色控传媒

New Center for Nursing Research Pilot Projects Awarded

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faculty awarded pilot research projects

Five 色控传媒 researchers and their collaborators were awarded new funding for pilot projects beginning this winter.

Awardees include Assistant Professors , , Brandon Knettel, PhD, and  and Professor .

This year鈥檚 grants address cancer recovery using physical activity, deep learning to improve EEG pattern detection, a community-based approach to eliminating hypertension disparities, treatment and mental health support for rural North Carolinians with Opioid Use Disorder, and depression treatment barriers for Latinx adolescents.

The pilot program encourages researchers to explore relevant and innovative ideas that promote health equity and address the School鈥檚 Research Areas of Excellence (RAEs). The four RAEs are: data science, health innovation, population health and precision health. The goal of the program is to encourage team science and endorse scientific inquiry that positions investigators to be competitive for extramural research funding. This year, applicants could choose from two path options: new research at the assistant professor rank or revise and resubmit research at any rank. The program is administered by the Center for Nursing Research (CNR) and funded through a generous award from 色控传媒 Health Chancellor Eugene Washington. The pilot program has funded 25 projects since 2017.

鈥淲e are thrilled to be able to offer another round of pilot grants to seed future external research for our School of Nursing faculty members,鈥 said Christin Daniels, assistant dean for Research Development.

鈥淭his year鈥檚 topics reflect the importance of today鈥檚 problems 鈥 including health inequity, and we鈥檙e inspired by our researchers鈥 rigorous approaches to developing much-needed solutions. We鈥檇 like to thank our reviewers and panel for their collegiality and service. We鈥檇 also like to thank Chancellor Washington for the generous award that allows us to offer this program.鈥

鈥淧ilot Testing a Nurse-Led Exercise Program in Adults with Acute Leukemia"

tara albrecht Albrecht serves as the principal investigator for her study entitled 鈥淧ilot Testing a Nurse-Led Exercise Program in Adults with Acute Leukemia.鈥 She is collaborating with , associate professor, Amy Pastva, professor of orthopaedic surgery and Tom LeBlanc, associate professor of medicine, of 色控传媒 University, and Ashley Leak Bryant, associate professor of nursing, of UNC-Chapel Hill.

Their study involves testing the Build Stamina intervention, a physical activity program for patients with acute leukemia that is tailored to each individual鈥檚 current physical abilities. Acute leukemias (AL) are aggressive, debilitating cancers of the blood and bone marrow with profound implications for the patient. The initial induction chemotherapy is aggressive and results in multiple symptoms, life-threatening complications, and long hospitalizations and often leads to diminished physical function, leaving individuals unable to function at pre-cancer levels. Diminished physical function is associated with poor survival and can delay or prevent future life-saving treatments such as stem cell transplant. Self-management interventions such as physical activity in adults during and after cancer treatment are associated with numerous benefits that include improved physical function and symptom severity, allowing the adult to function independently in their day-to-day life but are not yet well-tested in AL patients. This pilot study will yield preliminary data needed for a future R01 resubmission to the National Cancer Institute.

鈥淒eveloping a Large Repository of Expert-annotated Critical Care EEG Recordings Using the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society Standardized Nomenclature"

kais gadhoumiPrincipal investigator Gadhoumi will also team up with Yang and Aatif Mairaj Husain, professor of neurology, of 色控传媒 University, to improve real-time brain monitoring for critically ill patients. The team鈥檚 long-term goal is to leverage deep learning methods to build a core algorithm of a critical care EEG pattern detector, but, in order to train the model, the data must first exist and be reliable. In their project entitled 鈥淒eveloping a Large Repository of Expert-annotated Critical Care EEG Recordings Using the American Clinical Neurophysiology Society Standardized Nomenclature,鈥 Gadhoumi and team will build a large repository of continuous EEG recordings annotated by expert clinicians following the 2021 American Clinical Neurophysiology Society (ACNS) guidelines and standardized critical care EEG terminology and then analyze the inter- and intra-rater reliability between clinician annotators at multiple points throughout the annotation exercise. A tool for automatic detection and recognition of various EEG patterns does not currently exist and will ultimately contribute to a better understanding of abnormal critical care EEG patterns. Some of these have until recently been associated with epileptic activity including non-convulsive seizures and non-convulsive status epilepticus. These subclinical conditions may explain acute pathological insults such as stroke, trauma and central nervous system infection.

Gadhoumi and team鈥檚 finished product is the first step toward timely and precise diagnosis and treatment for critically ill patients. Their next step is to apply for a National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke R21 exploratory grant.

鈥淓xploring Telehealth Models to Extend Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder in Rural North Carolina"

brandon knettel In 2018, opioid overdose was the leading cause of injury death in North Carolina. The burden of opioid use disorder (OUD) is greatest in rural North Carolina where there are few treatment options. OUD often co-occurs with a variety of other social and health challenges including homelessness, traumatic injury, HIV, depression and PTSD. To address OUD and its rural burden, principal investigator Knettel along with Padma Gulur, 色控传媒 professor of anesthesiology, Aaron McKethan, 色控传媒 Margolis Center for Health Policy senior policy fellow, and Nidhi Sachdeva, 色控传媒 Department of Population Health senior research program leader, will launch a study entitled 鈥淓xploring Telehealth Models to Extend Treatment for Opioid Use Disorder in Rural North Carolina.鈥

The overall objective of this research is to develop a structured intervention to extend medication-assisted treatment (MAT) and mental health support for OUD in North Carolina鈥檚 rural communities. Knettel and team will first hold listening sessions with Buncombe and Granville Vance health departments to understand existing service needs. Next the team will conduct in-depth interviews with providers, health departments, people who use drugs or are in recovery, and experts in mental health. Finally, the team will employ user-centered design to develop the intervention. At the conclusion of this pilot study, the team will submit an NIH R21 to conduct a pilot feasibility trial of the intervention.

鈥淏arriers, Facilitators, and Preferences Regarding Depression Treatment from the Perspectives of Latinx Adolescents, Parents, and Health Care Providers鈥

allison staffordPrincipal investigator Stafford will work with , associate professor, and Hayden Bosworth, professor of medicine, psychiatry and nursing, of 色控传媒 University, to examine 鈥淏arriers, Facilitators, and Preferences Regarding Depression Treatment from the Perspectives of Latinx Adolescents, Parents, and Health Care Providers.鈥 Despite experiencing a higher prevalence of depressive symptoms, Latinx adolescents are significantly less likely to receive treatment for major depressive disorder (MDD) and are more likely to prematurely drop out of psychotherapy for depression than their non-Latinx White peers. This is concerning given that depressive symptoms among Latinx youth are associated with substance use, aggressive behavior and suicidality.

The purpose of this study is to identify a stakeholder-preferred implementation strategy that may improve psychotherapy attendance among Latinx adolescents. Specifically, the team will seek to determine facilitators of and barriers to receiving evidence-based psychotherapy for depression in this population from multiple stakeholder perspectives. Next they will seek to identify a stakeholder-preferred patient- and family-focused implementation strategy that will target known barriers. Data obtained from this pilot study will lay the foundation for an NIH R21 submission to test the effect of the identified implementation strategy on psychotherapy attendance among Latinx youth.

鈥淧atients as Partners for Improving Blood Pressure鈥

bradi granger headshotThe objective of principal investigator Granger鈥檚 project entitled 鈥淧atients as Partners for Improving Blood Pressure鈥 is to test one component of a larger community-based intervention designed to reduce disparities among adults with high blood pressure and to improve treatment equity that would result in more adults with controlled hypertension. Hypertension is a significant risk factor for serious cardiovascular events such as stroke and heart failure. The study team also includes Jennifer Deyo, a pharmacist at 色控传媒 Regional and Lincoln Community Health Center, and Holly Biola, chief of family medicine at Lincoln Community Health Center. The team will engage the 色控传媒 Clinical and Translational Science Institute Community-Engaged Research Initiative as well as a patient team of 10 members known as 鈥渉ypertension heroes.鈥

Granger and team aim to improve patient engagement in the experience of self-monitoring for blood pressure; medication management skills, medicine reconciliation, dose-optimization and adherence; and goal-concordance and patient-provider communication. Though many studies have evaluated strategies to improve medication management in hypertension, they have not included a patient-partner who is a peer in both literacy level, socio-economic position, and hypertension disease presentation and progression. Such a partner may be better equipped to establish a trusting relationship, share daily routines and medication-taking behaviors, and share tools. This pilot study will yield preliminary data needed for a future National Heart Lung and Blood Institute resubmission.

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