July 2, 2024: NIH Collaboratory Fellows Share Updates From the Program

During the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory’s 2024 Annual Steering Committee Meeting in May, 2 of the program’s research fellows described their research and discussed the value of the fellowship experience.

Lindsay Ballengee, a physical therapist and doctoral student in population health sciences at Duke University, said her fellowship research builds on previous NIH Collaboratory work on the intervention delivery complexity tool.

“We surveyed members of this Collaboratory and others to find out where they landed on the different domains of intervention delivery complexity and any changes they made during their trial process,” Ballengee said. “We are analyzing that data and hope to use it to inform other pragmatic trials about the different domains of complexity and how those might come into play when implementing in future trials.”

Kaitlyn McLeod, a cardiovascular disease fellow at the University of Michigan, has worked on 2 projects during her fellowship. One project is helping the Health Equity Core better understand how health equity has been integrated into NIH Collaboratory Trials. The second project is taking the health equity framework and applying it to the Nudge study, an NIH Collaboratory Trial, where McLeod has been looking at how the area deprivation index is an effect modifier for the trial’s primary outcome.

Ballengee and McLeod agreed that one of the strengths of the NIH Collaboratory fellowship is the open learning environment and mentoring that is available from investigators and leaders.

“The most valuable experience from being a part of the Collaboratory has been not only being able to build upon previous work and put my own spin on it and ask my own questions, but just the openness of the members of the Collaboratory to mentoring and brainstorming and them really wanting to see me grow as an investigator and fellow,” Ballengee said.

July 17, 2023: NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Welcomes First Class of Fellows

Headshots of Dr. Stephanie Ibemere and Dr. Kaitlyn McLeod
From left: Dr. Stephanie Ibemere and Dr. Kaitlyn McLeod

The NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory is welcoming its first class of fellows in a new program for early-career investigators with a scholarly interest in pragmatic clinical trials.

"We are very excited to welcome the 2 inaugural fellows to the NIH Pragmatic Trials Collaboratory Fellowship Program and give them the education and tools that they need to launch their careers as pragmatic clinical trials investigators," said Dr. Rosa Gonzalez-Guarda, cochair of the NIH Collaboratory’s Fellowship Program and Health Equity Core.

Dr. Stephanie Ibemere is an assistant professor in the Duke University School of Nursing. Dr. Ibemere will work closely with the Implementation Science Core and the GRACE NIH Collaboratory Trial team during her fellowship year.

Dr. Kaitlyn McLeod is a resident physician in the Internal Medicine Residency Program at the University of Colorado. Dr. McLeod will work closely with the Community Health Improvement Core and the Nudge NIH Collaboratory Trial team during her fellowship year.

"We are delighted that Stephanie and Kaitlyn are joining the NIH Collaboratory as fellows, and we look forward to the insights they will bring to the Cores and NIH Collaboratory Trials," said Dr. Kevin Weinfurt, co–principal investigator of the Coordinating Center and cochair of the new Fellowship Program.

During the 1-year fellowship, which began July 1, 2023, fellows will become members of the NIH Collaboratory program and have access to a wide range of activities and opportunities. Fellows will be active participants in a Core Working Group that aligns with their interests and will also be given education on the fundamentals of designing and conducting successful pragmatic clinical trials.

Working with a NIH Collaboratory Trial investigator mentor and a Core leadership mentor from the NIH Collaboratory, each fellow will complete a project that contributes to the field of pragmatic trials, resulting in a new publishable product or resource. In addition, fellows will participate in the following activities:

  • Regular presentations and discussions with experienced pragmatic trial investigators and leaders in the field
  • Individualized coursework and mentorship
  • Guided research program
  • Professional development training
  • Presentation and publication opportunities
  • Training on health equity as it relates to pragmatic trials

Ibemere and McLeod joined leaders from the NIH Collaboratory and their mentors for a welcome and orientation meeting on July 6 to kick off their fellowship year.