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Florence Momplaisir, MD, MSHP

Dr. Florence Marie Momplaisir, MD, MSHP, FACP is an Associate Professor of Medicine (Infectious Diseases) and Vice Chief in the Division of Infectious Diseases at the Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. She is also a Senior Fellow at the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics. As Director of the Penn Center For AIDS Research (CFAR) Implementation Science Core, Dr. Momplaisir leads the provision of technical assistance and consultative services for HIV implementation science research. She also co-leads the Penn CFAR Scholars Program and the Summer Program for Infectious Disease Research (SPIDR)—initiatives designed to cultivate interest in biomedical research and academic medicine among students, especially those focused on HIV or ID. She is also a member of the George W. Counts Interest Group within the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA).

Dr. Momplaisir’s clinical research centers on peer- and organizational-led behavioral interventions aimed at improving HIV care continuum outcomes. She focuses particularly on women’s health, including integrating sexual and reproductive health into HIV care and enhancing postpartum retention and viral suppression among women with HIV. Her work is distinguished by the use of mixed-methods, community-based, and implementation science approaches.

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Peter F. Cronholm, MD, MSCE, CAQHPM, FAAFP

I am Professor and Vice Chair for Research in the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health (DFMCH) at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania (UPenn). I have additional training in biostatistics, mixed methods, and epidemiology with content expertise in program evaluation, implementation science, and the science of community engagement.

My research has focused on community-based, participatory health services regarding: 1) Integration of trauma-informed care and primary prevention strategies into systems of care; 2) Advancing the use of mixed methodologies and patient-reported outcomes (PRO) into research and implementation paradigms through the science of community engagement; and 3) Improving models of care for medically and socially complex patients with a focus on primary care settings.

I have developed and serve as the Director of the University of Pennsylvania’s Mixed Methods Research Lab (MMRL) – A university Service Center housed within DFMCH – to foster the use of qualitative and mixed methods research methodologies with a focus on integrating key stakeholder perspectives and goals into research designs. The MMRL supports more than 60 mixed methods and qualitative studies annually with multiple projects supporting the training of investigators in mixed and qualitative methods.

I have extensive experience in the science of community engagement having served as the Principal Investigator on three; a Co-Investigator on one; and an engagement consultant on four PCORI Engagement Awards. I am leading the engagement core for a PCORI PLACER clinical trial and have supported federally funded initiatives developing PRO measures and clinical trial dissemination efforts implementing identified best-practices.

EPID 6290
Fall term (second half of term)
0.5
Elective

The course will cover the basics of R, and an overview of some common epidemiological uses of R. The aims of the course are: 1. To provide enough familiarity with R to be able to conduct the kind of routine analytical methods that are necessary for epidemiological analysis and publication, and, 2. To introduce students to the kinds of analyses and approaches to epidemiology that cannot be conducted with Stata or other similar software.

Are you a researcher at Penn in need of a REDCap project but short on time or technical support? The REDCap Development Group, within the Clinical Research Collaboration Unit, provides expert, fee-for-service support to investigators and research teams at the University of Pennsylvania.

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Researchers from a recent study involving two CCEB Senior Scholars compared the effects to glaucoma treatments, which served as an active neutral comparator. Read more.

Authors

Tat-Thang Vo, Samrat Roy, Ting Ye, Askhan Erterfaie, Thanh Phuong Pham Nguyen, James Flory, Charles E Leonard, Dylan S Small, Sean Hennessey

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CCEB Senior Scholars collaborated with other experts in a recent study to evaluate the variations in healthcare for IBD patients by race and ethnicity. Read more.

Authors

Abraham Segura, Colleen Brensinger, Virginia Pate, Shazia M Siddique, Lauren Parlett, Andres Hurtado-Lorenzo, Michael David Kappelman, James D Lewis

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Experts within Penn Medicine and the CCEB formed a team to develop an artificial intelligence (AI) machine-learning algorithm to detect if colonoscopy bowel preparation was complete by analyzing photos of stool sent via text messages from patients.

Authors

Chethan Ramprasad, Divya Saini, Henry Del Carmen, Lev Krasnovsky, Rajat Chandra, Ryan Mcgregor, Russell T Shinohara, Eric Eaton, Meghna Gummadi, Shivan Mehta, James D Lewis

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To assess current progress, a team of Penn Medicine faculty studied the relationship between patient experiences within the University of Pennsylvania Health System (UPHS) and race, ethnicity, and other sociodemographic characteristics. Read more.

Authors

Jeromy W Gotschall, Robert Fitzsimmons, Daniel B Shin, Junko Takeshita

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