Dr. William McConnell

William McConnell

Assistant Professor of Sociology

Phone:  (561) 297-3270
Email: wmcconnell@e21system.com  
Office: CU 250

Research: Social Networks, Caregiving, Mental Health, Health Care
Teaching: Aging, Mental Health, Research Methods, Statistics

Background

Dr. Will R. McConnell an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Florida Atlantic University. He earned his PhD in Sociology at Indiana University where he also obtained an MS in Applied Statistics. Dr. McConnell’s areas of expertise include social networks, aging, caregiving, mental health, culture, and quantitative methods.

Much of Dr. McConnell’s research examines the dynamic relationship between social networks and chronic illness management, particularly in the contexts of aging, disability, and mental health care. He also conducts research related to caregiving, the intersection of cultural beliefs and health care, and the contemporary medical profession. His research is highly interdisciplinary, often involving collaborations with health care providers, care facilities for older adults, and colleagues in Nursing, Health Administration, Psychiatry, and other fields. Dr. McConnell also works extensively with community organizations, including through research partnerships and through community-based dissemination of research results.

More information about Dr. McConnell’s research, teaching, and other activities is available on his website www.WRMcConnell.com. He has been a member of the FAU I-HEALTH Human Health and Dementia Research Focus Group as well as the FAU Biostatistics Collaborative Core.

Awards & Grants

NIH R21AG083184, PI, 9/2023-8/2025
“Network Analysis of Family Caregiving for People Living with Dementia: A Survey of Caregiver Networks in Clinical and Community Settings.”

NIH R01AG057739, Subaward PI, 8/2023-5/2024
“Leveraging Neuroimaging Biomarkers to Understand the Role of Social Networks in Alzheimer’s Disease.”

Selected Works

Gallan, Andrew S., Anu Helkkula, & William R. McConnell. 2024. "Why did this happen to me? Causal attributions of illness and cultural health capital." Social Science & Medicine, 350: 116923. http://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.116923

Perry, Brea L., William R. McConnell, Max E. Coleman, Adam R. Roth, Siyun Peng, & Liana G. Apostolova. 2022. "Why the cognitive “fountain of youth” may be upstream: Pathways to dementia risk and resilience through social connectedness." Alzheimer's & Dementia, 18(5), 934-941. http://doi.org/10.1002/alz.12443   

Perry, Brea L., William R. McConnell, Siyun Peng, Adam R. Roth, Max Coleman, Mohit Manchella, Meghann Roessler, Heather Francis, Hope Sheean, & Liana A. Apostolova. 2022. “Social Networks and Cognitive Function: An Evaluation of Social Bridging and Bonding Mechanisms.” The Gerontologist, 62(6), 865-875. http://doi.org/10.1093/geront/gnab112

Feyereisen, Scott, William R. McConnell, Clayton Thomas, & Neeraj Puro. 2021. “Physician dominance in the 21st century: Examining the rise of non-physician autonomy through prevailing theoretical lenses.” Sociology of Health & Illness, 43(8), 1867-1886. http://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.13366            

McConnell, William R., & Emma D. Cohen. 2019. “Fear of fraudulence: graduate school program environments and the impostor phenomenon.” The Sociological Quarterly, 60(3), 457-478. http://doi.org/10.1080/00380253.2019.1580552

McConnell, William R. 2017. “Cultural guides, cultural critics: Distrust of doctors and social support during mental health treatment.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 54(4), 503-519. http://doi.org/10.1177/0022146517736291

McConnell, William R., & Brea L. Perry. 2016. “The revolving door: Patient needs and network turnover during mental health treatment,” in Brea L. Perry (ed.), 50 Years after Deinstitutionalization: Mental Illness in Contemporary Communities (Advances in Medical Sociology, 17), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 119-145. http://doi.org/10.1108/S1057-629020160000017005