
Christopher Godfrey, PhD, Rethinks Healthcare for the Medically Disenfranchised

Healthcare is often viewed through a narrow lens鈥攖he doctor鈥檚 visit, the prescription, the procedure. But Associate Professor of Psychology Christopher Godfrey, PhD, on 花季传媒鈥檚 New York City campus, challenges this limited perspective. For him, healthcare is not just a sterile clinical exchange between patient and provider. His research challenges providers to consider a patient鈥檚 lived history, advocating for communication, trust, and patient empowerment as essential to equitable and effective care.
鈥淧atients carry a lifetime of experiences that shape how they interact with providers, how they trust institutions, and how they make decisions,鈥 he said.
A traditional deficiency has also existed on the study of healthcare system experiences of marginalized groups, such as Black and brown people, economically disadvantaged families, LGBTQ+ individuals, women, older adults, and those living with HIV/AIDS.
Godfrey and his student research team at Pace, however, want to change that.
The CUHER Lab at Pace
As director of the Center for Urban Health and Education Research Lab (CUHER) at Pace, housed in the Psychology department, he and his student colleagues work with communities and community-based organizations on questions of how medically disenfranchised populations make decisions about their health. Specifically, Godfrey, who teaches undergraduate students as well as directs Pace鈥檚 PhD program in Clinical Psychology 鈥 Health Care Emphasis, has been mapping patients鈥 self-reported experiences onto physiological data鈥攍ifting the voices of patients often left unheard.
鈥淚t鈥檚 validating,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ecause it means these conversations belong in primary care, not just in a specialist鈥檚 office after something has gone wrong.鈥
Sexual Health and Silence in Primary Care
One of Godfrey鈥檚 recent projects takes on a subject often neglected in medical settings: sexual health in primary care. According to him, these conversations are often reduced to risk factors, avoiding discussions on sexual behavior itself, such as pleasure, discomfort, or injury that are central to health. Another stream of his research examines how lesbian, gay, and bisexual individuals navigate primary care.
鈥淪ometimes it鈥檚 full disclosure, sometimes it鈥檚 partial, sometimes it鈥檚 silence. What matters is that people are constantly evaluating鈥攊s this someone I can trust with this part of myself?鈥 Godfrey said.
According to him, these nuanced strategies reflect patient resilience and problem-solving within an imperfect system that doesn鈥檛 always meet their needs.
It Takes a Family
Godfrey, who also has a private clinical practice, has also studied healthcare workers鈥 COVID-19 pandemic and post-pandemic mental health and health-risk perceptions and discovered how family plays a central role in health navigation.
Godfrey and his research colleagues found that what sustained frontline workers was community and family support more than institutional or civic recognition, challenging assumptions about what sustains resilience.
He also identified what he calls 鈥渕edical families鈥濃攈ouseholds with multiple health workers, who shared a unique culture of resilience.
鈥淲e talk about military families. Well, there are medical families too. They support each other in ways outsiders can鈥檛,鈥 he said.
Improving the Conundrum of Communication
At the heart of Godfrey鈥檚 work is communication.
Whether between patients and doctors, families and communities, or researchers and providers, effective communication determines outcomes. And for those who enter medical appointments unprepared, without the privilege of research or advocacy, he sees an urgent need for support.
Quipping at his own behavior as a patient鈥攕ending journal articles to his physician before a visit鈥攁nd describing himself as 鈥渁 provider鈥檚 nightmare,鈥 he said, 鈥漀ot everyone has the time, access, or background to do that research. My heart goes out to them.鈥
It鈥檚 why he envisions new ways of supporting patients鈥攆rom teaching communication skills to creating advocates who can accompany vulnerable populations.
The Bigger Picture
Godfrey鈥檚 message is clear: health care is not simply delivered; it is lived. It is shaped by memory, culture, trust, and community. And until systems begin listening to the voices of those who live it鈥攑atients and providers alike鈥攖he system will remain incomplete.
Through both his work at Pace鈥檚 CUHER lab and in private practice, he envisions a healthcare system that not only listens to patients but empowers them.
鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have a healthcare system without people,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd their voices have to be at the center.鈥