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.

Grand Rounds January 31, 2025: Advancing Rural Back Pain Outcomes Using Rehabilitation Telehealth (ARBOR-Telehealth): Early Progress and Lessons Learned (Richard L. Skolasky, ScD; Kevin H. McLaughlin, DPT)

Speakers

Richard L. Skolasky, ScD
Professor, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery

Kevin H. McLaughlin, DPT
Assistant Professor, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation

Keywords

Back Pain; Rural Health; Telehealth

Key Points

  • Low back pain (LBP) is the most common cause of disability globally and in the U.S. It’s the largest driver of U.S. healthcare spending growth and a top non-cancer reason for opioid prescriptions.
  • Physical therapy (PT) is a first-line treatment for LBP. It may include exercise, hands-on interventions, and modalities. These methods are cost-effective and decrease the risk of opioid use and surgery. However, due to barriers around the requisite travel, missed work, etc., only 7 – 13% of patients with LBP attend PT.
  • LBP patients in rural areas, where there are higher rates of opioid use and high-impact chronic pain, attend PT less frequently. PT is less accessible than it is in metropolitan areas; there are up to 40% fewer therapists per person; and the travel distance required to get to a clinic is farther.
  • PT was provided virtually (AKA telerehabilitation) during the pandemic, but the effectiveness of telerehabilitation for chronic LBP is unknown. Notably, not all components of PT can be delivered by video visit.
  • The research team’s aims include examining the effectiveness of risk-informed telerehabilitation in reducing LBP-related disability and comparing the prevalence of opioid use among those receiving telerehabilitation and education at 12 weeks.
  • The team is currently in the enrollment phase. They will begin disseminating their results in September 2028.
  • The research team randomized half the group to risk-informed telerehabilitation and the other half to an educational control group. Both groups received best practice advice through the study website, and the control group received eight video visits with a physical therapist over two months.
  • Community engagement strategies include a patient advisory panel and stakeholder advisory committee made up of physical therapists, primary care providers, and rural and public health advocates.

Discussion Themes

One challenge to flag for future studies is that many patients requested virtual appointments outside of office hours. However, the therapists weren’t able to accommodate these requests.

Another challenge is the inconsistent quality of calls between participants. Most folks have access to a smart device; not everyone has access to a desktop, laptop, or tablet, which are preferred for video calls. To address this, the research team is sending participants a phone stand in advance. They also provide basic exercise equipment, including resistance bands and a yoga mat.

While some patients feel a lack of connection with their therapists via telerehabilitation, others have reported that they felt the connection was stronger given the one-on-one nature of the appointments.