Researching Rural & Behavioral Health
The Center for Health Outcomes and Population Research fosters a collaborative and supportive environment to build capacity and work toward improving the health of patients and communities using unique data-driven techniques in rural areas of the Midwest.
How We’re Funded
The NIH National Institute of General Medical Sciences funds the Center for Health Outcomes and Population Research. The grant supports a Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (CoBRE) to facilitate the development of rural health in South Dakota. (NIGMS CoBRE P20GM121341)
What We Research
The level of health disparities in our region, coupled with the remote nature of our rural communities, calls for the development of a community and population health research center with a focus on rural populations. The center has expertise in:
- Data science
- Substance use and addiction
- Community partnerships
- American Indian (AI) Health
- Mental Health
- Healthcare services delivery
- Behavioral science
How We Support the Scientific Community
The center supports and mentors junior investigators (project leaders) vested in issues specific to rural and AI health. This leads to greater stability, sustainability and growth of regional research infrastructure. The leadership team provides project leaders with an individualized mentorship plan to enhance their professional skills and further their research goals to become successful, independent investigators.
The center also supports three interdisciplinary cores:
These research support cores provide center affiliates and regional scientists with key expertise and access to the most current approaches.
Our Publications
To learn more about the research center, see the published research under its CoBRE grant.
Meet Our Team
Leadership
Jill Weimer, Ph.D.
Principal Investigator
Clarence Weis
Program Manager
Tyler Sang
Core Director of the Biostatistics Core
Susan Hoover, MD, Ph.D.
Clinical Liaison
External Advisory Committee
Donald Nease Jr., M.D.
Professor, Family Medicine
University of Colorado, Denver
Andrew L. Sussman, PhD, MCRP
Associate Professor
Department of Family and Community Medicine
University of New Mexico
Sterling M. McPherson, PhD
Associate Professor and Assistant Dean for Research
Director of Biostatistics and Clinical Trial Design and the Program of Excellence in Addictions Research
Elson Floyd College of Medicine at Washington State University
Elizabeth Calhoun, PhD, MEd
Professor, Public Health Policy and Management
Associate Director, Population Sciences Cancer Center
Executive Director, Center for Population Science and Discovery
Associate Vice President, Population Science and Discovery
University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ
Project Leaders
Anna Strahm, PhD
Assistant Scientist in Behavioral Sciences at Sanford Research
Project: Maternal stress and blood sugar metabolization during pregnancy, and associations with adverse outcomes
Assistant Professor of Basic Biomedical Sciences at the University of South Dakota
Project: Midwestern changes in substance use and treatment during the COVID-19 pandemic
Santiago Lopez, MD
Associate Scientist at Sanford Research
Project: Outcomes during pediatric lower respiratory tract infections in American Indian children
Pilot Grants and Supplemental Awards
Tyler Sang, PhD, MBA
A Geospatial Analysis of Traumatic Agricultural Injuries in the Upper Midwest
A major barrier to the prevention of agricultural injuries (AI) in the upper Midwest is a lack of knowledge about the frequency, magnitude and characteristics of AI. North Dakota and South Dakota do not participate in national injury surveillance surveys conducted by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Most data about AI in the upper Midwest comes from media reports and self-report surveys sent to self-employed agricultural workers. Therefore, reliable, comprehensive information about AI in the upper Midwest is vital
to understanding the extent of AI in this region and to the development of education programs aimed at preventing AI. The purpose of this study is to characterize the incidence, injury characteristics, geospatial patterns and outcomes of patients with AI who presented to Sanford trauma centers in North Dakota, South Dakota, and Minnesota between 2010 and 2021. We will analyze AI data from Sanford trauma centers in the upper Midwest. AI will be identified through ICD-9 & ICD-10 codes. AI will include all traumatic injuries
occurring on farms, including, but not limited to, farm machinery injuries, falls, motor vehicle accidents, and animal related injuries. Patients of all ages will be included in the analysis.
Center Graduates and Pilot Awardees
Previous Pilot Awardees:
Benson Hsu, MD, MBA Influence of Behavioral Economics Techniques on Medical Decision Making
Lauren Schaefer, PhD Momentary Relationships between Stress and Weight Regulation Behaviors after Bariatric Surgery
Murat Sincan, MD Polygenic risk score phenome-wide association study to identify novel associations
Sabha Ganai, MD, PhD, MPH An Exploration of Rural-Urban Disparities in Colorectal Cancer Care in North Dakota and South Dakota
Center Graduates:
Arielle Deutsch, PhD Leverage Points for Equitable Systemic Change to Reduce Alcohol Exposed Pregnancy
Arielle Seyla, PhD Adolescent substance use and addiction
Emily Griese, Ph.D. Heterogeneity in developmental trajectories from childhood to early adolescence
Arielle Deutsch, PhD Examining how complex systems foster positive or negative outcomes related to the development of alcohol use and romantic/sexual health over age
DenYelle Kenyon, PhD Using Social Network Analysis to Visualize Networks in American Indian Health Research
Jessica Hanson, PhD Public health interventions within Native American communities
Events
Symposiums
Future Events:
Fall 2023 TBD
Past Events:
Annual Health Care Delivery and Population Health Research Symposium
October 28, 2022
Annual Health Care Delivery and Population Health Research Symposium
May 26, 2021
Transdisciplinary Approaches to American Indian and Rural Population
Nov. 7, 2019
Sanford Population Health & Data Collaborative Symposium
Oct. 11, 2018
Population Heath Research Summit “Finding Your Narrative”
April 17-18, 2018