December 22, 2025: Rural Health Symposium Opens Registration, Announces Call for Abstracts

The Duke University School of Nursing will convene healthcare professionals, educators, researchers, community leaders, and policymakers for a 1-day symposium dedicated to reducing rural health disparities across North Carolina through collaboration and innovation.

On April 20, 2026, from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina (and virtually via livestream), participants will come together for dynamic presentations, panels, poster sessions, and discussions with guests, including leaders from ECU Health, Sanford Health, UT-Arlington, and the NC Department of Health and Human Services. A reception will follow the program.

The deadline for abstract submission is February 9, 2026. See more information about the program below.

Did you know the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory supports several innovative pragmatic clinical trials to improve healthcare for rural and remote populations? Learn more about:

  • AIM-CP: Adapting and Implementing a Nurse Care Management Model to Care for Rural Patients with Chronic Pain
  • APA-SM: Personalized Auricular Point Acupressure for Chronic Pain Self-Management in Rural Populations
  • ARBOR-Telehealth: Advancing Rural Back Pain Outcomes Through Rehabilitation Telehealth
  • BeatPain Utah: Nonpharmacologic Pain Management in Federally Qualified Health Centers Primary Care Clinics
  • LungSMART: Population Health Management Approaches to Increase Lung Cancer Screening in Community Health Centers
  • RAMP: Reaching Rural Veterans: Applying Mind-Body Skills for Pain Using a Whole Health Telehealth Intervention

1st Annual Duke University School of Nursing Rural Health Symposium: Innovative Solutions to Addressing Rural Health Disparities

1st Annual Duke University School of Nursing Rural Health Symposium: Innovative Solutions to Addressing Rural Health Disparities

Monday, April 20, 9am-3pm, with Reception to Follow

Duke University Campus and Livestream Webinar

Register Now and Submit Abstracts by February 9

You are warmly invited to participate in the 1st Annual Duke University School of Nursing Rural Health Symposium, a one-day event that will convene healthcare professionals, educators, researchers, community leaders, and policymakers to address rural health disparities across North Carolina through collaboration and innovation.

Date: April 20, 2025
Time: 9:00 AM – 3:00 PM
Location: Duke University (with virtual livestream option)

The symposium will feature dynamic presentations, panel discussions, poster sessions, and networking opportunities, including a closing reception. Distinguished speakers will include:

  • Trisha Baise, ECU Health
  • Erica DeBoer, Sanford Health
  • Elizabeth Merwin, University of Texas at Arlington
  • Maggie Sauer, North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services

We invite you to submit abstracts by February 9 to share your research, innovations, and best practices that advance rural health.

Register today: https://duke.is/ruralhealth

Your participation will help foster meaningful dialogue and actionable strategies to improve health outcomes in rural communities. We look forward to your contributions and engagement in this important event.

December 15, 2025: A Year of Trial Results and Innovations From the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory

A collage of journal covers with the label "NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory 2025 Publications Roundup"In 2025, NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory investigators published new study designs and trial results, shared insights from program leadership, and developed innovative methods in the design, conduct, implementation, and dissemination of pragmatic clinical trials. Their work included perspectives from the Coordinating Center, best practices from the Core Working Groups, and results from the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

The program contributed 45 articles to the peer-reviewed literature this year, including the primary results of the ACP PEACE, BackInAction, HiLo, INSPIRE, and PRIM‑ER trials. Cross-Core and cross-Trial collaborations led to the sharing of important lessons from the conduct of multiple NIH Collaboratory Trials.

The total number of published articles from the program reached 386.

Coordinating Center

Cross-Core and Cross-Trial Collaborations

Distributed Research Network

Core Working Groups

Biostatistics and Study Design Core

Community Health Improvement Core

Electronic Health Records Core

Ethics and Regulatory Core

Health Care Systems Interactions Core

Patient-Centered Outcomes Core

NIH Collaboratory Trials

ABATE Infection

ACP PEACE

ARBOR-Telehealth

BackInAction

BeatPain Utah

BEST-ICU

EMBED

FM-TIPS

GGC4H

GRACE

HiLo

I CAN DO Surgical ACP

IMPACt-LBP

INSPIRE

iPATH

LIRE

MOMs Chat & Care Study

NOHARM

Nudge

OPTIMUM

PRIM-ER

SPOT

TAICHIKNEE

December 8, 2025: New Podcast Explores Partnership Between Rural-Focused Research Network and BeatPain, an NIH Collaboratory Trial

In a new episode of the Rethinking Clinical Trials Podcast, Julie Fritz of the University of Utah and Sebastian Tong of the University of Washington expanded on key takeaways from their recent Grand Rounds presentation, “Integrating the BeatPain Study With PRaCTICe, a New Network Research Hub of the CARE for Health Initiative.”

Listen to the podcast. For alerts about new episodes, subscribe for free on Spotify, Amazon Music, Apple Podcasts, or SoundCloud.

In an effort to connect patients in rural areas with innovative care, the Primary Care Rural and Frontier Clinical Trials Innovation Center (PRaCTICe) partnered with BeatPain. In the podcast, Fritz and Tong discuss what made the partnership a good fit.

“The BeatPain study was meeting a need that clinicians that patients had identified: access to non-pharmacological treatments for chronic pain that are evidence-based in many places there just wasn’t access to physical therapy,” said Tong.

Roughly a year into their collaboration, PRaCTICe had referred 165 patients to the BeatPain team, 95% of which were rural residents. Fritz and Tong each shared some of their lessons learned around building trust and capacity in low resource settings.

“Local people who support what you’re doing, that you build relationships with so they know that you’re doing the best you can by the participants that come out of their clinics, I think that’s been key to building successful partnerships. Both at the clinical level and at the patient level,” said Fritz.

BeatPain Utah, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, is comparing the effectiveness of nonpharmacologic intervention strategies for patients with back pain seeking care in federally qualified health centers throughout the state of Utah.

Fritz is the principal investigator for BeatPain Utah and a distinguished professor of physical therapy and athletic training at the University of Utah. Tong is a co–principal investigator for AIM-CP, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, and an associate professor of family medicine at the University of Washington.

October 8, 2025: Engaging Rural Communities in Pragmatic Clinical Trials, in This Week’s Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds

In this Friday's Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds, Julie Fritz of the University of Utah and Sebastian Tong of the University of Washington will present "Engaging Rural Communities in Pragmatic Clinical Trials: Leveraging the CARE for Health Initiative Hubs to Enhance Enrollment for BeatPain."

The Grand Rounds session will be held on Friday, October 10, 2025, at 1:00 pm eastern.

BeatPain Utah, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, is comparing the effectiveness of nonpharmacologic intervention strategies for patients with back pain seeking care in federally qualified health centers throughout the state of Utah.

Fritz is the principal investigator for BeatPain Utah and a distinguished professor of physical therapy and athletic training at the University of Utah. Tong is a co–principal investigator for AIM-CP, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, and an associate professor of family medicine at the University of Washington.

Join the online meeting.

July 2, 2025: Researchers Share Tips for Embedding Pragmatic Trials Into Primary Care Settings

Headshots of Drs. Wendy Weber, Julie Fritz, Natalia Morone, and Sebastian TongAlthough the need for pragmatic research in primary care settings is great, conduct of pragmatic clinical trials in these settings remains nascent. In a session at the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s 2025 Annual Steering Committee Meeting, Wendy Weber of the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) led a discussion about how to expand pragmatic research into primary care settings.

The panelists included Julie Fritz, principal investigator (PI) for BeatPain Utah; Natalia Morone, PI for OPTIMUM; and Sebastian Tong, co-PI for AIM-CP. They shared some of the challenges of conducting research in primary care.

  • Primary care physicians have multiple competing demands for attention and focus, and a range of topics to cover in a single visit.
  • The expectation of being offered participation in clinical trials is lower in primary care than in specialty visits.
  • There are fewer resources that can be diverted to research in primary care, especially time and personnel.

Key Takeaways

How do we adapt pragmatic clinical trials to primary care?

Identify relevant and meaningful research questions

The panelists suggested that, when planning a trial, investigators should think about the primary care setting and consider what problems keep clinicians up at night. Research will be easier to implement if it helps alleviate these problems.

“In primary care, [primary care physicians] are looking at the entire person,” Tong said. “There has to be value added in how we care for the patients with the condition under study, either where the [physician] sees a difference in their patients’ lives or their own lives with respect to reduced burden,” he said.

The panelists also suggested that, for community health centers, there are certain conditions that are linked to data reporting standards, and aligning research with these standards will make studies easier to champion.

Adapt to different kinds of primary care settings

The panelists stressed the need for adaptably and flexibility in intervention delivery because all primary care settings are different. If  possible, researchers should tailor the workflow at each site in a way that is familiar to providers. the panelists also suggested that initial engagement by external researchers is best made with someone who is trusted at the site.

Some clinics, including community health centers, may be new to research and may need additional support. Many do not have an institutional review board or a Federalwide Assurance number, and many do not have experience using the electronic health record for research and developing data use agreements.

About the Trials

  • BeatPain Utah, supported by the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR), is comparing the effectiveness of nonpharmacologic interventions delivered via telehealth for patients with back pain seeking care in federally qualified health centers in Utah.
  • OPTIMUM, supported by NCCIH, is assessing the impact of a group-based mindfulness intervention for patients with chronic back pain under usual care circumstances in the primary care setting.
  • AIM-CP, supported by NINR, is testing the implementation of a care management program to address disparate access to nonpharmacological treatments for chronic pain in rural populations.

This summer, we are sharing highlights from the 2025 Annual Steering Committee Meeting.  Access the complete collection of meeting materials.

January 6, 2025: Fritz and Rhon to Present Strategies for Pain Management in the Military Health System

Headshots of Dr. Julie Fritz and Dr. Dan RhonIn an upcoming session of the VA Spotlight on Pain Management Cyberseminars series curated by the Pain Management Collaboratory (PMC), Julie Fritz and Dan Rhon will present “Supporting Whole Person Pain Management in the Military Health System.” The session will be held on Tuesday, January 7, from 11:00 am to 12:00 pm eastern.

Improving care for persons with chronic musculoskeletal pain is a priority in the Military Health System. The Military Health System is supporting a shift towards more holistic, whole-person, approaches to pain management. The presenters of this seminar have been researching strategies to implement holistic pain management strategies in the Military Health System and evaluating ways to provide pain care that aligns with the DoD/VA Stepped Care Model for Pain Management.

Fritz is the principal investigator of BeatPain Utah, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, and is a distinguished professor of physical therapy and athletic training and the associate dean for research in the University of Utah’s College of Health. Rhon is a professor of rehabilitation medicine at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences.

Registration is required for participation this live web conference, but there is no cost. Continuing education credits are available for several disciplines for participants who are affiliated with the VA.

For more information, visit the Cyberseminar registration page.

About the PMC

The PMC is an important tri-government agency partnership involving the National Institutes of Health and Departments of Defense and Veterans Affairs that supports a growing number of large-scale, multisite, pragmatic clinical trials of nonpharmacological approaches for the management of pain and common co-occurring conditions in military and Veteran health systems. Launched in 2017, the originally supported 11 pragmatic trials are nearing completion and are ready to present early findings, lessons learned in the conduct of the trials, and future directions and opportunities for implementation of important findings and products and for future research.

December 12, 2024: A Year of Innovations and Insights From the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory

A graphic showing a collection of journal covers.In 2024, experts from the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory published the results of newly completed studies, shared insights from program leadership, and developed innovative methods in the design, conduct, and analysis of pragmatic clinical trials. Their work included perspectives from the Coordinating Center, best practices from the Core Working Groups, and results from the NIH Collaboratory Trials.

The program contributed more than 30 articles to the peer-reviewed literature this year, including the primary results of the ICD-Pieces and Nudge trials. Several cross-Core and cross-Trial collaborations led to the sharing of important lessons from the conduct of multiple NIH Collaboratory Trials.

The total number of published articles from the program surpassed 340.

Coordinating Center

Cross-Core and Cross-Trial Collaborations

Core Working Groups

Biostatistics and Study Design Core

Electronic Health Records Core

Ethics and Regulatory Core

Community Health Improvement Core

Implementation Science Core

Patient-Centered Outcomes Core

NIH Collaboratory Trials

ABATE Infection

BackInAction

BeatPain Utah

EMBED

FM-TIPS

GGC4H

GRACE

I CAN DO Surgical ACP

ICD-Pieces

LIRE

NOHARM

Nudge

OPTIMUM

PRIM-ER

PROVEN

SPOT

STOP CRC

TSOS

October 1, 2024: NIH CARE for Health Issues Awards to Inaugural Research Network Hubs

CARE for Health logoThe NIH Communities Advancing Research Equity for Health™, or CARE for Health™, program announced 3 inaugural hubs for its primary care–focused clinical research network. These awards are part of a pilot project to test the feasibility of a research network that expands research opportunities to primary care settings. NIH envisions this approach will accelerate research advances for adoption into everyday healthcare to improve health outcomes and health equity for everyone.

Each of the 3 Research Network Hubs will serve rural communities and participate in existing NIH-funded clinical studies. CARE for Health will expand the reach of existing NIH-funded studies by matching them to established rural primary care research networks.

For example, the award to Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU) will engage with BeatPain Utah, an NIH Collaboratory Trial focused on patients with back pain living in rural and low-income communities heavily impacted by the opioid epidemic. BeatPain Utah will be able to recruit from the OHSU network of federally qualified health centers with practices in rural locations as one of the first 3 trials linked to CARE for Health.

Learn more about the 3 Research Network Hub awards.

June 27, 2024: NIH HEAL Initiative Turns Attention to Pragmatic Trials in Rural Communities

Three of the newest NIH Collaboratory Trials are supported through the NIH HEAL Initiative℠, or Helping to End Addiction Long-Term Initiative℠, reflecting a special emphasis on developing strategies for the management of chronic pain in rural and remote populations.

“There are many known disparities between urban and rural populations,” said Karen Kehl, a program director at the National Institute of Nursing Research (NINR). “And when we talk about chronic pain, we know that there’s a higher incidence and a higher severity of pain in rural populations, and yet they don’t have access to many of the effective solutions that we have,” Kehl added.

We recently spoke with Kehl, Julie Fritz of the BeatPain Utah trial, and the principal investigators of the AIM-CP, ARBOR-Telehealth, and RAMP trials at the NIH Collaboratory’s 2024 Annual Steering Committee Meeting. They discussed the progress of their studies and the importance of supporting healthcare and promoting health equity in rural communities through pragmatic research.

AIM-CP

AIM-CP will test the implementation of a care management program to address inequities in access to nonpharmacological treatment for chronic pain in rural populations. The principal investigators are Kushang Patel and Sebastian Tong of the University of Washington. The study is supported by NINR. Learn more about AIM-CP.

ARBOR-Telehealth

ARBOR-Telehealth will evaluate the use of a telehealth physical therapy strategy for patients who present to primary care clinics with low back pain in rural communities. The principal investigators are Richard Skolasky and Kevin McLaughlin of Johns Hopkins University. The study is supported by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. Learn more about ARBOR-Telehealth.

RAMP

RAMP will evaluate the use of a 12-week mind-body skills training program for rural veterans with pain, including a one-on-one session with a “whole health coach” followed by 11 weekly group sessions to include prerecorded expert-led education videos, mind-body skills training and practice, and group discussions. The principal investigators are Diana Burgess and Roni Evans of the University of Minnesota and Katherine Hadlandsmyth of the University of Iowa. The study is supported by NINR. Learn more about RAMP.

Learn more about the NIH Collaboratory Trials.