In this month’s TRIbune we’re highlighting digital health research successes. For Tamara Perry, M.D., years of dedication developing an asthma application to help teens got a big shot in the arm with a $3.1 million NIH grant. Her app will be tested with 400 asthma patients over the next five years. Perry used data and a prototype app developed with a TRI pilot award and a follow-up pilot from Arkansas Children’s Research Institute to help secure the NIH funding. Carolyn Greene, Ph.D., said TRI’s ARresearch registry of volunteers was a great way to kick-start enrollment for her digital health study seeking participants with depression. This issue also announces UAMS’ first Digital Health Conference on Nov. 30. Our Research on the Horizon features Rohit Dhall, M.D., who is the local principal investigator on an industry-sponsored Parkinson’s disease study. As always, we feature the latest TRI-cited publications.
Read the October TRIbune.