Forbes Magazine Cites Study by Dr. Leah Zullig
Will digital medicine help patients with medication adherence? A study by Dr. Leah Zullig puts forth the case. Read More
Determining Support Services for Caregivers
How do caregivers in the VA Caregiver Support Program use and value supportive services? Courtney Van Houtven, PhD, and team found that first promoting their availability is key, then providing tailored services is a way to meet each caregiver's unique needs. Read More
Lesley Curtis, PhD, Makes Highly Cited List
Forty-four members of Duke’s faculty are included in the 2018 Highly Cited Researchers list compiled by Clarivate Analytics and Web of Science, one from Population Health Sciences.
Researchers Look at Improving Implementation
Researchers look at using technology to improve implementation.
We Need Opioid Prescribing "Best Practices"
Drs. Aaron Mckethan, Hilary Campbell and team write that high-quality opioid prescribing behaviors can reduce the risk of downstream harm, but defining “high quality” is challenging. Read more
Sudha Raman, PhD and Team Look at Trends in ADHD Medication Usage
Published in The Lancet Psychiatry, Dr. Sudha Raman and team discover the yet unknown prevalence of ADHD drug usage across different world regions for children and adults. Read more
What Will it Take to Reverse Childhood Obesity?
Asheley Skinner, PhD, tells PBS Newshour that changing the trajectory of obesity will take broad changes that impact every part of a child's life. Read more.
Courtney Van Houtven, PhD, Invited to Roundtable at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering & Medicine
Dr. Courtney Van Houtven spoke at the roundtable "Quality of Care for People with Serious Illness,"
Leah Zullig Receives AcademyHealth Award
Dr. Leah Zullig received the Carol Weisman and Gary Chase Gender-Based Award from the Women and Gender Health Interest Group.
Is There Racial Bias in Opioid Prescribing?
Dr. Asheley Skinner says there are implicit biases in prescribers' behaviors and that when pain is "poorly defined," Black patients are less likely to receive opioids than white patients.