The purpose of this study is to better understand researchers' and stakeholder partners' experiences working on stakeholder-engaged health-related research projects during the COVID-19 pandemic. We also hope to identify best practices, challenges, strategies, and desired resources related to working on stakeholder-engaged health-related research projects during COVID-19 and other health emergencies
The purpose of the NC PASE project is to create tailored supervision guidelines (TSG) that will inform the way probation officers supervise their caseloads.
This is a longitudinal cohort study with a concurrent mixed-methods design to determine the interrelationship between how stroke survivors adapt to and longitudinal changes in fatigue and recovery of physical function within 6 months poststroke (during index hospitalization, 1, 3, and 6 months).
The purpose of this study is to understand how the health literacy of a parent or primary caregiver might affect their child's outcomes following a traumatic injury.
This study will evaluate the relationship between visual components of visualization design (e.g. colors, shapes, sizes) and peoples' abilities to estimate different kinds of information from the resulting visualization (e.g., correlation, means, trends).
We propose to fill a gap in dementia-specific ACP and 1) evaluate a training toolkit for multidisciplinary clinicians who provide primary care for patients with dementia in a family-centered culture, and 2) evaluate confidence in dementia-specific ACP after training.
The purpose of this project is to understand, from the perspective of medical providers and community health workers (CHWs), the barriers and facilitators that people released from prison experience in establishing and engaging with health care, and how those barriers and facilitators may be impacted by participation in the FIT and FIT Connect transitional health care programs.
We are surveying anyone who might work with mothers who give birth or babies who are born at UNC Chatham Hospital's Maternity Care Center. The survey will ask about their rural health care experience and how they feel about their job.
Living with diabetes can be challenging, however Diabetes Self-Management Education and Support (DSMES) is well known to help persons with diabetes (PWDM) learn to cope with the uncertainties of life with diabetes. Unfortunately, DSMES is underutilized in the current health care setting.
We are measuring the size of lesions in Generalized Bullous Fixed Drug Eruption compared to those in Stevens-Johnson Syndrome/Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis to better differentiate the two diagnoses.