Join CHER for this year’s virtual, live training! UNC CHER’s Health Equity Summer Intensive (HESI) aligns with the UNC Center for Health Equity Research’s mission by creating space for community leaders, health care professionals, and academics to learn new tools for health equity research. The Center is hosting a two-part training on innovative methods and approaches to conducting health equity research. HESI will introduce you to new research methods and tools that help researchers consider equity across all stages of their research, from idea conception, to budgeting, to dissemination.
*** Register by June 16, 2021 ***
This year’s registration is completed through a two-part process. Please complete both steps to secure spot.
Note: Each part will have a limited number of attendees; we will update the website when registrations are full and will shift to waitlist.
Pricing
*No refunds will be provided. Transfer of registrations can be considered.
For Part I or II | Part I and II |
Community Partner: $225 Student: $225 UNC CHER Associate/Affiliate/Staff: $250 Regular: $300 | Community Partner: $400 Student: $400 UNC CHER Associate/Affiliate/Staff: $450 Regular: $550 |
If you have any questions about the 2021 Health Equity Summer Intensive, please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Co-sponsored by the NC TraCS Institute
Join CHER for this year’s virtual, live training! UNC CHER’s Health Equity Summer Intensive (HESI) aligns with the UNC Center for Health Equity Research’s mission by creating space for community leaders, health care professionals, and academics to learn new tools for health equity research. The Center is hosting a two-part training on innovative methods and approaches to conducting health equity research. HESI will introduce you to new research methods and tools that help researchers consider equity across all stages of their research, from idea conception, to budgeting, to dissemination.
*** Register by June 16, 2021 ***
This year’s registration is completed through a two-part process. Please complete both steps to secure spot.
Note: Each part will have a limited number of attendees; we will update the website when registrations are full and will shift to waitlist.
Pricing
*No refunds will be provided. Transfer of registrations can be considered.
For Part I or II | Part I and II |
Community Partner: $225 Student: $225 UNC CHER Associate/Affiliate/Staff: $250 Regular: $300 | Community Partner: $400 Student: $400 UNC CHER Associate/Affiliate/Staff: $450 Regular: $550 |
If you have any questions about the 2021 Health Equity Summer Intensive, please email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Co-sponsored by the NC TraCS Institute
Join a live training session for the N3C Data Enclave. Users of all types can learn how to navigate the N3C, utilize the Enclave and resources it provides, and learn how to better achieve their analytical goals. This orientation is split into 2 sessions – Session A and Session B. These orientations are ongoing and will alternate week by week. Session A is recommended before attending Session B
Session A is for those who want to learn about N3C, as well as how to engage with project teams and access the data.
Topics include:
Note: This orientation is held alternating Tuesdays | 8-9:30am PT/11am-12:30pm ET
The UNC Health Office of Health Equity and the Health Disparities Program at the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research present How Inequality Kills: Equity as a Health System Imperative with David Ansell, MD, MPH, from Rush University.
Ansell is a 1978 graduate of SUNY Upstate Medical College. He did his medical training at Cook County Hospital in Chicago. He spent 13 years at Cook County as an attending physician and ultimately was appointed Chief of the Division of General Internal Medicine at Cook County Hospital. From 1995 to 2005 he was Chairman of Internal Medicine at Mount Sinai Chicago. He was recruited to Rush University Medical Center as its inaugural Chief Medical Officer in 2005, a position he held until 2015. His research and advocacy has been focused on eliminating health inequities. In 2011 he published a memoir of his times at County Hospital, County: Life, Death and Politics at Chicago’s Public Hospital. His latest book, The Death Gap: How Inequality Kills, was published in 2017.
The REDCap Open Training Session will review using surveys and provide ample time to answer any questions REDCap users might have.
Our current REDCap trainings are offered as webinar-only.
REDCap is a secure web application that can be used to build and manage case report forms, surveys and other data capture mechanisms for clinical research. NC TraCS provides training classes to assist you in getting started with building REDCap data collection forms for your research projects.
Current REDCap training offerings include:
For more information, please visit our REDCap webpage.
This NIH Collaboratory Rethinking Clinical Trials Grand Rounds features a panel moderated by Emily O’Brien, PhD, Associate Professor, Department of Population Health Sciences, Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University School of Medicine.