Lori Crosby, PsyD and Lynette Fenchel, MSN at the Live Well Collaborative 15-year anniversary event

On April 27, 2023, the Live Well Collaborative celebrated its 15-year anniversary with an event in which they showcased numerous of their collaborative projects over the years. Our Community Engagement Core (CEC) director, Lori Crosby, PsyD, represented both the CCTST CEC and the CCHMC Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center at the event, in which their Live Well Collaborative project “Making Resources More Accessible for Sickle Cell Families” was highlighted and recognized with a 2022 Design Value Award.

Accessible and modernized educational materials relating to Sickle Cell Disease has remained an issue throughout the past few decades. In addition to outdaded resources, informal information passed through families and communities is often shadowed by stigmas from past experiences. The team sought to modernize their own educational materials in order to create up-to-date resources that can better help patients and families easily understand Sickle Cell Disease.

To achieve their goals of developing a Parent Sickle Cell Disease Handbook, along with creating an innovative strategy to expand access to their suite of Sickle Cell Disease educational materials, CCHMC partnered with the Live Well Collaborative. More information about the project’s study design and creation can be found in the graphic below, or by clicking here.

Congratulations to Lori and team on their award!


The Association for Clinical and Translational Science (ACTS) meeting took place April 18-20 in Washington, D.C., and the CCTST was well-represented among the attendees, poster and panel presenters! CCTST members also participated in several additional activities, such as special interest groups, workgroups, and the NCATS steering committee.

The following CCTST members presented posters:

Jason Blackard, PhD

Stacey Gomes, MS

Angela Mendell

Jen Veevers, PhD

  • Jason Blackard, Jackie Knapke, Stephanie Schuckman, Jennifer Veevers, William Hardie, Pat Ryan: Introducing trainees to research using an online, asynchronous course

  • Stacey Gomes, Lori Crosby, Farrah Jacquez, Kareem Simpson, Kendal Lindsey, Monica Mitchell: Effective Implementation of Collaborative Community Health Grants and a Leadership Training Program

  • Angela Mendell, Laura Hildreth, Elizabeth Kopras, et al.: Team Science Competencies for Clinical Research Professionals: Determining Skills and Leveling Through a Modified Delphi Approach

  • Jennifer Veevers, Patrick Ryan, Jackie Knapke, Jason Blackard, Stephanie Schuckman, Brett Kissela, Melanie Cushion: Grant Writing Program to Enhance Junior Faculty Research Funding Success

  • Jareen Meinzen-Derr et al.: The Formation of the ACTS Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Committee to Increase Belonging

In addition, Jareen Meinzen-Derr participated in two panels: Leveraging Institutional Systems to Drive Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, & Accessibility and Being an Ally: What It Means to Be an Ally When Mentoring and Sponsoring Others.

Jareen Meinzen-Derr, PhD

If you are interested in learning more about the 2024 ACTS meeting or getting involved with any of these activities, please feel free to contact us!


Story from the University of Cincinnati Dean’s List - May 1, 2023

Jennifer Molano, MD, associate professor in the Department of Neurology and Rehabilitation Medicine and CCTST Co-Director of the Center for Improvement Science (CIS), has been accepted into the Osher Center Integrative Health Faculty Fellowship Program Class of 2024, the first inductee from UC. The goal of the fellowship is for trainees to develop a holistic and expansive view of medicine, gaining and applying this perspective in their patient interactions through a combination of intensive mentorship, rigorous instruction and immersive experiential activities.

Molano is a collaborator with the Osher Center for Integrative Health at UC, serving as a faculty member of the Mind-Body program since 2016 and as an expert speaker at numerous Osher Center events, including the 2022 Optimize Your Well-Being Community Symposium and the 2022 Virtual Lifestyle Medicine and Wellness Series: Healthy Sleep.

Her interests within neurology include the interface between sleep and cognition. She is an avid advocate for the well-being of physicians, having served on multiple wellness initiatives with the American Academy of Neurology and the Ohio State Medical Association, as the chair of the College of Medicine Faculty Wellness Advisory Council and the UC Medical Center Graduate Medical Education Resident Wellness and Wellbeing Committee, and physician lead for UC Health’s involvement with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Joy in Work Learning Network.


The Community Engagement Core completed the 14th Annual Community Leaders Institute (CLI) on March 24th. The CLI is a leadership development training program offered over five consecutive weeks in February–March. The goal is to build research and leadership skills that the individual can use to improve or develop a health program. Training sessions are designed to build leadership and research/program evaluation skills.

This year’s class was made up of 10 community leaders, 2 community health advocates, and 3 auditors. Congratulations to the Class of 2023!
 
Community Leaders Institute Participants:

  • Marcia Boyd, CCHMC: Information Services and First Ladies Health Initiative

  • Emmanuel- Sathya Gray, CCHMC: Behavioral Medicine & Clinical Psychology

  • Sriparna Ghosh, University of Cincinnati; College of Economics     

  • Kaitlyn M. Bruns, University of Cincinnati, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience & Adams County Health Department  

  • Florence Rothenberg, University of Cincinnati, Internal Medicine & Cardiology & Food For Thought Cincinnati

  • Ruby Castilla, WARMI Mental Health

  • Nina Creech, PWC: People Working Cooperatively

  • Samu-El L Fowler, BYOD: Build Your Own Dream

  • Ashley Glass, All-In-Cincinnati

  • Tiffany George, All-In-Cincinnati  

  • Nicole Gordon, IPM Food Pantry

  • Hannah Griswold, La Soupe

  • Michelle S. Hamstra, The Women's Heart Center at The Christ Hospital

  • Rebecca Hennessey, Your Store of the Queen City


The CCTST Center for Improvement Science (CIS) is pleased to announce new leadership.

Jennifer Molano, MD, has been an active member of the CIS core, serving as Team Science faculty since 2018 and joining the CIS as associate director under Dr. Jack Kues’ leadership in 2021. Upon Dr. Kues’ recent retirement, Dr. Molano was named co-director of the CIS and director of Collaboration & Team Science.

Dr. Molano is an associate professor at the University of Cincinnati, where she has been on faculty since 2010. After obtaining her undergraduate degree in Psychology and Latin at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, she completed both medical school and neurology residency training in her home state at West Virginia University. She further received training in behavioral neurology at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and in sleep medicine at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee. Her career has also been enriched by numerous activities within the American Academy of Neurology (AAN), currently serving as the Vice-Chair of the Member Engagement Committee. She also serves on the editorial boards for the New England Journal of Medicine Journal Watch Neurology and the Brain and Life magazine. Her interests within neurology include the interface between sleep and cognition. She also has a great interest in promoting clinician and health care worker wellness, having participated in multiple wellness initiatives within the AAN and the Ohio State Medical Association Wellness Committee. Locally, Dr. Molano chairs the UC College of Medicine Faculty Wellness Advisory Council and the UC Medical Center Graduate Medical Education Resident Wellness and Wellbeing Committee. She is also the UC Health physician lead for their involvement with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement’s Joy in Work Learning Network. She continues to work on perfecting the art of juggling scarves, is always on a quest to find joy, and is looking forward to supporting collaboration and team science initiatives within the CCTST.

The CCTST welcomes Brittany Rosen, PhD, MEd, who has been named co-director of CIS and director of evaluation, overseeing evaluation initiatives for all CCTST cores. Dr. Rosen is a research associate professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Adolescent and Transition Medicine at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. Her research program focuses on developing and assessing evidence-based implementation strategies to increase the uptake of biomedical technologies (e.g., vaccines) in adolescent patients through the healthcare setting.

She has experience and training in survey development, advanced quantitative statistical analyses, behavior change theory application in public health, adult education, and intervention development and evaluation. She has also received extensive training in implementation science by completing the National Cancer Institute (NCI) Training Institute for Dissemination and Implementation Research in Cancer (TIDIRC) Facilitated Course and the Certificate in Implementation Science from the University of California San Francisco. She has experience conducting evaluations of smartphone apps, virtual reality, and game-based interventions.

Please join us in congratulating Drs. Molano and Rosen on their new positions!


The Community Engagement Core Speaker Series took place on December 8, 2022, via Zoom, with a focus on community-based approaches to mental and behavioral health among at-risk youth. In addition to the keynote address, Engagement and Data to Improve Behavioral Health and Well-being Among Youth, the event recognized the 2022 CCTST Community Awardees:

  • Practice-Based Research Awardee:

    • Post COVID-19 Clinic Team at The Christ Hospital

  • Academic-Community Research Partnership Awardees:

    • EMPOWER: Empowering Mothers and Providers and Other Stakeholders to Weigh in as Experts in Research in partnership with Dr. Nichole Nidey (Assistant Professor, Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology; CCHMC)

    • Caracole in partnership with Dr. Daniel Arendt (Assistant Professor, UC College of Pharmacy)

  • Academic-Community Partnership Student Awardee:

    • Cathrin Green, PhD (Psychology Resident, Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology) in partnership with the First Ladies for Health Initiative

  • Integrating Special Populations Awardees:

    • Dr. Meron Hirpa, Cincinnati Health Department

    • Dr. Melanie Myers, Dr. Michelle McGowan, Kristin Childers-Buschle: The Engaging Adolescents Research Study at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center Division of Human Genetics

  • Dr. Anita L. Brentley Community Health Advocate Awardee:

    • Mona Jenkins, Co-Founder & Executive Officer of Queen Mother’s Market

Congratulations to all awardees!


In an effort to expand D&I Science capabilities within UC and CCHMC and to establish a D&I Science research community across these institutions, the CCTST is sponsoring two meet and greet sessions on Tuesday, March 14th to bring together researchers with interest and expertise in the field.

A virtual session is planned from 10:00AM-12:00PM and a face-to-face session from 2:00PM-4:00PM. All are welcome to attend either one, and no prior knowledge or experience in D&I Science is needed.

Registration for both virtual and in-person sessions can be found here. Each session will be capped at 25 attendees, so please register early. Refreshments will be provided at the in-person session.

For questions, please contact Rohit Ramaswamy, PhD.


CCTST Integration Committee Offering Sessions for Research Faculty from UC and CCHMC

Each Integration Committee meeting features an invited researcher who briefly presents their work and challenge(s) they’re experiencing. This committee is a CCTST activity, and as such, one goal is to see if CCTST resources can be utilized to address the challenge at hand. The committee can also help brainstorm:

  • How to overcome environmental challenges strategies to accelerate the research leadership experience

  • Career opportunities

  • Collaborations

The committee meets virtually on the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays of each month from 3:00-4:00pm.

For more information, please contact Sandy Geideman or visit the Integration Committee website.


The CCTST KL2 Research Scholars Program is pleased to announce its new Associate Director, Moises Huaman, MD, MSc.

Dr. Huaman is a clinical and translational investigator trained in infectious diseases, immunology, and clinical epidemiology. He is associate professor in the Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases at the University of Cincinnati.

Dr. Huaman’s research focuses on the interplay between infection, inflammation, and cardio-metabolic diseases, with a particular focus on the role of tuberculosis in atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. He has experience conducting clinical and translational studies nationally and internationally, including observational and interventional trials to prevent and treat infections of global public health relevance such as tuberculosis, HIV, and COVID-19. Dr. Huaman is a former CCTST KL2 Scholar and currently serves as co-PI for the UC Infectious Diseases Research Unit. 

Please join us in congratulating Dr. Huaman and welcoming him to the team! 


On Friday, February 3, 2023 the CCTST is hosting Dr. Carolette Norwood, PhD, MA for a Grand Rounds entitled, “Black Doctors and the Jim Crow Health Infrastructure of Cincinnati”.

Dr. Norwood’s talk will chronicle the history of Black physicians in Cincinnati; the racism they encounter in the profession and the advocacy they undertook in the community.

Dr. Norwood is professor and department head of Sociology and Criminology at Howard University. Dr. Norwood is a Black feminist sociologist whose research explores the implications of violence (structural, spatial, and interpersonal) at the intersections of race, gender, class, sexuality, and space on reproductive and sexual health injustice for Black women. Dr. Norwood’s research on Black women’s economic mobility and reproductive (in)justice in Cincinnati collectively informs her first book project tentatively entitled, Jim Crow Geographies: Mapping the Intersections of Poverty, Gender, Race, and Sexuality in Urbane Space, under contract with Columbia University Press.

This off-cycle Grand Rounds event is co-sponsored by UC’s Office of Clinical Research Education Committee for Clinical Research Professionals and will be offering continuing education units. To register for Dr. Norwood’s presentation, please click here.

CCTST Grand Rounds is a monthly virtual seminar series showcasing best practices in clinical and translational science. Recordings from past Grand Rounds presentations can be found on CTRonline.


We would like to honor our good friend and colleague Jack Kues, PhD, who officially retired from his role as the Director of the Center for Improvement Science (CIS) in December 2022.

Dr. Kues has been a remarkable leader within the CCTST and the broader academic health center. He has dedicated his career to the improvement of health programs and the advancement of science, frequently through incubating interprofessional collaboration and being able to address inscrutable problems through thoughtful and meticulous evaluation efforts. Throughout his tenure, Dr. Kues has been a mentor and a collaborative force, bringing together teams of scientists and healthcare professionals to work toward common goals. His efforts have touched every CCTST core, and his legacy will continue to inspire future generations of researchers and clinicians.

Those within the CCTST and the CIS know that Dr. Kues has been a champion of team science, recognizing that the most effective solutions come from working together across disciplines. He has been a strong advocate for the importance of team science in driving health improvements, and his dedication to this mission has been a guiding principle for the CCTST. His passion for interprofessional collaboration has been evident in the many interdisciplinary teams he has led and nurtured over the years. Dr. Kues has been an integral part of the CCTST since its inception, working closely with the late Jim Heubi, MD, to establish the CIS. His contributions to the CCTST are immeasurable, and his collaborative spirit will always be remembered and respected by those he has touched and inspired.


Dr. Arun Jose (photo courtesy of University of Cincinnati College of Medicine)

Dr. Arun Jose (photo courtesy of University of Cincinnati College of Medicine)

K Scholar, Arun Jose, MD, MS, assistant professor in the Department of Internal Medicine, University of Cincinnati, recently published an article in Heart Failure Clinics titled, “Struggling between liver transplantation and portopulmonary hypertension”. To view the full article, please click here

Portopulmonary hypertension (PoPH) is a progressive, ultimately fatal cardiopulmonary disease that occurs exclusively in patients with underlying portal hypertensive liver disease. Although the mainstay of treatment in PoPH is targeted pulmonary vascular therapy, liver transplantation (LT) can be highly beneficial in select patients. This article, part of a featured issue on the challenges in pulmonary hypertension, reviews the rationale for medical therapy versus LT in PoPH, highlighting important clinical considerations and offering guidance to providers struggling to determine the optimal treatment approach for their PoPH patients.


Collaboration and Team Science provides an overview of the Science of Team Science (SciTS) for investigators who are (or will be) working in transdisciplinary teams. In addition to examining the theoretical and research literature on the dynamics of teams, the course will include:

  • An examination of the construction and maintenance of high functioning teams.

  • Hands-on exercises for assessing and improving team skills.

  • Discussions about institutional barriers to working in teams and strategies for overcoming these and other challenges faced by translational researchers navigating in a team-based environment.

To view the spring semester syllabus and additional course information, please visit the CCTST Team Science page.


COURSE INSTRUCTOR:
Jack Kues, PhD
Professor Emeritus
Department of Community and Family Medicine
CCTST Center for Improvement Science


TIME & LOCATION:
Thursdays, Spring Semester (January 12 – April 20, 2023)
Online, 9:00am – 10:50am


REGISTRATION:
BE-7040, 46941, 2 credits
Register at catalyst.uc.edu
Regular UC tuition rates apply


FOR REGISTRATION QUESTIONS, CONTACT:
Beth Niehaus
virantem@ucmail.uc.edu


The CCTST has enhanced the “CCTST Consultation Services” option in our services portal, Research Central, to include learning health systems and dissemination & implementation science!

Now, you can request any of the following services via a CCTST consultation request in Research Central:

  • Learning Health Systems (LHS): Designing and implementing an LHS, including 1) shared purpose, goals, and theory of change; 2) data collection, infrastructure, and analytics; 3) stakeholder engagement and coproduction with patients and families; 4) integration of clinical care, research, and improvement activities; and 5) leadership, governance, and ethics.

  • Dissemination & Implementation (D&I) Science: New and experienced researchers who want to explore ideas on how to build dissemination and implementation science into research projects.

Sign-up here to schedule a consultation.

SAVE THE DATE:
CCTST Workshop: Basics of Implementation Science
November 8, 2022, 9AM-4PM, 140 Kowalewski Hall
Primary Instructor: Rohit Ramaswamy, PhD, MPH, Grad. Dipl. (Bios)
Click here for more information.


The CCTST Ethics, Regulatory Knowledge, & Support Core is hosting a panel discussion titled, “Artificial Intelligence - Perils & Promises”, on Monday, October 31st from 11:30AM-12:30PM via Zoom.

The transformative impact of Artificial Intelligence (AI) on our society will have far-reaching implications in all aspects of our lives, be it in medicine or education. As with the promises of AI, we should be aware of its perils too. The panel will broadly discuss the ever-increasing role of AI in society. The main focus of the panel will be on how AI reinforces structural bias and the numerous ways in which it impacts everyday people. Attendees do not need a background in AI, but rather an interest in the topic.

Zoom registration can be found here.

CCTST Co-Director, Dr. Jareen Meinzen-Derr, will facilitate the panel. Event panelists include:

Annu Prabhakar, PhD, MS is a Professor in the School of Information Technology in CECH. Her primary research areas are Human-Computer Interaction, Health Informatics, and Science & Technology Studies. Her research focuses on designing interactive technologies for wellness and education. In addition, she investigates the effects of technology on society. She is the founding faculty adviser of the Women in Technology organization at UC. She is a strong advocate for Equity and Inclusion, and currently, she co-chairs Faculty Senate ad-hoc committee on Race and Equity. She is a recipient of UC's George Barbour Award for Excellence in Student-Faculty Relations. Dr. Prabhakar received her PhD in Informatics from Indiana University, Bloomington, IN.

Josette Riep, MS is the Executive Director of Software Development in Digital Technology Solutions. She holds a master’s degree in information technology and is currently pursuing a PhD in IT. Josette has worked in the field of Software Development for over 20 years and her current responsibilities include: leadership over custom development initiatives spanning education, research, patient care and administration as well as Equity and Inclusion sponsorship activities with an emphasis on increasing STEM representation for African Americans and other underrepresented groups. Through participation in UC’s Diversity initiatives, Josette continues to pursue opportunities and technologies that ensure UC creates an environment that does not tolerate but embraces our differences, and thus empowers individuals and organizations to excel.


Maelesha joined the Research Participant Advisory Council (RPAC) and the West End Community Research Advisory Board (WE C-RAB) in August of 2021. While she was initially recruited to participate in the WE C-RAB as a lifelong resident of the West End, she also quickly joined the RPAC due to her and her son’s participation in the longitudinal Imprint Study at Children’s which is following newborns through age 4 to predict how they go through life with illnesses.

She’s the proud mom of 2 boys, Kamryn (2 years old) and Kaiden (8 years old) and loves to dance in her spare time. She’s also an RN at University Hospital in the Surgical Intensive Care Unit and has participated in many studies since she was a child. 

Q. What motivated you to participate in research?

Coming from my background of science as a registered nurse and being on that side of policy change, changes in dosage of medication etc., we tend to always talk about evidence based practice. I found it very interesting to get a glimpse of the other side of medicine. It’s a very engaging process, to see it from the very beginning – how things start off as a question and then to see how it expands into a study, which eventually leads to changes in policies, changes in dosage etc.

Q.What has been your favorite aspect of the RPAC and/or research project/study to come to the RPAC?

It is just so fascinating to see it in full cycle. Being a part of RPAC has given me an opportunity to see the full circle of research and how it leads to changes in the healthcare system as a whole.

Q.What would you tell your peers about research who are hesitant to participate?

Being a member of RPAC/WE CRAB has shed light on things that were not visible to me at first. I am beginning to understand how important it is to participate in research. I realize now that there are not many people who look like me or come from the same background as me participating in research. They will never have the answers to solve our problems without our participation. I am doing this to help make a better environment for my future grandchildren. It is very important for the future of our world.

Q.How did you hear about any research in which you participated in? How were you approached or introduced to the studies?

With the Imprint study I was approached at West Chester Hospital where I was having my prenatal appointments. This was the hospital where I wanted to deliver Kamryn. I was 30 weeks pregnant. Initially I had jumped into the study thinking it was going to be about the flu but – as this was around the end of 2019/early 2020 – ended up being about COVID as well. Because of this, I ended up having to consent twice. They were drawing blood as part of my routine checkup appointments and would just ask if they could piggy back on those samples. They then gave me the rundown of what I should expect to happen once Kamryn was born. They explained to me how they would take samples of saliva, stool and blood from Kamryn. In the beginning they were taking nasal Swabs weekly and stool samples monthly, along with the blood draws. Now it is not as intense as before. We just send in monthly samples of stool and weekly nasal swabs.”

Q. Overall has participating in research studies been a positive experience for you?

It has been a positive experience overall. It has been very impactful when it comes to learning new things about myself. It has made me curious and willing to ask questions. It has piqued my interest and has always been a positive situation. I have not only participated in research on the medical level, I have also participated in marketing research for companies like P&G.  I once participated in a study on tampons. I had to store them in the freezer and they would come and pick them up after I used them. I would also have to journal about them. It was fun because I got to express how I felt, I had an opinion to give. It paid too. As a younger person, there was no better feeling than having that cold hard cash in an envelope! I remember making one hundred bucks to do that tampon study for a week. 

Q.What would you say to researchers about RPAC/ WE CRAB about why they should come to the RPAC?

Expand your reach. We can be helpful, if you come to a wall and have no idea what direction you should go we could be helpful with direction. We can help spark new ideas that you probably have never thought about. We could also be that connection to help you get the word out to the community. You could bounce ideas off of us and ask questions you might not be as comfortable asking with other groups of people. I love the conversations that happen between the researchers and us.

 

About the RPAC and WE C-RAB. The RPAC and WE C-RAB are resources available to anyone at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital interested in learning the research participant or community perspective and improving how research is conducted at the hospital or out in the community. If you are interested in seeking feedback from one of these groups at one of our meetings, or through electronic survey, contact Julie Wijesooriya, julie.wijesooriya@cchmc.org.

 


The CCTST Center for Improvement Science will host three (virtual) workshops this fall, each building on the other to empower teams to communicate effectively. Individuals can sign up for any and all of the workshops - each can be taken as a stand-alone training, but content will be related and participants will benefit from attending all three.

Workshop Series: Communication - A Strategic Tool for Teams

Communication Styles & Team Dynamics | October 6, 2022 (2:00-3:30PM)
Personal styles of communication and how they impact working relationships and team functioning.

Courageous Conversations | October 13, 2022 (8:30-10:30AM)
Understand the effects of stressful communication and explore strategies for navigating difficult conversations.

Team Charters: It's a Journey, Not a Destination | October 26, 2022 (1:00-3:00PM)
How to build an optimal team environment by creating and using a team charter.

Click here to register for the workshop series.

Questions? Please contact Laura Hildreth.


On Friday, September 16th, the CCTST is hosting Dr. Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson, PhD, MPH for a Grand Rounds entitled, “Toward our Shared Liberation: Reproductive Justice Epidemiology for Action”.

Dr. Sealy-Jefferson’s talk will cover theories and frameworks that ground scholarship on reproductive justice epidemiology as well as empirical examples of scholarship on macrosocial determinants of preterm birth in Black women.

Dr. Sealy-Jefferson is a social epidemiologist whose primary research seeks action to combat manifestations of structural racism that limit the human rights of Black families and communities. She is the Founder, Director, and Principal Investigator of the Social Epidemiology to Eliminate Disparities (SEED) Lab. The mission of the SEED Lab is to conduct high quality epidemiologic research to find solutions to the disproportionate burden of infant mortality among Black women. Specifically, Dr. Sealy-Jefferson’s scholar-activism draws from the Reproductive Justice Framework and seeks to: (1) empirically document associations between systems of oppression and preterm birth (which is the leading cause of infant death), (2) explicate the intervening biologic, social, and psychosocial mechanisms, as well as (3) identify effect modifiers of these associations among Black women. The goal of her scholarship is to inform future intervention studies, policy change, and social activism.

To register for Dr. Sealy-Jefferson’s presentation, please click here.

CCTST Grand Rounds is a monthly virtual seminar series showcasing best practices in clinical and translational science. Recordings from past Grand Rounds presentations can be found on CTRonline.


The CCTST will offer two free workshops this fall introducing the basics of Learning Health Systems (LHS) and Implementation Science. Instructional material and activities will be geared towards researchers interested in or already working in these areas. Each workshop is stand-alone but the topics and content are connected, so participants will benefit from signing up for both.  

Workshops will be held from 9 a.m. – 4 p.m. with a one-hour lunch break on October 10 (LHS) and November 8 (Implementation Science), both in 140 Kowalewski Hall on the Academic Health Center campus. Go here to register for both workshops.

More Information: 

CCTST Workshop: Basics of Learning Health Systems
October 10, 2022, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m., 140 Kowalewski Hall 
Primary Instructor: Michael Seid, PhD

This course provides an overview of the science and practice of Learning Health Systems (LHSs). In a LHS, science, informatics, incentives, and culture are aligned for continuous improvement and innovation, with best practices seamlessly embedded in the care process, patients and families active participants in all elements, and new knowledge captured as an integral by-product of the care experience (IOM 2013). This one-day workshop will expose students to the key competencies required for LHS researchers and practitioners, including the organization and methods required to design, develop, and implement LHSs and collaborate with stakeholders to produce novel insights and evidence that can be rapidly implemented to improve the outcomes of individuals and populations and health system performance (Forrest et al. 2018). Upon completion of this course, students will have a basic understanding of LHS science and methods across the four domains of the IOM LHS model – culture, informatics, science, and value. No prior knowledge of Learning Health Systems is necessary, but experience with clinical or systems improvement and research methods is expected. Participants can sign up for optional one-on-one consulting time the day after the course.

CCTST Workshop: Basics of Implementation Science
November 8, 2022, 9 a.m. – 4 p.m., 140 Kowalewski Hall
Primary Instructor: Rohit Ramaswamy, PhD, MPH, Grad. Dipl. (Bios)

Implementation science is the systematic study of methods to bring evidence based healthcare and public health interventions to routine and sustained use. Implementation research focuses on the third stage of the translational research pipeline where interventions that have been shown to be efficacious and effective need to be widely disseminated and adopted for outcomes to be realized at scale. This one-day workshop is intended be an introduction to the principles and language of implementation science, focused primarily on researchers interested in learning more about how they can incorporate implementation questions into their work. No prior knowledge of implementation science is required, but experience with research design terminology and research methods is expected. The workshop will distinguish implementation research from other types of translational and health services research, introduce participants to the terminology in the field and provide examples of common implementation research questions and the designs used to answer them. Participants can sign up for optional one-on-one consulting time the day after the course.


In collaboration with Cincinnati & Hamilton County Public Library and the Cincinnati Ethics Center, the CCTST will be co-hosting The Ethics of Genetics Expert Panel on September 13, 2022 at 7PM at the Deer Park Branch Library. 

In anticipation of author Walter Isaacson's visit as the Mary S. Stern Lecturer, a panel of experts on Genetics will be discussing the ethics behind gene editing, a topic that will be brought to life during Mr. Isaacson's lecture as he goes into detail on his latest book 'The Code Breaker', which discusses Jennifer Doudna's work launching CRISPR.

This panel discussion will be moderated by Andy Cullison, Executive Director of the newly founded Cincinnati Ethics Center housed at UC. The experts include, Dr. Anil Manon (Director of UC's Biomedical Sciences Program), Dr. Daniel Gurnon (Rare Genomics Expert & Professor of Biochemistry - DePauw), Dr. Michelle McGowan (Research Professor, Ethics Center - Cincinnati Children's). More information can be found here.