Dr. Carlozzi Receives New Grant From The Neilsen Foundation!
Dr. Noelle Carlozzi receives a new grant award from the Neilsen Foundation
To develop new measures using state-of-the-art methods that maximize measurement validity, precision, sensitivity, efficiency, and clinical relevance.
To provide expert consultation for measurement selection and application to evaluate clinical questions and interventions.
To utilize novel measurement systems and strategies to inform the creation and refinement of interventions to improve the HRQOL of those we care for.
CODA is working with a growing number of researchers at the University of Michigan and at institutions across the United States.
Dr. Noelle Carlozzi receives a new grant award from the Neilsen Foundation
CODA team attends Team Hope Walks to support the Huntington’s Disease Society of America
Dr. Carlozzi awarded the 2021 ACRM Mitchell Rosenthal Mid-Career award.
On tonights show, we are having Dr. Noelle Carlozzi, who is an associate professor of physical medicine and rehabilitation, director of the Center for Clinical Outcomes Development and Application at Michigan Medicine, and she is the leading author in a new special edition of Rehabilitation Psychology that examine quality of life in caregivers of persons with TBI.
A moderate-to-severe traumatic brain injury affects not only the patient but their caregiver, whose sleep, physical health, social relationships and mood can be negatively affected by the strains of caring for a brain-injured individual.
Teva Pharmaceuticals recently awarded Dr. Carlozzi $250,000 to examine the role of chorea in the day-to-day experience of symptoms (sleep, fatigue and anxiety) and functioning (physical activity and social participation) in individuals with Huntington Disease (HD).
New research uses a unique survey tool to understand how caring for a person with TBI impacts the caregiver’s mental health and well-being.
COD Lab awarded $2.9+ million grant from the NINR/NIH
Cutting-edge patient-centered “smart tests” will allow clinicians to evaluate specific quality of life concerns for individuals with Huntington’s disease.
Caregivers of individuals with traumatic brain injury (TBI) undergo considerable stress that can negatively impact their health-related quality of life (HRQOL), a multidimensional construct reflecting the impact of a disease, disability, or its treatment, on mental, physical, and social well-being.