Dr. Jean Kutner directs this T32-supported research training program. Dr. Kutner is a Professor of Medicine in the Divisions of GIM and Geriatrics and was, until July 1, 2014, Head of the Division of GIM. She has been developing aging research at the University of Colorado since her research and geriatric fellowship training (1994-1997), joining the UCSOM faculty in 1997. She is contact principal investigator for the NINR-funded Palliative Care Research Cooperative Group (PCRC). Her career demonstrates a commitment to: 1) enhancing the evidence base to improve care for older adults with serious illness; 2) mentoring others interested in aging and palliative care research; and 3) developing research, clinical and educational programs and infrastructure aimed at improving care for older persons with serious illness. Dr. Kutner has established a highly successful aging-focused research program addressing fundamental issues in the care of persons with advanced illness, increasing capacity for aging-related research locally and nationally.
Dr. Stacy Fischer Associate Professor of Medicine in the Division of GIM, DOM, UCSOM. Dr. Fischer has been conducting palliative care research for over 15 years with a focus on underserved populations. She developed and tested a culturally tailored patient navigator intervention designed to improve palliative care outcomes for Latinos with cancer, conducting a multi-site study across the state of Colorado, representing urban, rural, and mountain communities. Currently, she is completing an RCT of the intervention in patients with advanced non-cancer medical illness and through a Supplement, in persons with AD/RD. She has received funding from the National Institute of Aging Research (NIA), American Cancer Society (ACS), and National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR). She received pilot grant funding from the National Palliative Care Research Center (NPCRC). She is involved as a Co-I and Site PI for numerous national multi-site trials through her work with the PCRC and is the Director for Site Engagement for the PCRC. She has also recently joined the leadership team of the University of Colorado Comprehensive Cancer Center’s Cancer Control and Prevention Program. Dr. Fischer is also a successful mentor, having mentored a Harold Amos Career Development Awardee, and current ACS CDA and NPCRC CDA awardees. She is mentoring current T32 awardee Dr. Bennett and Affiliated Faculty Drs. Kessler and Singh. As a Director and program faculty, Dr. Fischer mentors T32 trainees interested in palliative care in underserved populations.
Dr. David Bekelman, Professor of Medicine in the Division of GIM, DOM, UCSOM is a T32 co-director and program faculty. Dr. Bekelman’s research aims to improve quality of life in adults with chronic and advanced illnesses. He is a practicing palliative care physician who is a board-certified internist and psychiatrist. His current research tests ways to integrate palliative and psychosocial care into the ongoing care of people with heart failure and lung diseases. He has experience with patient-oriented research and behavioral/health services intervention trials. He has also investigated spirituality and informal caregiving in chronic illness. He is currently PI on two VA Merit Review awards (R01 equivalents). One is a multisite clinical trial of early, primary palliative care in COPD and heart failure (HSR&D IIR 14-346). The other uses a clinician-level Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trial (SMART) to determine the effectiveness of clinician and patient implementation strategies to improve the occurrence of documented goals of care conversations in Veterans with serious medical illness (HSR&D IIR 14-346). Dr. Bekelman is highly regarded as a mentor, receiving the UCSOM Dean’s Master’s Mentoring Award in 2017 and the GIM Best Mentor Award in 2020.
Dr. Hillary Lum Associate Professor of Medicine in the Division of Geriatric Medicine, DOM, UCSOM. Dr. Lum is a primary care geriatrician and palliative care physician researcher. Her program of research focuses on improving care for older adults with serious illness, especially persons living with dementia and their family care partners. She has used designing for dissemination approaches to develop, refine and test novel advance care planning interventions such as an Advance Care Planning Group Visit Model and patient portal-based advance care planning tools. She has received funding from the National Institute on Aging, National Palliative Care Research Center, Palliative Care Research Cooperative, and the Department of Veterans Affairs. She has experience with stakeholder engagement, intervention development and clinical trials, outcomes research, and mixed methods and implementation science. She is currently PI on an NIA R01 to test the efficacy of a multisite clinical trial of the ACP Group Visits intervention for older adults. Dr. Lum is primary mentor for current T32 awardee Dr. Macchi and is Co-Director of the University of Colorado CCTSI’s Clinical Faculty Scholars Program where she mentors four junior faculty health services researchers each year. As a co-director and program faculty for the T32, Dr. Lum mentors T32 trainees interested in dementia, advance care planning, and conducting pragmatic palliative care research.
Name | Degree(s) | Academic Affiliation | Research Expertise | T32 Faculty Collaborators | T32 awardees supporting |
F. Amos Bailey https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/8154365 | MD | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Palliative care health services research | Candrian Fink | |
Elizabeth Bayliss https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/226825 | MD, MSPH | Kaiser Institute for Health Research | Studying and improving the delivery of patient-centered care for persons with multiple medical conditions | Candrian | |
David Bekelman | MD, MPH | GIM, DOM, UCSOM & VA | Improving quality of life in adults with chronic and advanced illnesses | Fairclough | Doyon |
Sheana Bull https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224434 | PhD, MPH | CSPH, UC-AMC | Testing and determining the efficacy of interventions for health promotion using mobile and social media technologies | Boxer | |
Eric Campbell https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/19514733 | PhD | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Survey research methodology; ethical frameworks in research | Lum | |
Heather Coats https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/14824293 | PhD, MS | CON, UC-AMC | Patient-centered communication interventions to optimize quality of life for minority patients with life limiting illness | ||
Diane Fairclough https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224164 | DrPH | CSPH, UC-AMC | Advanced statistical methods | Allen Bayliss Bekelman Boxer Colborn Kessler Kluger Kutner Laudenslager Matlock Meek | Macchi |
Stacey Fisher | MD | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Palliative care in underserved populations | Bekelman | Wan |
R. Mark Gritz https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/3353663 | PhD | HCPR, DOM, UCSOM | Economic analyses; Implementation costs and return on investment of interventions | Kluger Kutner Schilling | |
Jean Kutner https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224405 | MD, MSPH | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Palliative care clinical studies, caregivers, medication deprescribing | Allen Bekelman Candrian Colborn Fairclough Fink Fischer Gritz Kessler Kluger Laudenslager Levy Lum Matlock O’Bryant Schilling Wynia | Amoyal Pensak Bickel Plys Portz Reed Sannes Siler |
Cari Levy https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224675 | MD, PhD | Geriatrics, DOM, UCSOM & VA | Quality of life at the end of life in nursing homes; quality of care in non-institutional care settings | Albright Kutner Lum | |
Hillary Lum | MD, PhD | Geriatrics, DOM, UCSOM & VA | Developing and implementing novel advance care planning interventions for older adults into healthcare system and community-based settings | Allen | |
Kevin Masters https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/230471 | PhD | Dept of Health Psychology, UCD | Religiousness, spirituality, behavioral medicine | Allen Bekelman Matlock | |
Dan Matlock https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224504 | MD, MPH | Geriatrics, DOM, UCSOM | Communication and decision making; implementation science | Allen Bekelman Candrian Fairclough Fischer Kutner Lum McIlvennan | |
Wells Messersmith https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/225824 | MD | Oncology, DOM, UCSOM | Palliative care for older adults with gastrointestinal malignancies | Kessler O’Bryant | |
Jenny Portz https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/12707707 | PhD | GIM, DOM, UC-SOM | Heart failure, m-health, symptoms | Boxer Bekelman | |
Lisa Schilling https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224574 | MD, MPH | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Health services research, clinical and research informatics that support improvements in health outcomes and health care value | Fairclough Gritz Kutner Wynia | |
Jamie Studts | PhD | UCSOM | Cancer prevention and Control | Fischer Lum | |
Matthew Wynia https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/5516545 | MD, MPH | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Patient and physician engagement, stakeholder-driven research, and medical ethics | Glover Kutner Schilling |
Name | Degree(s) | Academic Affiliation | Research Expertise | T32 Faculty Collaborators | T32 awardees supporting |
Larry Allen https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/226050 | MD, MHS | Cardiology, DOM, UCSOM | Aging, palliative care and cardiovascular disease | Bekelman Colborn Fairclough Kutner Lum Matlock Masters McIlvennan | |
Joanna Arch https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/226493 | PhD | Department of Psychology, UC-Boulder | Anxiety and depression among patients with metastatic cancer | Kutner | Plys |
Ben Brewer https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/226749 | PsyD | Hematology & Hematologic Malignancies, DOM, UCSOM | Palliative interventions in stem cell transplant patients and their caregivers | Kolva Sannes | Amoyal Pensak |
Jed Brubaker | |||||
Carey Candrian https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/231383 | PhD | GIM, DOM, UCSOM | Communication and decision making in the context of hospice and palliative care | Kutner Lum Matlock | |
Kathryn Colborn https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/11763981 | PhD | CSPH, UC-AMC | Advanced statistical methods | Allen Fairclough Kutner Lum | Reed |
Regina Fink https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/227649 | PhD, MS | CON and GIM, DOM, UCSOM, UC-AMC | Interventions to improve palliative care for underserved patients with serious illness | Bailey Fischer Kutner | |
Elizabeth Kessler https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/2769063 | MD | Oncology, DOM, UCSOM | Impact of cancer treatment on function & how to best assess and intervene to support patients and caregivers | Fairclough Fischer Kutner Laudenslager Messersmith O’Bryant | |
Benzi Kluger https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/224721 | MD | Dept of Neurology, UCSOM | Neuropalliative care | Bekelman Fairclough Kutner Lum | Macchi |
Carolyn Lefkowits https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/11764061 | MD, MS | Gynecologic Oncology, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, UCSOM | Intersection between surgical oncology and palliative care | Fischer | |
Colleen McIlvennan https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/226349 | PhD, DNP, MS | Cardiology, DOM, UCSOM | Patients with end-stage heart failure who are considering a left ventricular assist device (LVAD) | Allen Matlock | |
Lauren Nicholas | PhD, MPP | DOM-Division of Geriatrics | Health economics, end-of-life care, dementia, Medicare cost & quality | Fischer Lum Matlock | Wan |
Cindy O’Bryant https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/227521 | PharmD | School of Pharmacy, UC-AMC | Geriatric oncology | Kessler Kutner Messersmith | |
Evan Plys | |||||
Sean Reed | PhD, APRN, ACHPN | College of Nursing, UCSOM Division of Geriatrics | Aging, Palliative Care, Health Service Research | Candrian Colborn Kutner Lum Schilling | |
Sarguni Singh https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/11589600 | MD | Hospital Medicine, DOM, UCSOM | Identifying cancer patients at highest risk for poor outcomes after discharge from the acute care setting to a Skilled Nursing Facility (SNF) | Fischer |
Name | Degree(s) | Academic Affiliation | Research Expertise | T32 Faculty Collaborators | T32 awardees supporting |
Jackie Glover https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/225204 | PhD | Department of Pediatrics, UCSOM | Responsible conduct of research | Wynia | |
Shanta Zimmer https://profiles.ucdenver.edu/display/12650015 | MD | UCSOM, Associate Dean of Diversity and Inclusion, Senior Associate | Infectious disease, Medical Education |
CCTSI | Colorado Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute |
CON | College of Nursing |
CSPH | Colorado School of Public Health |
DOM | Department of Medicine |
GIM | General Internal Medicine |
PCRC | Palliative Care Research Cooperative Group |
UC-AMC | University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus |
UCSOM | University of Colorado School of Medicine |
VA | Veterans Affairs Medical Center |
Connie Cole, PhD, DNP, APRN (2022-2024): Dr. Cole’s research interest and clinical expertise include palliative care, pain, and aging. Her research focuses on improving access to palliative care for nursing home residents through improved screening for identification of palliative care needs. Dr. Cole has extensive clinical experience with nursing home residents as a director of nursing, Minimum Data Set (MDS) coordinator, and nurse practitioner. In these roles, she has seen the challenges associated with end-of-life care, pain and symptom management, and the complex care requirements of nursing home residents. Dr. Cole’s goal as a palliative care researcher is to improve the quality of life for nursing home residents through improved access to palliative care, making sure that nursing home residents receive care that is meaningful and person centered, with an emphasis on improving the quality of life in the final months and years of life.
Shaowei Wan, PhD, MS, MA, BPharm (2022-2024); Dr. Shaowei Wan’s research interests focus on end-of-life care disparities and inter-professional team sciences. Her research examines rural disparities in access to end-of-life care among older adults with advanced cancer and the context of care coordination between interprofessional teams for older adults with advanced cancer living in rural to gain access to palliative and hospice care in the cancer care trajectory. Her goal is to develop and evaluate a feasible intervention to address barriers at the health system level to access timely and appropriate treatment mix of palliative and hospice care among rural older adults with advanced cancer. Her long-term career goal is to reduce end-of-life disparities among underserved communities and populations leveraging comprehensive research methodology and team sciences.
C. Robert Bennett PhD, CPNP-AC (2021-2023); Dr. Bennett’s research focuses on the lived experiences of aging young adults who have survived cancer during childhood and are experiencing a secondary cancer as an adult. His research applies descriptive methods, grounded in the Relational Caring Inquiry and Husserlian Phenomenology. Dr. Bennett’s goal as a Palliative Care researcher is to investigate the concept of hope, the impact of hope, and the transitions of hope for aging young adults as a means for decreasing psychological, spiritual, and existential suffering in this population. His long-term goals are to develop future interventions that sustain hope for aging young adults across their lifespan.
Korijna Valenti PhD, MS, MPW (2021-2023); Dr. Valenti’s research focuses on geriatric palliative care for underserved populations by developing interventions that can be used to improve the goals, emotional trajectory, and relationship quality for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender (LGBT) older adult patients, and to improve patient-dyad outcomes. To achieve this goal, Dr. Valenti’s current research examines communication approaches and their impact on a) palliative care practitioners’ (PCPs) utilization of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) data; b) PCPs experiences with LGBT older adult patients (individually and as a dyad); and c) LGBT older adult patient and dyad knowledge of palliative care and their experiences around palliative care communication.
Zachary A. Macchi, MD (2020-2022); Dr. Macchi is a behavioral neurologist from the University of Colorado Anschutz where he also completed his residency in neurology and subspeciality training. His research uses qualitative and quantitative approaches to understand factors which affect caregivers of patients living with Parkinson’s disease, looking at determinants of caregiver burden while also examining patient behaviors that affect patient and caregiver outcomes, like aggression and agitation.
Katherine Doyon, PhD, RN (2019-2021); Dr. Doyon’s mission is to design innovative methods to assess and improve communication between clinicians and patients with serious illness. To achieve this goal, her current work is focused on a communication coaching intervention designed to improve nurse perceived self-efficacy in spiritual communication and African American patients with heart failure.
Shauna Siler, PhD (2018-2020); The focus of Dr. Siler’s research is on integrating spiritual care into palliative care and implementation of community-based palliative care interventions for minority populations.
Evan Plys, PhD (2018-2020); The focus of Dr. Plys’ research is on quality of life of older adults with physical and/or cognitive limitations due to serious illness in residential care settings.
Kathleen Bickel, MD, MPhil, MS, (2017-2019); Dr. Bickel is examining the hypothesis that patients with a diagnosis of PTSD are more likely to have increased acute health care utilization at the end-of-life, using a retrospective cohort study of chronically ill Veterans receiving VA health care benefits dying between 2010-2015. Using multivariate regression, Dr. Bickel will determine if PTSD is associated with increased end-of-life health care utilization. Dr. Bickel also hypothesizes that the effect of PTSD on end-of-life will vary depending on the primary chronic illness, it will be important to accurately characterize a veteran’s primary chronic illness at time of death. These findings will provide baseline information about the scope of this problem so that appropriate interventions can be developed.
Sean M. Reed, PhD, APN, ACNS-BC, ACHPN, (2017-2019); The focus of Dr. Reed’s research is on the design and testing of economic and predictive models aimed to improve the delivery of care for the seriously ill.
Jennifer Dickman Portz, PhD, MSW, (2016-2018); Dr. Portz’s mission is to advance social work research in geriatric palliative care by developing digital health interventions that can be used by older adults with advanced illnesses, their caregivers, and family to effectively improve patient-family centered outcomes. To achieve this goal, her current research is focused in three related areas: 1) identification of outcomes and needs important to patients with chronic disease and advanced illness 2) creation, study, and dissemination of digital health for older adult users, and 3) chronic disease self-management.
Nicole Amoyal Pensak, PhD (2015- 2016); Dr. Amoyal Pensak’s research focuses on improving distress management in patients and caregivers of adults with serious illnesses.
Tim Sannes, PhD (2015- 2017); Dr. Sannes’ research aims to develop new and improved support mechanisms for patients and their family members facing serious illness. Specifically, he seeks to determine if stress marker data can be translated into meaningful strategies for patients and their caregivers and investigate if emerging biomarker data influences decision-making and behavior.
All T32-funded trainees will be postdoctoral physician scientists or PhD scientists who have indicated substantial interests in learning translational or clinical research that is relevant to aging and palliative care. Upon completion of the program, the trainees will be expected to have mastered basic technical aspects of research and to have progressed to an independent stage of developing their own ideas and projects.
Coursework: As a T32 trainee, you will be required to take the following courses or equivalent (or demonstrate equivalent prior training):
Course Name (all courses are semester long) | Course number | Credits (total 15) |
---|---|---|
Applied Biostatistics I and II | BIOS 6601 and 6602 | 3 credits each |
Design of Clinical Trials and Experiments | CLSC 6648 | 3 credits |
Introduction to Health Information Technology | CLSC 6800 | 3 credits |
Scientific Writing (grants & manuscripts) | CLSC 7101 and 7102 | 1 credit each |
Critical Appraisal Seminars in Clinical Science | CLSC 6270 | 1 credit |
As required by the NIH, you must complete 8 hours of training in the responsible conduct of research. This requirement may be fulfilled by taking the CLSC courses 7150 (Ethics) and 7151 (Responsible Conduct of Human Research), the PHCL course 7605 (Ethics in Research) or the BIOS course 7605 (Ethics: Computational Bioscience Research) or via the seminar series offered by University of Colorado Clinical research Support Center https://research.cuanschutz.edu/regulatory-compliance/home/research-integrity/responsible-conduct-of-research-training . This requirement must be completed in Year 1 of the award.
Additional courses will be selected from the CLSC catalogue by the trainee and his or her mentor(s) to best fit the future research goals of the trainee. The course work plan will be part of the required Career Development Plan (CDP). T32 trainees will have the option of completing the requirements for award of a Master's degree in Clinical Investigation.
Please provide the following:
Application Form (PDF)
Please refer to the T32 Flyer for more information.
Send or email your materials to:
Danielle Kline
General Internal Medicine
Department of Medicine
Academic Office 1, room 8411
12631 E 17th Ave, Mail Stop B180
Aurora, CO 80045
danielle.kline@cuanschutz.edu