The goal of the ABACUS-HIV Study is to learn about things that make it easier or more difficult for people with HIV to take their cholesterol medication consistently. WHAT WILL YOU BE ASKED TO DO? Be interviewed for 60-75 minutes in clinic or by phone; All your responses will be confidential; Participants will be compensated $50. WHO CAN JOIN? People living with HIV; At least 18 years old; Prescribed a cholesterol medication called a statin; Can speak English; Have agreed to be in the HIV clinic database at UNC. Patients interested in participating should contact the study team at (919) 843-2532.
This is a research study to gather the opinions of individuals with Rett syndrome concerning their communication with others, reading, and writing. The purpose of this study is to gather information that might help future therapy for children with Rett syndrome. Participants will be interviewed and observed in their own environments over the course of about one month.
To examine the impact of microaggressions on an academic L&D unite
Using a national survey of emergency departments, this study examines the impact of the current Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) shortage amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. By understanding how emergency departments are coping with and adapting to PPE shortages, we hope to discern best practices and contribute to keeping our communities, clinical or otherwise, safe.
This is an annual UNC-Chapel Hill freshman survey as part of assessing undergraduate student development and using the results to enhance programs and services that support their success.
We are interviewing physicians working in corrections to better understand professional issues they face in providing care in these settings.
To find out whether physicians, chiropractors, acupuncturists and other health care practitioners have different motivations for training and personal health outcomes.
We are asking to interview South Asian and Southeast Asians living in the United States on their experiences with birth, postpartum care, and menstrual management. We want to know how culture and religion can impact how we experience these life changing moments and how the medical team can best support South Asian and Southeast Asian patients during these times.
We are examining literacy instruction in a rural school through interviews, observations, and focus groups with relevant stakeholders.
This study is interested in how our collective memories of the past shape our lives in the present, how they construct or shore up identity, and how they manifest in the built world around us. This research attends to the ways that material practices of remembrance-museums, memorials, and monuments-related to the history of the Transatlantic slave trade operate rhetorically to uphold or challenge investments and identities in American public life. Particularly in a moment of active public discourse around this subject, I maintain a rhetorical perspective that engages questions about how, when, and where this discourse occurs and what publics and counter-publics it constructs. This study aims to interrogate the effectiveness of material and discursive rhetorical decisions in such sites by developing critical insights and perspectives for the operation of museums, memorials, and heritage sites in North Carolina and Louisiana.