The purpose of this study is to see if ustekinumab works to treat children with juvenile psoriatic arthritis (also known as jPsA).
The purpose of this study is to culturally adapt and to assess the acceptability of a self-care system named Patient Reported Outcome - Informed Symptom Management System (PRISMS) (IRB#: 20-1662) in Spanish. The study's goal is to help cancer patients with ostomies and their caregivers to smoothly transition from hospital care to post-treatment self-care at home. Participants will be Spanish Speaking Latino cancer patients who have an ostomy (outpatients).
The purpose of this study is to examine how individuals think about and justify their positions on political issues.
The purpose of this study is to test the efficacy of ZX008 for kids and adults with CDD. We will measure this based on a decrease in motor seizures and using the Clinical Global Impression- Improvement rating scale.
In Aim 1, we will use existing research and expert review to develop new text and pictorial LCC warnings and test the new warnings using online experiments to identify warnings that adult LCC users perceive as most effective. The proposed study will fill critical gaps regarding which characteristics make LCC warning labels most effective and provide needed evidence on how LCC warnings influence LCC behavioral intentions. Our overarching goal is to develop effective LCC warnings that reduce cancer and other health risks.
I aim to examine the impacts of remote schooling on the racial/ethnic achievement gaps in Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools and what mechanisms led to this impact. My study will help map how the switch to remote schooling during the COVID-19 pandemic impacted student achievement, particularly for students from marginalized backgrounds as compared to privileged students.
The goal of this study is to see why people may engage with some organizations but not others, and how facts about organizations can impact engagement.
Examine the impact of the educational interventions on stigmatizing attitudes towards people with mental illness.
This project is about the role of science and data in ocean management. The Big Data revolution is increasing knowledge about oceans and human impacts on them. This knowledge both fuels and is fueled by interest in development and conservation opportunities in oceans. Ocean data science initiatives (ODSIs) use new data and technologies to support work by government and non-government organizations to extend, reform and create new policies for ocean management. This project examines the role of ODSIs in improved ocean management, at global and regional scales, focusing on two key questions: 1) What kinds of new policies are possible based on knowledge generated by ODSIs? 3) How can ODSIs inform policies for ocean management in ways that that support environmental sustainability and human well-being? The project brings together an interdisciplinary team of human geographers, marine ecologists, geospatial data scientists and information scientists to conduct the research. It also engages
Using online surveys to measure level of patient symptoms and seeing how regularly monitoring that impacts a patient's healthcare experience.