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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research Grants

Browse 29 open grants from NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research. Find eligibility requirements, award amounts, and deadlines for each opportunity.

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Identifying and Measuring the Palliative Needs of Children in Foster Care

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

TITLE: Identifying and Measuring the Palliative Needs of Children in Foster Care A major challenge in tailoring palliative care for children in foster care is a lack of appropriate measures and data identifying their needs. Among children with medical complexity, 27% utilize concurrent (hospice and end of life) care. This high percentage suggests that many CMC with more than 6 months of life expectancy could benefit from palliative care. The known health challenges among children in foster care and CMC suggests a strong likelihood of unmet palliative care needs for CMC in foster care, however, the scope and severity are unclear due to an absence of literature and limitations of data. Participatory action research methodologies with critically ill patients have led to positive outcomes between patient need and medical intervention. Research suggests collaborative co-design could help provide the context, insight and understanding to address unmet palliative needs for children in foster care. Therefore, this exploratory mixed methods study using a participatory co-design approach will determine what palliative care needs should be measured among CMC in foster care from the perspective of two partner groups: 1) Foster partners, including foster and biological parents, and adults formerly in foster care, and 2) health care team partners (including nurses, nurse practitioners, physicians, and social workers). Aim 1a: Qualitatively identify the lived experiences of foster partners caring for children in foster care with palliative needs, and quantitatively assess the clarity and relevance of an existing palliative screening tool in this population. Narrative interviews will be followed by a quantitative content validity index for a current parent-reported pediatric palliative care screening tool. Aim 1b: Qualitatively understand the lived experiences of health care partners caring for children in foster care with palliative needs, and quantitatively assess the clarity and relevance of an existing palliative screening tool for this population. Focus groups will be followed by a quantitative content validity index for a current health care team-reported pediatric palliative care screening tool. Aim 1c: Integrate qualitative and quantitative data into preliminary synthesized findings. Aim 2a: Conduct reflexive discussion and validation of the preliminary Aim 1c findings using a participatory co-design approach with representatives from the foster and health care team partner groups and Aim 2b: Collaboratively co-design screening priorities for palliative needs among foster children. This work will inform future research and clinical practice by anchoring inquiry within human-centered design research approaches to address palliative care needs in foster care.

Up to $58K
2027-06-30
Behavioral and Social ScienceClinical ResearchHealth Disparities Research+6

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

The Nerve of Chemo: Unpacking Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy in Breast Cancer Survivors

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Project Summary Advancements in cancer treatment are enabling breast cancer survivors to live longer, highlighting the need for more research on their ongoing needs after chemotherapy. By 2030, there are expected to be 4.9 million breast cancer survivors in the United States (US). Black women, in particular, face significant differences in breast cancer outcomes compared to other racial and ethnic groups. For example, Black women are frequently diagnosed at later stages, are twice as likely to develop aggressive cancers such as triple-negative breast cancer, which necessitates chemotherapy treatment, and have a 40% higher mortality rate compared to White women. Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN), can be a debilitating side effect following treatment among breast cancer survivors. CIPN symptoms, including numbness, pain, and balance issues, can impede activities of daily living, substantially lower the quality of life, and lead to psychological distress and social isolation among patients. Limited research exists on CIPN presentations among Black breast cancer survivors. Understanding CIPN's impact on treatment decisions and quality of life for Black patients is important to ultimately reducing symptom burden and improving outcomes among survivors. Data on CIPN symptoms, severity, and treatment outcomes are needed to inform clinical interventions and improve patient care. To examine the impact of CIPN on Black breast cancer survivors, this proposed cross-sectional survey study aims to determine CIPN characteristics and severity among N=125 early-stage (stage I-III) Black breast cancer survivors following chemotherapy at a large urban academic medical center in the Southeastern US. Aim 1 will identify CIPN symptoms and severity using patient-reported outcome measures. Aim 2 will examine associations between CIPN severity and physiological, psychological, and social factors. Aim 3 will characterize the occurrence in treatment outcomes, such as chemotherapy dose reductions, dose delays, and treatment discontinuations. This study will illuminate CIPN's impact among Black breast cancer survivors, informing the design of future longitudinal research and interventions to reduce CIPN's impact and improve treatment outcomes. During the conduct of this fellowship, the applicant will pursue a rigorous training plan, under the supervision of an interdisciplinary team of mentors, to cultivate the skills needed to become and independent researcher. This study will provide the initial data to develop a longitudinal cohort of Black breast cancer survivors experiencing CIPN. The proposed fellowship aligns with the National Cancer Institute and the National Institute of Nursing Research’s strategic plans to train the next generation of cancer researchers and strengthen the cancer workforce while reducing symptom burden and optimizing care outcomes among breast cancer survivors.

Up to $50K
2027-08-16
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Exploring prevention-related health beliefs of emerging adults with a family history of type 2 diabetes

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) has reached epidemic levels in the United States and, alarmingly, cases of early-onset T2D are steadily rising, with nearly 305,000 new cases diagnosed among 18 to 44 year-olds in the United States each year.1,2 Early-onset T2D (diagnosed before age 40) progresses more rapidly than older-onset T2D3 and is associated with increased risk of developing comorbid cardiovascular and kidney diseases and life-altering complications.2-5 Emerging adults (ages 18 to 29) with family histories of T2D have an especially high risk of developing early-onset T2D and associated complications.2,6 National Diabetes Prevention Programs (NDPPs) are the gold standard for T2D prevention,7 and emerging adults compared to older adults have lower participation and retention in NDPPs.8,9 The underlying reasons for emerging adults’ low NDPP participation, including this population’s T2D prevention-related health beliefs, have been ill-explored.8,9 High perceived threat and low perceived benefits related to the belief that T2D is inevitable paired with high perceived barriers and limited cues to action related to limited healthcare usage may have a powerful influence on emerging adults’ NDPP participation.10 Understanding the T2D prevention-related health beliefs of emerging adults with family histories of T2D can help identify opportunities to intervene to increase NDPP participation. The purpose of this study is to describe T2D prevention- and NDPP-related health beliefs of emerging adults with family histories of T2D, focusing on the perceived threat of developing T2D, perceived benefits and barriers of T2D prevention behaviors, and cues to action. A sample of 20 to 30 emerging adults will be recruited using three methods: recruitment from Indiana University Indianapolis and Bloomington and local community organizations, social media recruitment, and online recruitment from an Indiana-based research registry. Participants will be eligible if they are 18 to 29 years old, have at least one biological parent or sibling diagnosed with T2D, have a body mass index greater than or equal to 25, and have not participated in an NDPP. Data will be collected with a demographic survey and a semi-structured interview about T2D prevention- and NDPP-related health beliefs. Interviews will be transcribed and analyzed using qualitative descriptive methods as described by Sandelowski.11 Findings will elucidate how health beliefs influence T2D prevention behaviors of emerging adults with family histories of T2D including their NDPP participation and inform intervention development and NDPP adaptation to increase NDPP participation in this population to lower their risk of early-onset T2D. This grant will also support training of the principal investigator in conducting research with emerging adult populations, community-based participatory and intervention research, and postdoctoral fellowship preparation.

Up to $39K
2027-09-30
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Technology knowledge optimization for type 1 diabetes in schools (TeKnO T1D: Schools): A Novel e-learning platform for school nurses to advance health outcomes

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

The standard of care for pediatric type 1 diabetes (T1D) is the use of continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) and automated insulin delivery (AID) systems to optimize glycemia. These diabetes technologies hold the potential to decrease the risk of acute and long-term complications. Yet, the rapid developments over the last decade have posed challenges for youth, caregivers, and healthcare professionals who must learn to use these devices. Use of these devices requires significant user interaction and remains labor-intensive, leading to variability in glycemic outcomes. Up to 75% of youth may have higher hemoglobin A1c levels despite device use, placing them at increased risk for complications over time. Schools offer a unique opportunity to support these populations. Youth with T1D spend nearly one third of their weekdays in school under the care of school nurses. School nurses have expressed a critical gap in their knowledge of T1D devices, which can negatively affect parent and student school experiences. To date, little to no research has explored interventions to support school nurses with T1D devices. Structured education may directly impact school nurse CGM and AID knowledge and confidence and student outcomes. e-Learning, defined as the delivery of education through digital resources, allows for flexible, asynchronous learning at a self-determined pace. App-based CGM and AID education stimulates active, problem-centered learning that improves the knowledge and confidence of endocrinology trainees. We propose to adapt an existing diabetes technology e-Learning tool to meet the needs of school nurses using the Discover-Design-Build-Test framework. In the Discover phase (Aim 1), focus groups of school nurses, parents of youth with T1D, teens with T1D, and diabetes clinicians will be used to understand CGM and AID use in the school setting, individual and organizational challenges for school nurses learning to use devices and perceptions of nurse understanding of these devices. The Design and Build phases (Aim 2) will engage school nurses to adapt an existing app-delivered diabetes device curriculum using user-centered design and educational theory. We will conduct usability testing, seeking quantitative and qualitative feedback, to guide app refinement before proceeding to a pilot in Aim 3. Pilot outcomes will focus on feasibility and acceptability (primary), school nurse knowledge and confidence (secondary) and health and academic outcomes for students with T1D cared for by participating school nurses (exploratory). The e-Learning tool developed will be tested in future studies with the goal of implementing a widely disseminatable tool that can lead to sustainable systems-level change to improve school health.

Up to $473K
2028-01-31
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Music-4-MS to Improve Cognition in People Living with Multiple Sclerosis: A Feasibility Study

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Project Abstract Over the past 10 years, the rates of multiple sclerosis (MS) have nearly doubled in the United States. This chronic, neuroinflammatory, and neurodegenerative disease is most often diagnosed between the ages of 20-40. In many countries, it is the main cause of nontraumatic disability in young adults. Cognitive impairment affects up to 70% of those with MS, in whom the incidence of early onset dementia is 7 times higher than it is in adults without MS. Cognitive- based rehabilitation, however, can improve memory and learning as well as symptoms of depression and anxiety, which may reinforce cognition. Traditional approaches to cognitive rehabilitation use restorative (drill and practice) and compensatory (management) strategies. Yet most cognitive interventions for persons with MS are predominantly visual or speech focused, which eliminates the possibility of stimulating multiple senses. Playing a musical instrument provides multisensory stimulation and feedback to enhance neuroplasticity in the learning process making it superior to traditional cognitive rehabilitation strategies. Music training is a multimodal activity that involves coordinating of sensory and motor sequences with planned actions that require higher cognitive resources. Music training has been associated with frontal lobe function and higher visuospatial, working memory and executive function performance across the life span. The purpose of this study is to determine the feasibility of Music-4-MS, a 12-week music-based, eHealth intervention. The specific aims are to 1) determine the feasibility and acceptability of delivering the Music-4-MS eHealth intervention among individuals with MS over 12 weeks; 2) evaluate the preliminary effect of Music-4-MS on cognitive (objective performance, subjective function), psychosocial (anxiety, depression, social function), and functional (physical function, fatigue, hand dexterity) well-being over time compared to an active control group; and 3) explore participants’ perceptions of the motivation, engagement, connection, and usefulness of Music-4-MS in their daily lives.

Up to $431K
2028-02-29
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Study Assessing Feasibility and Effectiveness of Community-Based Heart Failure Care (SAFE-HF))

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

PROJECT SUMMARY Heart failure affects million adults in the U.S., is associated with high mortality, and is a leading cause for hospitalizations. The long-term objective of this project is to understand the impact of an existing, trauma- informed, community-based, nurse-led heart failure disease management program that provides care to heart failure patients with adverse social determinants of health and unmet social needs (poverty, unstable housing, substance use, mental illness). The Community Heart Failure Program (CHFP) is operated out of a safety-net hospital in the Pacific Northwest and delivers an innovative model of care, where staff provide clinical care in the location of the patient’s choosing, often a shelter, tent, apartment, or other non-clinic-based location. Point- of-care labs and ultrasound support clinical decision-making. Using trauma-informed care principles, including safety, trustworthiness, collaboration, empowerment, and choice, the CHFP and this research project were designed to engage patients with adverse social determinants of health and unmet social needs. This project advances health equity by removing barriers to high quality clinical care and clinical research participation. The short-term objective of this project is to establish feasibility of research study protocols that were designed to evaluate the impact of this innovative existing program. The proposed study is a prospective, longitudinal design (N=40). The specific aims of this project are to: 1) evaluate feasibility of research protocols, 2) compare healthcare utilization 6 months pre- and post-CHFP enrollment, and 3) compare guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT), biomarkers, and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) at baseline and 3- and 6-months post-enrollment, and 4) examine associations between CHFP conceptual model key components (trust/relationship building, shared-decision making, care coordination, harm reduction) and outcomes (healthcare utilization, GDMT, biomarkers, and PROs). Descriptive statistics will be used for Aim 1. For Aim 2 and 3, paired t-tests (or Wilcoxon signed-rank test) will be used to compare outcomes pre- and post- enrollment, and effect sizes will be calculated to inform future intervention studies in this patient population. For aim 4, correlations (continuous variables) and chi-squared (categorical variables) will be used to examine the direction and strength of associations between key components of the conceptual model and model outcomes, in addition to multivariate regression to determine the independent effect of key components on outcomes. The goals of this project align with the strategic mission of the National Institute of Nursing Research to prioritize research that advances health equity by removing barriers to research participation, optimizes health for individuals and communities, and addresses pressing health challenges.

Up to $308K
2028-04-30
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Health-Related Quality of Life Among Adolescents and Young Adults Living with Chronic Hepatitis B: An Exploration of Family Context and Stigma

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

PROJECT SUMMARY Children living with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) must actively manage their disease throughout their lifetime due to the risk of progressive liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma. Their transition to adult care complicates care management and typically occurs during adolescence and young adulthood, when health-related quality of life (HRQoL) can also diminish. The proposed mixed methods study seeks to provide insights into how family context and stigma influence care management and HRQoL among adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with CHB during their transition into adult care, with three specific aims: 1) To estimate the effects of family health risk factors on HRQoL trajectories among adolescents with CHB and to determine whether they are modified by family structure; 2) Explore care management experiences, including medical decision-making and adherence, for AYAs with CHB transitioning into adult care; and 3) Identify how key moments, such as disclosure, secrecy, and silence, from the family context form pivotal experiences that shape care management and HRQoL for AYAs with CHB. First, the quantitative phase utilizes the Hepatitis B Research Network Pediatric Cohort Study dataset, an investigation of HRQoL in youth with CHB in North America from 2010 to 2017, to examine how family context influences HRQoL trajectories among adolescents with CHB. Next, the qualitative and participatory phases involve primary data collection, leveraging the Johns Hopkins Viral Hepatitis Center. AYAs with CHB will be recruited (n=15) from the Center for in-depth interviews to explore transitioning into adult care, medical adherence, decision-making, and family communication and support. Second, all participants will be invited to participate in Collaborative Filmmaking. This participatory method involves filmmaking and discussions to identify how pivotal experiences within the family context have informed disease-related stigma and shaped care management and HRQoL. Data integration will include visual displays whereby data are visualized alongside each other. Participants will have the opportunity to incorporate their films into a composite film and share them publicly. This study is an in-depth exploration of AYA chronic disease management and HRQoL that involves public-facing work with the creation and dissemination of films. It is responsive to NICHD’s strategic plan theme to improve child and adolescent health and transitions to adulthood, including healthcare transitions for those with chronic health conditions. This research will provide foundational knowledge and actionable items for families, health providers, and public health professionals to support AYAs with CHB transitioning into adult care. The proposed research fulfills the dissertation and degree requirements for Ms. Block, PhD student at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Training will be mentored by experts in viral hepatitis, AYA health, biostatistics, qualitative and participatory mixed methods, and translational science. With guidance from this robust mentorship team (Sponsor: Dr. Jill Owczarzak), research and training will support Ms. Block’s growth into an independent researcher dedicated to promoting the health and well-being of AYAs living with chronic disease.

Up to $53K
2028-06-30
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

How nurses contribute to global health system resilience

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Health system resilience has emerged as a crucial objective for health systems globally, yet the critical role of the nursing workforce in achieving these targets remains insufficiently understood. Bridging this knowledge gap is essential to harness the full potential of nurses in strengthening health system resilience. The purpose of this F31 application is to prepare the applicant for a career as an independent investigator focused on expanding collective knowledge of key predictors and evidence- informed strategies for developing health system resilience. The proposed fellowship consists of two complementary components: 1) a training plan aimed at developing quantitative and qualitative methods proficiency, substantive disaster and health system resilience expertise, and role attainment of a nurse scientist; and 2) a research plan that will further understanding of the relationships between the nursing workforce, health system resilience, and disasters. A strong mentorship team that includes sponsors and collaborators from the University of Michigan Schools of Nursing, and Public Health will provide interdisciplinary expertise in the nursing workforce, global health, disasters, statistical analyses, and qualitative methodologies. Through formal coursework and mentorship, the training plan will allow the applicant to build upon early experience in qualitative methodologies, as well as substantially increase knowledge and experience in quantitative methodologies and data management. The applicant will be supported through intensive mentorship by an expert and personally committed team of mentors, advanced coursework, participation in the national and global scientific community, and progressively independent research. The proposed research project will utilize data from reputable open access sources including World Health Organization National Healthcare Workforce Statistics, country-level health data from the World Bank, country level disaster data from the Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT), and country-level health statistics from the World Health Organization. The specific aims are to 1) examine the relationship between the global nursing workforce, and population health outcomes during declared disasters, and 2) identify the facilitators, barriers, and key adaptations of the role of the nursing workforce in contributing to health system resilience during disasters. This study aligns with the National Institute of Nursing Research’s strategic plan by examining mechanisms to address health outcomes as well as population and community health by investigating approaches to mitigate negative outcomes at the macro level. Findings from this study are critical for shaping future policy and research agendas, and to better identify key predictors of health system resilience.

Up to $47K
2028-10-30
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Advancing Cardiovascular Health Among Adolescents with Intellectual Disabilities: Co-Development of Technology Interventions to Enhance Physical Activity

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Adolescents with intellectual disabilities (ID) face significant health issues, particularly in managing chronic conditions such as cardiovascular (CV) health risks. These issues are exacerbated by limited physical activity (PA), health literacy challenges, and a lack of evidence-based health interventions. This project aims to address these gaps by engaging adolescents with ID and their stakeholders supporting ID as co-researchers to design, adapt, and pilot-test a virtual reality (VR)-based PA intervention tailored to their needs. The long-term goal is to dismantle factors to improve health outcomes for adolescents with ID through innovative, collaborative research that enhances health literacy, increases PA, and lowers CV health risks. With this goal in mind, the proposed K Mentored Research Scientist Development Award will direct Dr. Patricia West toward an established innovative independent research program. Guidance for her transition to independence will be provided in a strong institutional research environment at Michigan State University with dedicated interprofessional expert scientists and collaborative resources both internal and external to the University. The objectives of this application will address three specific aims: 1) adapt and validate research instruments by collaborating with adolescents with ID and their ID stakeholders to incorporate common language in measures for assessing health outcomes; 2) evaluate and select VR-based PA programs by engaging co-researchers in identifying effective VR exergame interventions for improving health outcomes through PA; and 3) pilot-test the VR PA intervention, which incorporates peer support. We will assess feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary efficacy of our 16-week VR exergame PA intervention using co-adapted measures and biologic CV risk measures. A quasi-experimental mixed-methods approach will be used, guided by our Logic Model. Preliminary evidence highlights the potential of interactive, technology-driven PA to address CV risks while fostering peer engagement and optimal self-efficacy to manage health. The expected outcomes are: 1) validated measures through greater health literacy, and 2) a co-designed intervention to reduce CV risks that helps adolescents with ID to take an active role in their health. By addressing critical gaps in health literacy, self-efficacy, and PA, this work advances healthcare practices and supports long-term improvements in public health.

Up to $169K
2029-01-31
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Adapting and testing an evidence based digitally delivered healthy relationship and violence prevention intervention with Native American adolescents

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Dating violence (DV) is common among U.S. high school age adolescents and has significant and lifelong negative health consequences, including suicide behaviors. Native American (NA) adolescents are at increased risk for violence victimization and/or perpetration in their dating violence, given their high rates of violence exposure in their homes and communities. Key challenges for dating violence prevention are the lack of services, fear of stigma and discrimination, and limited trust in and access to skilled professionals. The Fort Peck Reservation is home to the Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes in rural Montana. The reservation community reports high rates of violence and suicide behavior with underfunded and limited health and social service, especially for adolescents. The wide range of negative health and social outcomes associated with violence experienced by reservation-based NA adolescents underscores the call for innovative and targeted behavioral health interventions using appropriate technology. myPlan Teen, is an evidence-based healthy relationship and dating violence prevention intervention for adolescents and is delivered through a secure and confidential web based and mobile app. myPlan Teen provides adolescents with immediate access to information about healthy and unhealthy behaviors, safety strategies tailored to their situation with links to youth friendly resources, to reduce confusion, feelings of isolation and stigma associated with unhealthy relationships. In our CDC funded randomized control trial (RCT) with a national sample of 609 adolescents aged 15-17, we found adolescents randomized to myPlan Teen had a significant increase in use and helpfulness of safety behaviors compared to control group (adolescent health website). Further adolescents who used myPlan Teen reported a significant reduction in physical/sexual violence perpetration and suicide behaviors compared to control group. To advance the relevance and use of myPlan Teen with NA adolescents, our interdisciplinary team in partnership with Tribal Health leaders and Youth Advisory Board (YAB) will adapt myPlan Teen by integrating culturally relevant content, including tribal identity and communal mastery for NA adolescents to build healthy relationships, develop safety skills and access culturally relevant resources. Following the adaptation process, the team will evaluate the effectiveness of the culturally adapted myPlan Teen app on health and safety outcomes with 550 NA adolescents. In addition, we will examine the mechanisms by which myPlan Teen improves health and safety outcomes. The study will advance violence prevention interventions with NA adolescents and inform future processes to adapt and disseminate a digital intervention with adolescents nationally.

Up to $2.0M
2029-02-28
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Mapping the Complex Processes and Outcomes of Care Planning

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Advance care planning (ACP) supports patients in identifying and communicating their preferences for medical care and is a key component of individualized care. The Patient Self Determination Act of 1990 narrowly defined ACP as documentation of preferences for end-of-life procedures (e.g., resuscitation), resulting in a focus on advance directive completion. Since then, ACP has evolved to include a focus on preparing patients and caregivers for communication and decision-making across the illness trajectory, which is better conceptualized as “Care Planning” (CP) because the process includes both advance and in-the-moment decisions over the life course. While health systems have invested in CP as a requisite component of individualized care and it is reimbursed by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, wide heterogeneity of CP implementation and measurement remain, and the perspectives and needs of patients, caregivers, and interdisciplinary experts (e.g., nurses, attorneys, chaplains, etc.,) have not been considered. Unprecedented basic science (NIH Stage Model, Stage 0) is required to map the complexity of the entire CP process. Implementation science and human factors engineering offer a path towards clarity. This proposal advances the field of CP and implementation science by leveraging interdisciplinary expert, patient, and caregiver perspectives and human factors engineering methods to map implementation processes of CP and to identify clinically relevant CP outcomes across clinical and community settings and illness trajectories. We will apply the well-validated Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research (CFIR) model to illuminate CP’s complexity. CFIR domains include CP innovation characteristics (e.g., discussions) that operate in an inner setting (e.g., inpatient, outpatient, nursing home, hospice) and outer setting (e.g., policy) centered around subject matter experts (e.g., patients, caregivers, healthcare professionals, community leaders, legal/policy experts) involving a range of implementation components (e.g., initiating, facilitating, documenting, storing, accessing, updating CP wishes). This complexity is amplified by patients’ illness trajectories and setting. Our study aims are to: 1) Define processes of CP for varying settings (community, outpatient, acute care, long-term care, hospice), illness trajectories (healthy/chronic illness, serious illness, end-of-life) and healthcare access by creating CP Workflow Archetypes; and 2) Identify clinically relevant outcomes for each component of the CP Workflow Archetypes. Using CFIR and human factors engineering, we will map essential implementation factors of CP through focus groups and interviews and use Delphi methods to identify important implementation outcomes. Our long-term goal is to set the direction for future CP policy, research, and implementation.

Up to $836K
2029-03-31
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Empowering Baltimore youth through applied research experiences to improve diet quality in older adults living in healthy food priority areas

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Project Summary/Abstract Underrepresented groups are disproportionately impacted by nutrition-related chronic diseases. In Baltimore, a city with a majority minority population, disparities in healthy food access contribute to poor dietary intake. One third of Black residents and nearly 25% of older adults live in Healthy Food Priority Areas (HFPA), urban areas where unhealthy foods are more available than healthy foods. Common self-care tasks like food shopping, meal preparation, and cooking are also barriers to consuming a healthy diet among older adults. Poor dietary intake contributes to chronic disease risk and loss of muscle mass and strength, consequently limiting functional mobility. Ensuring that the next generation of researchers reflects the diversity of the larger population is essential to address all aspects of disparities, but there is a need to engage students at early education levels. UMB RAMP is a summer research training program that exposes high school (HS) students from historically excluded groups to translational research concepts and teaches basic lab techniques and clinical skills. Pilot data from our first cohort (86% Black) demonstrate a positive impact on HS students’ research career interest, but year-round paid experiences to engage and mentor these students in research labs are lacking for this age-group. In this phase 2 randomized controlled trial, we will determine if a 3-month virtual group nutrition education and virtual teaching kitchen cooking demonstrations paired with free produce tailored for older adults (>65 yrs) living in HFPA will improve diet and health-related outcomes compared to contact control. Our overarching hypothesis is that this intervention, personalized to include considerations of this older adult population’s barriers to consuming a healthy diet, will improve dietary quality and functional mobility while providing a paid, applied clinical research experience for HS students. Our research aims will determine the impact of the virtual intervention on diet and other health outcomes of older adults living in healthy food prior areas. The DEIA aims utilize a mixed methods approach to determine the impact of a year-long applied research opportunity on HS students from historically excluded groups' sense of belonging, confidence and motivation for pursuing undergraduate/career research experiences, and perceptions about both the aging field and the community impact of their research experience. We will also explore perceived impact from the older adult research participants related to working with young student researchers and how it may change their perceptions of research. Lack of effective interventions to improve diet quality among older urban adults represents a significant health problem. Simultaneously, workforce diversification is essential to meet growing US demands in research and biomedical science fields to address disparities in chronic disease outcomes. This project meets these demands by expanding research training opportunities for younger students to build confidence and self-efficacy that they belong in an academic research environment while providing a relatively low-cost intervention to disseminate to help narrow these gaps.

Up to $2.2M
2029-04-30
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

Statewide Implementation of Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) Data Collection to Advance Health Equity

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Abstract National health authorities point to collecting sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) data as essential to systematically addressing the health and healthcare needs of sexual- and gender-diverse (SGD) people across all domains of life. The State of New Mexico answered this call by directing all its government agencies, including those overseeing or financing health and human service delivery, to collect voluntary self-reported SOGI data. These vital (a) illuminate the nature and extent of disparities and adverse health outcomes for a minoritized population, (b) encourage patient-centered care, and (c) develop equity-focused evidence-based interventions (EFEBIs) to eliminate long-standing disparities. New Mexico is a bellwether for other states wanting to routinize processes for robust demographic analyses of SGD people, enhance coordination of health services, guide policy and funding decisions, advance EFEBIs for their varied citizenries and monitor progress toward health equity for SGD people. New Mexico's health department (NMHealth) operates 53 public health offices (PHOs)— ideal settings for analyzing the uptake and sustainment of SOGI data collection. Staffed in large part by nurses, PHOs are a critical safety net for racially, ethnically, and geographically diverse communities in New Mexico, offering a wide range of health services, from immunizations, family planning, nutritional programming, substance use harm reduction, testing and treatment for sexually transmitted infections, cancer prevention and control, and other medical care across the lifespan. This multilevel, mixed-method R01 study will test the acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility of implementation strategies in PHOs to enable SOGI data collection with different populations and in urban, rural, and frontier contexts. Guided by the Interactive Systems Framework, our interdisciplinary team will (1) assess gaps in implementation readiness to engage in accurate, reliable, and usable SOGI measurement in PHOs; and apply implementation mapping to systematically select and tailor implementation strategies to address barriers; (2) deploy and evaluate identified implementation strategies to enable SOGI data collection in PHOs in a sequential multiple assignment randomized trial (SMART); and (3) use the Discover, Design, Build, and Test framework to develop an online toolkit integrating manualized implementation strategy resources to disseminate SOGI data collection in service delivery settings. Our team of researchers, healthcare providers, and patient advocates are poised to foster use of implementation strategies for inclusive SOGI data collection, so the state and nation are prepared to identify, analyze, and advance EFEBIs to intervene in the alarming disparities negatively shaping SGD health and well-being. Through the innovative use of models and methods from dissemination and implementation science, our team's overall goal is to tackle a long-running, perplexing problem—the rampant deficiencies in state-sponsored data collection systems that abet the invisibility of SGD people in public health, medical, and human service records, thwart the development of EFEBIs, and buttress poor health outcomes.

Up to $2.5M
2029-06-30
health research

Free to search & build · $99 one-time to unlock the application pack · No subscription

What interventions to reduce hospital nurse burnout are most effective?

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

What Interventions to Reduce Hospital Nurse Burnout Are Most Effective? Nurse burnout is a threat to healthcare safety, and to nurse and patient outcomes. Burnout among nurses has been a long-standing concern only accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Burnout is a syndrome caused by chronic workplace stress and characterized by feelings of emotional exhaustion, cynicism towards one’s work, and decreased professional efficacy. Pre-pandemic, about 30% of nurses were burned out. Today, nearly half of 4.7 million nurses are experiencing burnout. This unsustainable high level of burnout has dire consequences for nurses and patients alike. Nurse burnout is associated with higher odds of patient mortality, failure to rescue, and prolonged length of stay, as well as nurse job dissatisfaction and turnover. We propose to integrate two approaches to addressing burnout: investigation of organizational characteristics as determinants of burnout, notably conducted by the proposed research team in recent decades, and health system administrators’ current implementation of interventions to reduce nurse burnout. Our preliminary studies reveal that organizational and individual interventions are being implemented nationwide and that nurses prefer organizational ones. It is unknown how preferred and implemented interventions relate to hospitals’ performance on nurse burnout, individual nurse burnout, and reducing burnout over time. Crucially, whether these interventions’ effectiveness depends on the work environment is unknown. Integration of these two approaches will yield a representation of reality across a large, geographically diverse hospital sample to inform whether certain intervention combinations are most effective and in what organizational contexts. The proposed aims address the Notice of Special Interest NOT-NR-23-012, “Addressing Organizational Factors to Prevent or Mitigate Nurse Burnout,” which invites “research studies to develop and evaluate novel organizational interventions to prevent and mitigate nurse burnout,” by identifying the currently preferred and implemented interventions, their work environment contexts, and their relation to nurse burnout, dissatisfaction, and intent to leave and hospital performance on nurse burnout. We propose to conduct a cross-sectional and longitudinal observational study utilizing 2024 and 2026 hospital nurse survey data from 31,942 nurses in 1,278 hospitals (in 2024) in 10 U.S. states to determine how preferred and implemented interventions relate to hospitals’ performance on nurse burnout, individual nurse burnout, and reducing burnout over time. The potential impact of the proposed study would be high because it would provide actionable results to optimize burnout intervention choices and contexts to mitigate pervasive nurse burnout.

Up to $1.6M
2029-12-31
health research

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Organizational Changes to Reduce Nurse Burnout

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

This study evaluates multi-level interventions—ranging from state-level policy action to healthcare organizational strategy and frontline care delivery innovations—to effectively prevent nurse burnout and mitigate the severity of burnout among the roughly half of hospital-based nurses already burned-out. Study objectives will be accomplished by leveraging unique data from thousands of nurses in approximately 535 hospitals in multiple states (CA, FL, NJ, PA) across 4 time-points spanning 20 years. We will generate repeated samples of these hospitals at multiple time-points (already collected: 2006, 2016, 2024, to be collected 2026). Using a repeated cross-sectional design with changing organizational and policy influences overtime, we are uniquely positioned to evaluate potentially causal relationships of modifiable organizational factors and state-level policy interventions on nurse burnout. Each time-period of data includes repeated measures of nurse outcomes (e.g., burnout, job dissatisfaction, intent to leave employment), and hospital factors and models of care (e.g., staffing levels, work environment, Magnet). These cross-sections of data will be linked with contemporaneous American Hospital Association data for considering structural features of hospitals (e.g. teaching status). In combination, we will have 4 cross-sections of data from 535 hospitals (with fluctuating nurse populations), with changing organizational, policy, and other intervening influences (e.g. CA staffing policy relative to non-policy states, 2008 Great Recession, 2020 Covid-19 pandemic). Our quantitative analytic approach uses hierarchical models with time-varying covariates to capture the multilevel structure of the data, as well as difference-in-difference models with propensity score weighting for rigorous causal inferences of changes in organizational factors on changes in outcomes. Using data collected in 2026, we will empirically identify typologies of hospitals with respect to their proportions of nurses with high burnout and average tenure and conduct in-depth interviews with key nurse leaders (hospital nurse executives, nurse managers) in hospitals representative of each of the typologies to elucidate the facilitators and barriers to reducing hospital nurse burnout and turnover. This multi-modal study has novel potential for sustained impact since it will (1) evaluate the impact of modifiable organizational and policy changes on hospital nursing and models of care on nurse burnout; (2) leverage 20 years of repeated cross-sections of data to evaluate potentially causal mechanisms between modifiable hospital factors and external policy interventions on nurse burnout; (3) evaluate currently employed nurses and those who recently left employment to understand whether the reasons nurses say they would leave hospital employment are the same as the reasons they actually leave; (4) integrate quantitative findings with qualitative frontline hospital leadership perspectives to move from evidence to action. The cumulative evidence will inform targeted recommendations for policy and hospital interventions for reducing the unprecedented high rates of nurse burnout and low retention.

Up to $2.2M
2029-12-31
health research

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RESP-FIT: A Respiratory Muscle Strength Training Intervention for COPD

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a leading cause of death in the U.S. (3rd worldwide) and disproportionately affects individuals living in rural areas. Poor COPD outcomes are influenced by exposures common in rural settings, such as wood smoke, dust, and agricultural byproducts known to adversely affect respiratory health. There is a critical need for accessible COPD interventions that can be delivered in rural communities. Respiratory muscle strength training (RMST) is an empirically validated therapy that can improve ventilation and airway defenses and reduce dyspnea symptoms in patients with COPD. Few studies have evaluated the effects of RMST on respiratory function, respiratory quality of life (R-QOL), dyspnea, and dyspnea-related kinesiophobia in patients with COPD in rural areas. Our multicomponent, mHealth-delivered COPD intervention, Respiratory Muscle Strength Training and Fitness Program (RESP-FIT) is feasible and acceptable. RESP-FIT incorporates home-based RSMT using a portable training device, mHealth, and behavior theory. Integration of remote spirometry and ecological momentary assessment (EMA) allows measurement of lung function and symptoms (including dyspnea) in real-time in a remote setting. This integrated design (RMST + mHealth + EMA) addresses three key areas: 1) COPD-related physical deconditioning and associated symptoms; 2) health behaviors, including dyspnea-related kinesiophobia; and 3) accessibility (i.e., a portable respiratory intervention enhanced by mHealth/remote technology) for intervention delivery in rural areas. In Aim 1, we will conduct a RCT to evaluate efficacy of RESP-FIT on dyspnea, dyspnea-related kinesiophobia, and R-QOL in adults with COPD. Participants will be randomized to the RESP-FIT intervention or enhanced usual care (control) study arms. In Aim 2, we will identify barriers, facilitators, and contextual factors (e.g., environmental exposures, age, distance from healthcare provider, social support, access to care, income) that may moderate intervention engagement, adherence, and outcomes. RESP-FIT has high potential for scalability. Successful completion of these aims will lay the groundwork for subsequent implementation initiatives that support positive health outcomes and respiratory health for patients with COPD.

Up to $2.0M
2030-02-28
health research

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Examining the Effectiveness of School-based Health Centers (SBHCs) to Improve Pediatric Asthma Care

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

PROJECT SUMMARY More than 20 million children in the US lack sufficient access to essential healthcare. School-based health centers (SBHCs) have been broadly implemented to address this unmet need, particularly for low-income and minoritized children, by providing primary healthcare at school. Despite proven feasibility with over 3000 SBHCs now in operation in the US, the effectiveness of SBHCs to improve health outcomes has yet to be established. It is critical to determine the effectiveness of SBHCs to inform future investment and policy focused on SBHC expansion or modification, as well as best practices. Our multidisciplinary team propose asthma as an ideal pediatric disease to examine SBHC effectiveness. Asthma is the most common chronic disease in childhood, affecting more than 6 million children in the US. It has detrimental consequences, particularly for low-income, Black and Latinx children who experience more missed schooldays, poor school performance, parental lost workdays, and urgent visits than their higher income and white counterparts from asthma. This disproportionate morbidity borne by marginalized children is largely due to poor access to guideline-based asthma care and adverse social determinants of health (SDOH). Many low-income, Black and Latinx children with asthma now receive care in SBHCs and have the potential to receive guideline-based asthma care at school. While prior cross-sectional and small cohort studies suggest that SBHCs improve pediatric asthma outcomes, there has yet to be a large-scale examination of the effectiveness of SBHCs to improve asthma care and outcomes for marginalized children. With traditional community health centers (CHCs) as a comparator condition, we propose to conduct an unprecedented, multi-state and longitudinal study examining the effectiveness of SBHCs to advance health equity in asthma care. We will examine electronic health record (EHR) data from 2015-2025 in the OCHIN, inc. data network, the largest data network of SBHCs and CHCs in the US serving >6 million low-income and vulnerable patients nationwide, including 395 SBHCs and 1280 CHCs in 16 states. Our data network includes longitudinal measures of asthma care and outcomes with novel linkages to geographically coded SDOH data on community-level economic, environmental, and structural factors. In Aim 1 we will determine whether SBHCs are more (or less) effective than CHCs at providing high quality asthma care and reducing asthma exacerbations among low-income children; and evaluate the potential synergy of these two settings for optimal asthma care. In Aim 2 we will examine whether SBHCs are more (or less) effective than CHCs at improving asthma outcomes given specific adverse SDOH. In Aim 3 we will conduct qualitative work with multi-level SBHC partners, including children/caregivers, SBHC staff and policymakers to explain quantitative findings in Aims 1 and 2. Leveraging this unique network of SBHCs, this study provides a landmark opportunity to examine the effectiveness of SBHCs to improve pediatric asthma care for marginalized children and will inform national SBHC policy.

Up to $3.9M
2030-03-31
health research

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Structural Gendered Racism-Related Policies and Mental Health among Cisgender Women at Intersecting Axes of Race, Ethnicity, and Nativity: An Intersectional Mixed Methods Study

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

Project Summary In the United States, women are twice as likely to report depression and anxiety than men, and face stressors related to interlocking systems of oppression such as racism, sexism, and xenophobia. Interlocking systems of oppression can exacerbate inequalities in mental health by manifesting an unequal distribution of women’s resources and result in symptoms of depression and anxiety like exhaustion, hopelessness, and loss of interest. Despite the growing recognition of the mental health impacts of systems of oppression, several studies have analyzed this relationship at the individual-level, and not the structural or policy-level. Political intersectionality focuses on how policies and laws enact unfair practices against intersectional groups and subdue their rights. Policies related to structural gendered racism may shape the inequitable allocation of women’s social, economic, and political resources across racial, ethnic, and nativity groups, which may put racially and ethnically minoritized women at risk for depression and anxiety. The objective of this R01 grant proposal is to use novel theoretical frameworks and methodologies to examine how structural gendered racism-related policies impact depression and anxiety through intersectional social-structural factors among US- and foreign-born Black, Latina, and white women. This proposal will also aim to identify the best strategies to enhance adoption of supportive policies, and de-implement harmful policies that perpetuate systemic inequities. Informed by Intersectionality, Constrained Choice theory, and a policy implementation science, we propose a sequential explanatory mixed methods study with US- and foreign-born Black, Latina, and white women, and policy stakeholders. Aim 1 examines the direct and indirect relationships between structural gendered racism-related policies, intersectional social-structural factors, depression and anxiety among US- and foreign-born Black, Latina, and white women. Population-based data of adult women’s depression and anxiety from the National Health Interview Survey will be linked to state structural gendered racism-related policies, and an existing structural sexism and racism index of state social, economic, and political data from publicly available administrative sources. Aim 2 includes conducting focus groups with US- and foreign-born Black, Latina, and white women to explicate quantitative findings and identifying unanticipated themes. Aim 3 includes integrating findings from Aims 1 and 2 to systematically develop policy implementation strategies using a three-round Delphi method approach with US- and foreign-born Black, Latina, and white women, and policy stakeholders. This proposal responds to RFA-NR-25-004 by analyzing “relevant policies that reinforce intersectional social-structural factors and identify social-structural interventions to improve mental health.”

Up to $3.3M
2030-06-30
health research

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Evaluating Nurse Demands and Resources with Virtual Nursing to Mitigate Burnout

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

PROJECT ABSTRACT Importance: Healthcare settings are struggling to provide enough nurses to meet patients’ needs. About 40% of nurses reported high rates of burnout and leaving their positions prematurely. Burnout is driven by high job demands and limited organizational resources. Virtual nursing (VN), an organizational strategy borne of necessity to deliver patient care during the pandemic, was also viewed as an approach to potentially mitigate nurse burnout. To date, 43% of US hospitals have already implemented some form of VN, where remote nurses engage in team-based care using telehealth. Hypothetically, VN is expected to reduce the job demands for bedside nurses. However, little is known about the relationship between the use of VN and nurse job demands and resources. To address this knowledge gap, we will use a multi-site, natural experiment across nine diverse hospitals. Objective: Generate real-world, data-driven evidence on the job demands and resources, drivers of burnout, for bedside nurses who do and do not use VN. Specific aims: (1) Determine the association between the use of virtual nursing and workplace job demands among bedside nurses using EHR and survey data. (2) Determine the association between the use of virtual nursing and individual job demands among bedside nurses using eye-tracking technology and wearable devices. (3) Determine the job resources required to support VN and identify organizational solutions to mitigate nurse burnout using Design Thinking workshops. Methods: Guided by the Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) framework and using a mixed-methods sequential design, we will examine the relationship between VN use and the job demands and resources that drive nurse burnout. First, we will use novel quantitative data (EHR and physiologic) to gain data-driven, real-world insights on job demands (e.g., time pressure, mental demand). Second, we will apply design thinking to understand the job resources needed to support VN and design organizational solutions that address systemic aspects of burnout. Expected outcomes: On successful completion of our research, we expect contributions to include to (1) understand the association between using VN and workplace job demands, (2) understand the association of using VN and nurse job demands for bedside nurses using physiologic data, and (3) determine the required organizational resources to better support bedside nurses using virtual nursing.

Up to $742K
2030-11-30
health research

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Aging-Related Health and Aging Acceleration in Older Women with Criminal Legal System Involvement (AGELIS)

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

PROJECT SUMMARY There are over 177,000 women detained in U.S. jails and prisons on any day and another 800,000 serving sentences in the community under custodial supervision. About 20% of women with criminal legal system involvement (CLSI) are age 50 or older. Rates of women and older adults have both risen dramatically in recent decades, 700% and 280%, respectively. For many women, incarceration and probation are profoundly stressful experiences, often overlapping with other life circumstances—trauma and abuse, homelessness, substance use, mental illness—that disrupt women's support systems and health services access. Many women who experience CLSI also do so repeatedly, cycling in and out of incarceration and probation over many years. The toll on health can be profound. CLSI is associated with disproportionately high rates of many chronic and infectious diseases and early mortality in women of all ages and is hypothesized to lead to acceleration of aging-related conditions. Most of what we know about the health of older women (age 50 and older) with CLSI is extrapolated from the groups of older men and younger women. We lack an understanding of how CLSI functions as a social determinant for aging-related health in the group, including how much, when, and in conjunction with what other factors over the life course experiences of incarceration and probation contribute. We also know almost nothing about the health in aging attitudes, goals, self-efficacy, and experiences of community-dwelling older women with CLSI. The objective of the Aging-Related Health and Aging Acceleration in Older Women with Criminal Legal System Involvement Study (AGELIS) is to fill critical gaps in our knowledge about how CLSI functions as a life course social determinant and what women with CLSI mean by and want from health in aging. Closing such gaps is crucial in moving the field toward intervention readiness and ultimately improved health outcomes. The specific aims of AGELIS are to (a) establish relationships between the health in aging construct, functional ability, life course factors, and CLSI in older women with CLSI, compared with a matched comparison group in the Health and Retirement Study and (b) characterize attitudes, goals, self-efficacy and experiences of health in aging in older women with CLSI using semi-structured interviews and ethnographic case study. In partnership with a community research team, we will bring results from the two aims together in an integrated model of health in aging with CLSI. AGELIS will provide an empirical and experiential basis for subsequent intervention design and point the way forward for investigation in aging with other groups that experience significant life course stress.

Up to $425K
2030-12-31
health research

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TIER-PALLIATIVE CARE: A population-based care delivery model to match evolving patient needs and palliative care services for community-based patients with heart failure or cancer

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

ABSTRACT Persons with serious illness suffer from poor symptom control, decreased quality of life (QoL) and poor communication with their healthcare providers, especially in terms of goals of care discussions (GOCD). Palliative care, when offered alongside disease management, offers improved symptom control, QoL, communication, caregiver satisfaction and reduced caregiver anxiety. Due to a limited specialty-trained palliative care workforce, however, patients and their caregivers often cannot access these benefits, especially in the community. These needs are particularly acute in advanced cancer and HF, the two leading causes of death in the US which also model the most common illness trajectories. The dynamic nature of these illnesses presents distinct symptom patterns and changing functional state that require an adaptive, dynamic model of palliative care delivery. Yet, workforce shortages prevent scaling of existing community-based specialty palliative care models. To meet patient/caregiver dyads' needs with a limited workforce, new models that deploy palliative care clinicians based on patient's illness trajectory and changing needs are required. The innovative TIER-PALLIATIVE CARE (TIER-PC) model provides the right level of care to the right patients at the right time. TIER-PC increases the number and intensity of specialty trained palliative care disciplines added to the dyad's care team as their symptoms worsen and function declines. In Tier 1, patients who can care for themselves and have easily managed symptoms, receive support from a community health worker (CHW) trained to elicit illness understanding in a culturally competent way. In Tier 2, for patients with poorer function and mild symptoms, a social worker (SW), trained in serious illness communication, joins the CHW to further elicit patients' illness understanding and goals, and provide caregiver support. In Tier 3, as function decreases and symptoms increase, an advance practice nurse (APN) joins the CHW+SW to manage complex symptoms. In Tier 4, for those patients with the poorest function and worst symptoms, an MD joins to address the most complex needs (e.g., end-of-life treatment preferences and multifaceted symptom control). The CHW follows dyads longitudinally across all tiers and re-allocates them to the appropriate tier based on their evolving needs. We will evaluate TIER-PC's efficacy in a multi-site, single blinded, two arm, randomized controlled trial. Patients with advanced cancer or HF will receive regular assessments by the TIER-PC team to: address symptom and psychosocial needs; improve illness/prognostic understanding; prescribe medications; and address goals of care. We will enroll and randomize 400 patients with HF or cancer and their family caregivers to receive TIER- PC or an augmented control. We will follow dyads for 12 months to determine if TIER-PC: improves patients' symptom control and QoL (primary outcomes), patient-reported GOCDs and caregiver satisfaction; reduces caregiver anxiety and post-traumatic stress; and decreases patients' healthcare utilization and cost. By matching demand to the scarce workforce, our scalable model can improve care for patients with cancer or HF.

Up to $839K
2030-12-31
health research

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Mentoring Patient-Oriented Research to Improve Syphilis Screening and Treatment for Mothers and Infants

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

This K24 mid-career investigator award in patient-oriented research is to support the mentoring, research, and career development activities of Dr. Jillian Pintye, a nurse-scientist and Associate Professor at the University of Washington. The proposed mentoring and research aims are grounded in her work on HIV/STI prevention in pregnancy and will provide protected time to increase the number of clinician scientists mentored by Dr. Pintye. The overall goal of this proposed K24 is aligned with Dr. Pintye's mission to prepare the next generation of scientists with patient-oriented research experiences and skills to advance HIV/STI prevention among pregnant women—a unique and important priority population for STI/HIV research. Her combined leadership roles and five ongoing NIH-funded studies enable her to build a rich mentoring environment with opportunities for patient- oriented research among pregnant people and adolescent girls and young women affected by HIV and STIs. This K24 application proposes to sustain and grow Dr. Pintye's successful mentorship program and will leverage educational, career development, and research support programs available through the University of Washington and its highly productive and supportive HIV/STI research centers. She currently mentors several multidisciplinary clinician-scientists in a variety of clinical and public health fields including nursing science, infectious diseases, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, clinical epidemiology, and implementation science. The K24 Mentoring Plan aligns with Dr. Pintye's mission to grow patient-oriented research in HIV and STIs among pregnant people by mentoring multidisciplinary trainees from the United States, Botswana, and Kenya. Mentees will gain experience in patient-oriented clinical epidemiology and implementation science research in pregnant women with primary mentorship from Dr. Pintye complemented by mentorship from collaborators in Botswana and Kenya. The proposed research aims are designed to provide evidence for HIV/syphilis elimination programs for pregnant women. Aim 1 will determine syphilis burden and clinical outcomes among pregnant women affected by HIV by leveraging clinical epidemiology data from (2) large ongoing RCTs in Botswana and Kenya. Aim 2 will assess clinical and implementation outcomes of incorporating syphilis testing at delivery in a pilot evaluation in maternity wards in Kenya and contribute preliminary data to design a future large-scale hybrid effectiveness-implementation RCT. Aim 3 will gather patient and provider perspectives on root causes of missed opportunities for maternal syphilis testing and treatment. In combination, these studies will contribute key evidence toward syphilis elimination and provide opportunities to develop diverse skills in patient-oriented research. The overall goal of the proposed K24 research aims is to inform policy and clinical practice for pregnant women affected by syphilis and HIV while training patient-oriented researchers. The K24 Career Development Plan includes formal mentorship, leadership, and research training in qualitative research, antenatal syphilis, and directing productive research centers to increase the impact of Dr. Pintye's research and mentorship.

Up to $175K
2031-01-31
health research

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CARE: Community Action Research for Equity – Understanding care and decision making for Incarcerated Patients

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

ABSTRACT: On any given day, nearly 2 million people are incarcerated in the US. People of color, disabled people, LGBTQ people, and people from lower socioeconomic statuses are incarcerated at much higher rates than white, able bodied, cis, straight, economically privileged people. This population experiences high rates of chronic illness and infectious disease prior to incarceration and continue to experience worse health during and after incarceration. The level of healthcare provided in correctional facilities varies, but in all cases when the medical need of a patient exceeds the capabilities of the institution, they are transferred to the community setting for care. While incarcerated patients are entitled to many of the same decision-making and privacy rights as non-incarcerated patients, little is known about how patients form relationships with their care team and make healthcare decisions while incarcerated, particularly in the community hospital setting. While most hospitals have policies on shackling, police presence, and other security measures, our preliminary research indicates that many clinicians are unaware of these policies and even more clinicians are unclear how to navigate care decisions within a complex policy landscape, perpetuating systemic inequities in care delivery. We will use the San Francisco General Hospital as a case study to examine how institutional, local, state, and federal policies converge and the conflicts that may arise as providers and correctional staff implement said policies with a diverse and vulnerable patient population. We will interview local and institutional policy makers from the hospital, the jail, and the sheriff’s department (N=45) and survey clinicians (N=500) about their knowledge, understanding, and utilization of existing policies (Aim 1). Through institutional ethnography, including participation observation and interviews with clinicians (N=50), patients (n=50), and correctional staff (N=25) we will develop a multifaceted understanding of care delivery, models of consent and decision making, and ethical challenges for incarcerated patients in the hospital setting (Aim 2). We will then use methods of Human Centered Design, within a Participatory Action Research framework, to translate empirical research findings into community driven policy and practice solutions (Aim 3). We are intentionally involving people with lived experiences of incarceration in all phases of the research (as co-investigator, research staff, advisory council members, and partners in policy development). We will engage in community-led co-learning of research best practices for collaboration with people impacted by the criminal legal system. Through this research, we will generate the needed evidence to develop community-based policy and practice recommendations to improve care, consent, and decision making for incarcerated patients in the hospital setting, advancing health equity and extending the research capacity of people with lived experience of incarceration. We will advance new understandings of the ethical principles of autonomy and justice for incarcerated patients while removing structural barriers to research through community-led efforts.

Up to $758K
2031-01-31
health research

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Self-Compassion, Health, and Empowerment: A Randomized Controlled Trial for Chinese Immigrant Women Experiencing Intimate Partner Violence

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NINR - National Institute of Nursing Research

ABSTRACT Intimate partner violence (IPV) poses significant social and health challenges, particularly affecting immigrant women who confront increased risk and adverse consequences. Chinese immigrants, the largest Asian ethnic group in the U.S., with over 4 million individuals, have received limited focus in existing IPV research and intervention efforts, despite a high prevalence of IPV reaching nearly 21% within the past year. They face substantial barriers to accessing IPV and mental health services, due to sociocultural factors such as stigma or shame, limited English proficiency, isolation from mainstream American society, unfamiliarity with available resources, and limited availability of linguistically and culturally appropriate services. Moreover, IPV’s substantial and well-documented effects on mental health further exacerbate the challenges faced by this population of women. However, there is a lack of culturally appropriate interventions that address these barriers while improving their acceptability and accessibility to address the mental health needs of abused Chinese immigrant women. To fill this gap, our proposed community-partnered intervention, Self-Compassion, Health, and Empowerment (SHE), adapts a structured safety and empowerment intervention while uniquely incorporating mental health elements, including relaxation and self-compassion meditation, to address abused Chinese immigrant women’s mental health needs. Leveraging mobile health technology, our intervention seeks to overcome barriers such as geographic dispersal, stigma, and privacy concerns that often hinder access to support. Our pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) with 50 abused Chinese immigrant women has shown the feasibility and acceptability of the mobile-based SHE intervention, which forms the basis for this proposal of a fully powered two-arm RCT. The primary aim of the study is to test the efficacy of the mobile-based SHE intervention in improving mental health among Chinese immigrant women experiencing IPV and co-occurring symptoms of depression, anxiety, or posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). We will recruit 364 Chinese immigrant women and randomize them 1:1 to the intervention or attention control group. The 6-week SHE intervention consists of one phone session on IPV safety and empowerment and five weekly relaxation/self-compassion sessions via text. The attention control group will receive 6 weekly nutrition and health sessions, matched in delivery mode, timing, and contact frequency. We will compare the two groups for primary outcomes of depression, anxiety, and PTSD symptoms and the secondary outcome of IPV from baseline to 6-week, 3-month, 6-month, and 12-month follow-ups. Our findings will provide evidence for the application of the mobile-based SHE intervention to support the mental health needs of abused Chinese immigrant women. Our approach is innovative, and there is a high potential for scaling up the intervention to improve access to IPV and mental health support among Chinese immigrant women experiencing IPV.

Up to $638K
2031-02-28
health research

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