Danielle Chiaramonte and Cayetana Navarro, co-chairs of the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer (LGBTQ) Affinity group did not know each other before becoming co-chairs in 2021. It was almost a year before they met in person. Now good friends, they reflect on their experience guiding their members through a difficult time and how creating a safe but social atmosphere for their members was necessary in a post-pandemic world.
Danielle came to Yale in 2020 as a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Psychiatry. She now works as an associate research scientist at the Yale LGBTQ Mental Health Initiative conducting research to understand the mental health of LGBTQ populations. She grew up in Chicago, Illinois, and is a diehard White Sox fan.
Cayetana Navarro grew up in Texas before attending Wesleyan University for her undergraduate degree. After earning an MBA at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, in 2011, she returned to the Nutmeg State when her husband began his residency at the Yale School of Medicine (YSM). They now call Hamden home. She worked at the School of Medicine in the Office of Communications for a decade as its deputy director of operations and now works as program manager for diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in Internal Medicine at YSM.
This interview has been lightly edited and condensed.
How did you get involved with the Yale LGBTQ group?
Danielle: I moved here after finishing my Ph.D. in community psychology at Michigan State University in Lansing. I knew no one. My father had recently passed away; it was during the height of the pandemic and a tough time to meet new people. The LGBTQ affinity group was the only way I could meet queer friends during that time. They had so much social programming, including virtual happy hours and game nights. It was exactly what I needed to get connected here, and I’m so grateful for it. When you find yourself in a new city, it is hard to find queer spaces. The pandemic made it more complicated, and this group understood the toll the pandemic was taking on queer people and provided the support to keep people connected during a difficult time.