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DUKE UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER
CURRICULUM VITAE
for
Permanent Record
and the
Appointments and Promotions Committee
Date Prepared: October 2017
Name: (complete with degrees) Ryan Jeffrey Shaw, PhD
Primary academic appointment: Duke University School of Nursing
Primary academic department: Duke University School of Nursing
Secondary academic appointment: Duke Center for Applied Genomics & Precision Medicine
Present academic rank and title: Associate Professor, Elizabeth C. Clipp Term Chair of Nursing
Date and rank of first Duke Faculty appointment July 1, 2013
Nursing Licensure: North Carolina License # 266297
Date of License: 2013
New York State License # 553142-1
Date of License: 2004
Current specialty certification(s): None
Citizen of: USA
E-mail: [email protected]
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Education:
Institution Date Degree Major/Minor
High School Fuquay-Varina High School,
Fuquay-Varina, NC
2000 Diploma
College University of Miami 2004 BSN Nursing
Graduate
Schools
New York University 2008 MS Nursing
Informatics
Duke University 2012 PhD Nursing Science
Postdoctoral
Training
Durham Veterans Affairs
Medical Center & Duke
University Medical Center
2013 -- Health Services
Research
Scholarly societies:
Society Date (Year)
Sigma Theta Tau International 2004-present
Professional and academic career:
Institution Position/Title Dates (Year)
NYU Langone Medical Center Nurse Clinician, Cardiothoracic
Surgery
2004- 2007
NYU Langone Medical Center Assistant Nurse Manager,
Cardiothoracic Surgery
2007- 2008
New York University College of Nursing Informatics Research Assistant 2007- 2008
Duke Health Technology Solutions
and Duke University School of Nursing
Information Technology Fellow 2008- 2012
Center for Health Services Research in
Primary Care, Durham VA Medical Center
and Duke University Medical Center,
Department of Internal Medicine
Post-doctoral Research Fellow 2012- 2013
Center for Health Services Research in
Primary Care, Durham VA Medical Center
Research Associate 2013- 2016
Duke University School of Nursing Assistant Professor 2013- 2017
Duke University Health Innovation Lab Director 2016- present
Duke University School of Nursing Associate Professor 2017- present
Duke Mobile App Gateway, Duke Clinical
& Translational Science Institute
Faculty Advisor 2017- present
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Duke University School of Nursing Elizabeth C. Clipp Term Chair
of Nursing
2017- 2020
Publications:
1. Refereed journals:
Published (* denotes data-based; ^Senior author)
1. *Sorensen, L., Shaw, R., Casey, E. (2009). Patient portals: Survey of nursing
informaticists. Studies in Health Information Technology, 146, 160-165. PMID:
19592827
2. Phillips, B., Shaw, R.J., Sullivan, D.T., Johnson, C. (2010). Using virtual environments
to enhance nursing distance education. Creative Nursing, 16(3), 132-135. PMID:
20879622
3. *Johnson, C.M., Nahm, M., Shaw, R. J., Dunham, A., Newby, K., Dolor, R., Smerek,
M., Del Fiol, G., Zhang, J. (2010). Can prospective usability evaluation predict data
errors? AMIA Annual Symposium Proceedings 2010, 346-350. PMCID: PMC3041437
4. ^Johnson, C.M., Corazzini, K.N., Shaw, R. (2011). Assessing the feasibility of using
virtual environments in distance education. Knowledge Management & E-Learning. 3(1);
5-16.
5. *Shaw, R.J., Johnson, C.M. (2011). Health information seeking and social media use on
the Internet among people with diabetes. Online Journal of Public Health Informatics,
3(1), 1-9. PMID: 22066032. PMCID: PMC3615779
6. *Shaw, R.J., Ferranti, J. (2011). Patient-provider internet portals‒Patient outcomes and
use. CIN: Computers, Informatics, Nursing. 29(12), 714-718. PMID: 21697705 (Selected
as a continuing education article.)
7. *Shaw, R.J., Bosworth, H.B. (2011). Baseline medication adherence and blood pressure
in a 24-month longitudinal hypertension study. Journal of Clinical Nursing, 21(9/10),
1401-1406. PMID: 22107599
8. *Shaw, R., Bosworth, H. (2012). Short message service (SMS) text messaging as an
intervention medium for weight loss: A literature review. Health Informatics Journal.
18(4) 235-250. PMID: 23257055
9. *^Johnson, C.M., Shaw, R.J. (2012). A usability problem: Conveying health risks to
consumers on the Internet. AMIA Annual Symposium Proceedings 2012, 427-435. PMID:
23304313. PMCID: PMC3540473
(Winner of the Harriet H. Werley Award for paper making the greatest contribution to
advance the field of nursing informatics)
10. *Shaw, R.J., Brion, J. (2013). Leadership through the Special Olympics. Nursing
Education Perspectives, 34(2), 134-135.
11. *Zullig, L.L., Melnyk, S.D., Goldstein, K., Shaw, R.J., Bosworth, H.B. (2013). The role
of home blood pressure telemonitoring in managing hypertensive populations. Current
Hypertension Reports, 15(4), 346-355. PMID: 23625207
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Published (* denotes data-based; ^Senior author)
12. *Shaw, R.J., Bosworth, H.B., Hess, J.C., Silva, S.G., Lipkus, I.M., Davis, L.L., Johnson,
C.M. (2013). Development of a theoretically driven mHealth text messaging application
for sustaining recent weight loss. JMIR mHealth and uHealth, 1(1), e5. PMCID:
PMC4114452
13. *Shaw, R.J., Bosworth, H.B., Silva, S., Lipkus, I.M., Davis, L.L. Sha, R.S., Johnson,
C.M. (2013). Mobile health messages help sustain recent weight loss. The American
Journal of Medicine, 126(11), 1002-1009. PMID: 24050486. PMCID: PMC3820279
14. *Shaw, R.J., Kaufman, M.A., Bosworth, H.B., Weiner, B.J., Zullig, L.L., Lee, S.Y.,
Kravetz, J.D., Rakley, S.M., Roumie, C.L., Bowen, M.E., Del Monte, P.S., Oddone,
E.Z., Jackson, G.L. (2013). Organizational factors associated with readiness to
implement and translate a primary care based telemedicine behavioral program to
improve blood pressure control: The HTN-IMPROVE study. Implementation Science, 8,
106. PMID: 24010683
15. *Zullig, L.L, Shaw, R.J., Crowley, M.J., Lindquist, J., Grambow, S.C., Peterson, E.,
Shah, B.R., Bosworth, H.B. (2013). Association between perceived life chaos and
medication adherence in a postmyocardial infarction population. Circulation:
Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes, 6(6), 619-625. PMID: 24221839
16. Vorderstrasse, A., Shaw, R.J., Blascovich, J., Johnson, C.M. (2014). A theoretical
framework for a virtual diabetes self-management community intervention. Western
Journal of Nursing Research. 36(9), 1222-1237. doi: 10.1177/0193945913518993.
PMID: 24451083
17. *Zullig, L.L., Sanders, L.L, Shaw, R.J., McCant, F., Danus, S., Bosworth, H.B. (2014).
A randomized controlled trial of providing personalised cardiovascular risk information
to modify health behaviour. Journal of Telemedicine and Telecare, 20(3), 147-152. doi:
10.1177/1357633X14528446. PMID: 24647384
18. *Shaw, R.J., Steinberg, D.M., Zullig, L.L., Bosworth, H.B., Johnson, C.M., Davis, L.L.
(2014). mHealth interventions for weight loss: A guide for achieving treatment fidelity.
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 21(6), 959-963. doi:
10.1136/amiajnl-2013-002610. PMID: 24853065
19. *Shaw, R.J., McDuffie, J.R., Hendrix, C.C., Edie, A., Lindsey-Davis, L., Nagi, A.,
Kosinski, A.S., Williams, J.W. Jr. (2014). Effects of nurse-managed protocols in the
outpatient management of adults with chronic conditions: A systematic review and meta-
analysis. Annals of Internal Medicine, 161(2), 113-121. doi: 10.7326/M13-2567. PMID:
25023250
20. *Crowley, M.J., Zullig, L.L., Shah, B.R., Shaw, R.J., Lindquist, J.H., Peterson, E.D.,
Bosworth, H.B. (2014). Medication non-adherence after myocardial infarction: An
exploration of modifying factors. Journal of General Internal Medicine, 30(1),83-90.
doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-3072-x. PMID: 25361685
5
Published (* denotes data-based; ^Senior author)
21. *Shaw, R.J., Horvath, M.M., Leonard, D., Ferranti, J.M., Johnson, C.M. (2015).
Developing a user-friendly interface for a self-service healthcare research portal: Cost-
effective usability testing. Health Systems Journal, 4(2), 151-158. doi:
10.1057/hs.2014.26
22. Shaw, R.J., Bonnet, J., Modarai, F., George, A., Shahsahebi, M. (2015). Mobile health
technology for personalized primary care medicine. American Journal of Medicine,
128(6), 555-557. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2015.01.005 PMID: 25613298
23. *Zullig, L.L., Shaw, R.J., Shah, B.R., Peterson, E.D., Lindquist, J.H., Crowley, M.J.
Grambow, S.C., Bosworth, H.B. (2015). Patient-provider communication, self-reported
medication adherence, and race in a post-myocardial infarction population. Patient
Preference and Adherence, 9, 1-8 PMID: 25737633, PMCID: PMC4344178
24.
*Shaw, R.J., Sperber, M.A., Cunningham, T. (2016). Online social media as a curation
tool for teaching health informatics. Nurse Educator, 41(1), Epub ahead of print. doi:
10.1097/NNE.0000000000000178. PMID: 26001748
25. *Shaw, R.J., Zullig, L.L., Crowley, M.J., Grambow, S.C., Lindquist, J.H., Shah, B.R.,
Peterson, E.D., Bosworth, H.B. (2016). Willingness of patients to use computers for
health communication and monitoring following myocardial infarction. CIN: Computers,
Informatics, Nursing, 33(9), 384-389. PMID: 26176640
26. *Shaw, R.J., Pollak, K., Zullig, L., Bennett, G., Hawkins, K., Lipkus, I. (2016).
Feasibility and smokers’ evaluation of self-generated text messages to promote quitting.
Nicotine & Tobacco Research, 18(1), doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntv268
27. *Shaw, R.J., Steinberg, D., Bonnet, J., Modarai, F., George, A., Cunningham, T.,
Mason, M., Shahsahebi, M., Grambow, S.C., Bennett, G., Bosworth, H. (2016). Mobile
health devices: Will patients actually use them? Journal of the American Medical
Informatics Association, 1-5. DOI: 10.1093/jamia/ocv186
28. *DeRienzo, C., Shaw, R.J., Meanor, P., Lada, E., Ferranti, M.J., Tanak, D. (2016). A
simulation tool to support and predict hospital and clinic staffing. Health Informatics
Journal, 1-10. doi: 10.1177/1460458216628314
29. *^Chaballout, B., Molloy, M.A., Vaughn, J., Brisson, R., Shaw, R.J. (2016). Feasibility
of augmented reality in clinical simulations: Using Google Glass with manikins. JMIR
Medical Education, 2(1):e2 DOI: 10.2196/mededu.5159
30. *^Vaughn J, Lister M, Shaw RJ (2016). Piloting Augmented Reality Technology to
Enhance Realism in Clinical Simulation. CIN: Computers Informatics Nursing, ePub
ahead of print doi: 10.1097/CIN.0000000000000251
31. *Goode A.P., Hall K.S., Batch B.C., Huffman K.M., Hastings S.N., Allen K.D., Shaw
RJ, Kanach F.A., McDuffie J.R., Kosinski A.S., Williams J.W. Jr., Gierisch J.M..
(2016). The Impact of Interventions that Integrate Accelerometers on Physical Activity
and Weight Loss: A Systematic Review. Annals of Behavioral Medicine, ePub ahead of
print doi: 10.1007/s12160-016-9829-1
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Published (* denotes data-based; ^Senior author)
32. *Jackson, G.L., Roumie, C.L., Rakley, S.M., Kravetz, J.D., Kirshner, M.A., Del Monte,
P.S., Bowen, M.E., Oddone, E.Z., Weiner, B.J., Shaw, R.J., & Bosworth, H.B. (2016).
Linkage between theory-based measurement of organizational readiness to change and
lessons learned conducting partnered research. Learning Health Systems. ePub ahead of
print doi: 10.1002/lrh2.10013
33. *Perkins, L., Pereira, K., Shaw, R.J., Biernacki, G.J., Thompson, J. (2016).
Implementing the Evidence-based Guidelines for Overweight/Obese Adults. The Journal
of Nurse Practitioners. 12(9), e389-3393
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nurpra.2016.05.025
34 *^Rudolph, A., Vaughn, J., Crego, N., Kuszajewski, M., Molloy, M., Brisson, R., Shaw,
R.J., (2017). Integrating Telepresence Robots into Nursing Simulation. Nurse Educator,
ePub ahead of print doi: 10.1097/NNE.0000000000000329
35. *Li, Z., Moran, P., Dong, Q., Shaw, R. J., & Hauser, K. (2017). Development of a Tele-
Nursing Mobile Manipulator for Remote Care-giving in Quarantine Areas. In IEEE Int.
Conf. Robotics and Automation.
36. ^Chaballout, B., Shaw, R.J., Reuter-Rice, K. (in press). The SMART Healthcare
Solution. Advances in Precision Medicine
37. *Shaw, R., Molloy, M., Vaughn, J., Crego, N., Kuszajewski. M., Brisson, R., Hueckel, R., &
Oermann, M. (in press). Feasibility and Acceptability of Telepresence Robots for Pediatric
Clinical Simulations. Pediatric Nursing
Submitted or in review
1. *^Lister, M.J., Vaughn, J., Brennan-Cook, J., Molloy, M., Kuszajewski, M., Shaw, R.J.
(in review). Telehealth and Telenursing Using Simulation for Prelicensure Students.
Submitted to: Nursing Education in Practice
2. Hirschey, R., Kimmick, G., Hockenberry, M., Shaw, R., Pan, W., Lipkus, I. A (in
review) Intervention Developed with and for Breast Cancer Survivors. Western Journal
of Nursing Research.
3. *^Shaw, R.J., Kelly, J., Bettger, J. (in review). Validating Apple’s ResearchKit Timed
Walk Test. American Heart Journal
4. ^Voils, C., Levine, E., Gierisch, J., Pendergast, J., Hale, S., McVay, M., Reed, S., Yancy,
W., Bennett, G., Strawbridge, E., White, A., Shaw, R. (in review). Study protocol for
Log2Lose: A feasibility randomized controlled trial to evaluate financial incentives for
dietary self-monitoring and interim weight loss in adults with obesity. Contemporary
Clinical Trials
2. Non-refereed publications:
Published
1. ^Johnson, C.M., Vorderstrasse, A., Shaw, R. (2009). Virtual worlds in health care higher
education. Journal of Virtual Worlds Research, 2(2), 3-9.
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Published
2. Shaw, R.J. (2012). A Mobile Health Intervention to Sustain Recent Weight Loss.
Dissertation. Duke University Libraries:
http://dukespace.lib.duke.edu/dspace/handle/10161/5866
3. Vaughn, J, Shaw, R.J., Molloy, M.A. (2015). A telehealth case study: The use of
telepresence robot for delivering integrated clinical care. Journal of the American
Psychiatric Nurses Association, 1-2
3. Chapters in books:
Published
1. Zullig, L.L., Shaw, R.J., Bosworth, H.B. (2015). Applying technology to medication
management and adherence. In D. D’Addona, L. Marsch, S. Lord, & J. Dallery (Eds.),
Behavioral Health Care and Technology: Using Science-Based Innovations to
Transform Practice. New York: Oxford University Press.
4. Books: n/a
5. Non-authored publications:
1. VA Health Services Research & Development Service (HSR&D). (2013, November). A
systematic review: Effects of nurse-managed protocols in the outpatient management of
adults with chronic conditions. HSR&D Management Brief No. 72.
[Summary of Shaw, R.J., McDuffie J.R., Hendrix C.C., Edie A., Lindsey-Davis L., &
Williams J.W. Jr. (2013). Effects of nurse-managed protocols in the outpatient
management of adults with chronic illness. VA-ESP Project #09-010.]
2. VA Health Services Research & Development Service (HSR&D). (2014, May).
Systematic review: Computerized cognitive behavioral therapy for adults with depressive
or anxiety disorders. HSR&D Management Brief No. 80.
[Summary of Dedert, E., McDuffie, J.R., Swinkels, C., Shaw, R.J., Fulton, J., Allen,
K.D., Datta, S., Williams, J.W. (2013). Electronic cognitive behavioral therapy for
adults with depressive or anxiety disorder. VA-ESP Project #09-011.]
3. Kaufman, N. (2014, February). Using health information technology to prevent and treat
diabetes. Diabetes Technology and Therapeutics, 16 (Suppl.1), S56-s67. PMID 23441709.
doi: 10.1089/dia.2014.1507. Kaufman reviews “innovations that are ready, or almost
ready, to spread”, including: Shaw, R., Bosworth, H. Short message service (SMS) text
messaging as an intervention medium for weight loss: A literature review. [Health
Informatics Journal, 2012; 18: 235-250], which is reviewed on pp. S59-S60.
4. Jauhar, S., & Battinelli, D. (2014). Are nurses an answer to new primary care needs?
[Editorial]. Annals of Internal Medicine, 161(2), 153-154. doi:10.7326/M14-1308.
Editorial includes extensive discussion of Shaw, R.J., et al. [Annals of Internal Medicine
2014; 161(2), 113-121].
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5. Schulman, K.A. (2014, December). Review: In adult outpatients, nurse-managed
protocols improve hemoglobin A1c levels and blood pressure. American College of
Physicians Journal Club. Annals of Internal Medicine 2014; 161(JC6).
doi:10.7326/0003-4819-161-12-201412160-02006. Commentary includes extensive
discussion of Shaw, R.J., et al. [Annals of Internal Medicine 2014; 161(2), 113-121]
6. VA Health Services Research & Development Service (HSR&D). (2015, October). The
impact of wearable motion sending technologies on physical activity. HSR&D
Management Brief No. 72.
[Summary of Gierisch, J.M., Goode, A.P., Batch, B.C., Huffman, K.M., Hall, K.S.,
Hastings, S.N., Allen, K.D., Shaw, R.J., Kanach, F.A., McDuffie, J.R., Kosinski, A.S.,
Nagi, A., & Williams, J.W. Jr. (2015). The impact of wearable motion sensing
technologies on physical activity: A systematic review. VA ESP Project #09-009]
7. Duke SciPol (2017). FDA Mobile Medical Apps. Policy brief featuring Shaw, R.J. as a
relevant expert.
6. Other:
a. Published expert panel reviews, consensus statements, practice guidelines, etc.
1. *Shaw, R.J., McDuffie, J.R., Hendrix, C.C., Edie, A., Lindsey-Davis, L., Williams, J.W.
Jr. (2013, August). Effects of nurse-managed protocols in the outpatient management of
adults with chronic conditions. VA-ESP Project #09-010.
2. *Dedert, E., McDuffie, J.R., Swinkels, C., Shaw, R.J., Fulton, J., Allen, K.D., Datta, S.,
& Williams, J.W. (2013, October). Computerized cognitive behavioral therapy for adults
with depressive or anxiety disorders. VA-ESP Project #09-011 PMID: 25590119
3. *Gierisch, J.M., Goode, A.P., Batch, B.C., Huffman, K.M., Hall, K.S., Hastings, S.N.,
Allen, K.D., Shaw, R.J., Kanach, F.A., McDuffie, J.R., Kosinski, A.S., Nagi, A.,
Williams, J.W. Jr (August 2015). The Impact of Wearable Motion Sensing Technologies
on Physical Activity: A Systematic Review. VA ESP Project #09-009
b. Selected abstracts
1. Shaw, R.J., Casey, E., Sorensen, L. (July, 2009). Patient portals: Survey of nursing
informaticists. Presentation given at the 10th International Conference on Nursing
Informatics. Helsinki, Finland.
2. Shaw, R.J., Johnson, C.M. (2010, January). Online social networking and diabetes.
Poster presented at the Southern Nursing Research Society. Austin, TX. (Top Student
Poster)
3. Neffa, D.R., Goetschius, A.B., Anand, A.A., Shaw, R.J., Talbot, A., Toledo, L. (2010,
November). BirdsNBees: Marketing an adolescent sexual health text messaging service.
Poster presented at the Health Communication Conference. Lexington, KY.
4. Shaw, R.J., Kaufman, M.A., Bosworth, H.B., Weiner, B.J., Lee, S.D., Kravetz, J.D.,
Rakley, S.M., Roumie, C.L., Bowen, M.E., Del Monte, P.S., Oddone, E.Z., Zullig, L.L.,
9
Jackson, G.L. (2013, June). Organizational factors associated with the effective
implementation and translation of a primary care based behavioral program to improve
blood pressure control: The HTN-IMPROVE study. Poster presented at Academy
Health. Baltimore, MD.
5. Chaballout, B., Shaw, R.J. (November 2015). Health Alert: A real-time health
monitoring app using Apple’s HealthKit. Poster presented at the American Medical
Informatics Association, San Francisco, CA.
6. Molloy, M., Shaw, R.J., Vaughn, J., Hueckel, R. An innovative use of telepresence
robots for educating healthcare professionals. Studies in Health Technology and
Informatics. Ebook: Volume 225 (989-990): Nursing Informatics 2016
7. Bettger, J.P., Shaw, R.J., Kelly, J., Morey, M.C., Schwartz, K., Liu, C., Hawkins, K.,
Peterson, E.D. (November, 2016). Early National Dissemination and Adoption of the
Sixth Vital Sign: A Mobile App for Population Health Surveillance. American Heart
Association Scientific Sessions. New Orleans, Louisiana
8. Shaw, R.J. (July 2017). Mobile Health Technologies & Precision Health. Podium
presentation at the Sigma Theta Tau International Honor Society of Nursing annual
conference. Dublin, Ireland
9. Voils, C.I., Hale, S, Pendergast, J, Gierisch, J.M., McVay, M.A., Strawbridge, E, Levine,
E, White, A, Yancy Jr, WS, Reed, S, Li, Y, Bennett, G, & Shaw, R.S. (under review).
Incentivizing behavior change skills to promote weight loss. Abstract submitted to the
Society of Behavioral Medicine. New Orleans, Louisiana
c. Editorials, position, and background papers:
1. ^Ni, Z., Wu, B., Samples, C., Shaw, R.J. (2014). Mobile technology for healthcare in
rural China. International Journal of Nursing Sciences. 1(2), 323-324. doi:
10.1016/j.ijnss.2014.07.003.
2. ^Samples, C., Ni, Z., Shaw, R.J. (2014). Nursing and mHealth. International Journal of
Nursing Sciences. Epub ahead of print. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnss.2014.08.002
3. ^Voils, C.I., Shaw, R.J. (2017). Wearable Technology and Long-Term Weight Loss.
Letter to the Editor in the Journal of the American Medical Association. 317(3):318. Doi:
10.1001/jama.2016.19259
d. Op-ed Media
1. Shaw, R.J. (2014). Wearable health monitors not quite there yet. November 27, 2014.
News and Observer (Raleigh, NC)
2. Shaw, R.J. Technological gadgets cannot change human behavior. November 25, 2014.
Times Union (Albany, NY)
3. Shaw, R.J. (2016). The best power of Pokémon? Getting people off the couch. July 15,
2016. News and Observer (Raleigh, NC)
10
e. Other Media
1. Dalek, B. (2013, November 24). The Easiest Way to Stay Slim. Men’s Health Magazine
2. Shaw, R.J. (2014 – present). Digital Health, Informatics, and Healthcare (Blog.)
http://sites.duke.edu/ryanshaw/
3. Shaw, R.J., Shahsahebi, M. (2014, June 15). Blue glass. [YouTube video (3:32)
exploring the use of Google Glass to improve patient care.
4. Worcester, S. (2014, July 14). Nurse-managed protocols benefit outpatients with chronic
disease. Posted to Internal Medicine News website (Practice Economics section).
Features research of Shaw, R.J. et al. [Annals of Internal Medicine 2014; 161(2), 113-
121].
5. Lehman, S. (2014, July 15). Nurses Could Manage Chronic Care on Doctors’ Orders.
Reuters Health http://bit.ly/U7fMd7
Features research of Shaw, R.J. et al. [Annals of Internal Medicine 2014; 161(2), 113-
121]. Article includes comments from interviews with Shaw and with editors of the
journal. Reposted with same title on multiple websites, including:
• Business Insider (2014, July 15)
• Yahoo News (2014, July 15)
• Medscape (2014, July 16)
• Harvard Medical School Center for Primary Care (2014, July 18)
6. HealthDay News (2014, July 17). Nurses expand outpatient care for chronically ill
adults. Features research of Shaw, R. J. et al. [Annals of Internal Medicine 2014;
161(2), 113-121]. Article posted to multiple sites including:
• HCPLive Healthcare Professions Network (2014, July 17)
• Pri-Med Diabetes/Endocrinology News (2014, July 17)
• Health Medicine Network (2014, July 18)
7. NIH National Institute of Nursing Research (2014, July 29). Research highlights: Daily
text messages help adults sustain weight loss over time
8. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. (2014, August 11). Quotable quotes about nursing,
August 2014, posted to Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Human Capital Blog,
Includes quote from Shaw, R.J.
9. Mobile Health Technologies Will Change Chronic Disease Management (2015, March
27). MedicalResearch.com Medical Research Interviews and News, interview with
Shaw, R.J.
10. Duke Nursing Magazine (2015, Winter). Google Glass Possibilities for Health Care,
Story on Shaw, R.J. Page 18
11. Triangle Business Journal (July 9, 2015). How Duke nursing students use ‘JaMMeR’
robot for next-generation class, story with Shaw, R.J.
12. MEdSim Magazine (2015, Summer). Duke University Nursing School Using Robot for
Distance Learning, story with Shaw, R.J.
11
13. WRAL TechWire (2015, Summer). Telepresence robots aid Duke nursing instruction,
story with Shaw, R.J.
14. Shaw, R.J., Molloy, M., Vaughn, J., Hueckel, R. (2015, July). Case Study: Duke
University + Double [YouTube video (3:19) Duke University's School of Nursing uses
Double to engage nurse practitioner and ABSN students in simulations]
15. WNCN NBC17 Local News (August 18, 2015). Duke School of Nursing on cutting edge
of simulation and distance education [Newscast video (2:23)].
16. Technician (November 4, 2015). Duke scientists talk research, innovation over beer,
Story with Shaw, R.J.
17. Nurse.com (November 9, 2015). On the move with mHealth, Story quoting Shaw, R.J.
18. Duke Nursing Magazine (2016, Winter). The Future of Telemedicine, Feature Story with
Shaw, R.J. Page 8.
19. Duke Nursing Magazine (2016, Summer). Reimagining Nursing Research, Story with
Shaw, R.J. Page 20.
20. News & Observer (November 16, 2016). Duke Officials test, refine robot-nurse. Story
with Shaw, R.J.
Hospitals & Health Networks (November 18, 2016)
DailyNurse (December 1, 2016)
21. The Chronicle (November 22, 2016). Duke Engineers, Nurses Develop Robotic Nursing
Assistant. Story with Shaw, R.J.
blastr (November 29, 2016)
mental_floss (November 25, 2016)
Presentations (not included in abstracts above)
a. Invited Presentations
National/International Presentations Date
1. Sorensen, L., Shaw, R., Casey, E. Patient portals: Survey of nursing
informaticists. Paper presented at International Congress on Nursing
Informatics, Helsinki, Finland.
2009, July
2. Hendrix, C., Shaw, R., presenters. (2014, January 28). Spotlight on
Evidence-based Synthesis Program: Effects of nurse-managed protocols in
the outpatient management of adults with chronic conditions.
ESP Cyberseminar session archived by VA HRS&D. [Archived
cyberseminar (63:37) includes audio with slides; PDF handout and 15-page
transcript also available]
2014,
January
3. Shaw, R.J. Mobile devices for improving patient outcomes. Montana
Primary Care Association webinar.
2014,
March
12
4. Shaw, R.J. Panel Presentation on Wearable Technology for Older Adults.
International Congress on Nursing Informatics. Geneva, Switzerland.
2016,
June
5. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Technologies & Precision Health. Keynote
Speaker. Ruth K. Palmer Research Symposium. Loyola University Chicago
2017,
March
6. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Technologies & Precision Health. Keynote
Speaker. Research Day 2017: Innovations to Improve Health Outcomes.
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Houston, TX.
2017,
June
7. Shaw, R.J., Molloy, M. The Future of Nursing: Mobile Technology,
Robotics & More. Keynote Speaker. The National Council of the State
Boards of Nursing Annual Conference. Chicago, IL.
2017,
August
8. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Technologies and Precision Medicine.
University of Sichuan. Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China.
2017,
October
9. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Technologies and Precision Health. Duke
Kunshan Conference on Digital Health Science and Innovation: Academia
and Industry Partnerships. Kunshan, Jiangsu Province, China
2017,
October
Local Presentations Date
1. Shaw, R.J. A mobile health intervention to sustain recent weight loss.
Duke/UNC/NCCU Joint Health Informatics Seminar Series. Durham, NC.
Archived presentation (videorecording and slides), 49:13.
2013,
January
2. Shaw, R.J. Mobile health for behavior change. mHealth@Duke
Symposium Series. Durham, NC.
2013,
March
3. Shaw, R.J., Hendrix, C. Nurse managed protocols in the outpatient
management of adults with chronic conditions. Duke University Health
System Nursing Grand Rounds, Durham, NC.
2014,
April
4. Shaw, R.J. Digital health. Center for Health Services Research in Primary
Care, Duke University Department of Internal Medicine & Durham VA
Medical Center, Durham, NC.
2014,
April
5. Shaw, R.J. Digital health for health outcomes and care delivery. Duke
Primary Care, Durham, NC.
2014,
May
6. Shaw, R.J. Technology for health management and a healthy lifestyle.
Duke Stroke Symposium
2014,
August
7. Shaw, R.J. Digital Health Technologies for Healthcare and Symptom
Science, Duke University School of Nursing Research Seminar Series
2014,
September
8. Shaw, R.J. Online Social Media: A Curation Tool for Health Education,
Duke Center for Instructional Technology's 2014 Faculty Instructional
Technology Showcase
2014,
October
9. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health: Technology for Care Delivery and Health
Management. IBM University Day, Research Triangle Park, NC
2014,
November
13
10. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Technology for Precision Medicine and Nursing
Care Delivery. Duke Health Technology Solutions, Durham, NC
2015,
April
11. Shaw, R.J. Black Friday – Digital Health Technologies. A lawyer, a doctor,
and two scientists walk into a bar… Periodic Tables at MotorCo, Durham,
NC
2015,
November
12. Shaw, R.J. From Episodic to Real-Time Care. Duke Center for Applied
Genomics & Precision Medicine
2016,
February
13. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Devices: Will Patients Actually Use Them?
North Carolina Healthcare Information & Communications Alliance, Inc.
(NCHICA)
2016,
June
14. Shaw, R.J. Mobile Health Technology for Precision Medicine. Duke
Center for Health Informatics
2016,
August
15. Shaw, R.J. Wearable Health Technologies. Osher Lifelong Learning
Institute at Duke
2016,
November
16. Shaw, R.J. Analyzing and Visualizing Data from Mobile Health
Technologies. Duke University Computational Media, Arts & Culture
2016,
November
b. Selected Other Presentations
Presentation Date
1. Shaw, R.J. Using informatics to deliver tailored persuasive messages to
populations to promote sustainability and maintenance of health behaviors.
4th Doctoral Consortium on Sociotechnical Issues in Medical Informatics.
AMIA Annual Symposium. Washington, DC.
2010,
November
2. Shaw, R.J., Scarton, L.A. Consumer health informatics. Unconference
Chair. American Medical Informatics Association annual symposium.
Washington, DC.
2011,
October
3. Theera-Ampornpunt, N., Kelley, T., Ramly, E., Shaw, R., Khairat, S., &
Sonnenberg, F.A. The paths toward informatics careers in the post-HITECH
Era. Panel presentation at the AMIA annual symposium. Chicago, IL.
2012,
November
4. Shaw, R.J., The mobile health platform, Duke Institute for Health
Innovation, Durham, NC
2013,
April
Consultant appointments: n/a
Professional awards and special recognitions:
Award Date(s)
14
Award Date(s)
Mary Gaynell Forbes Nursing Scholarship
University of Miami
2003
Academic Excellence Award
University of Miami Jackson Memorial Hospital
2004
Inducted, Sigma Theta Tau International 2004
Distinguished Master’s Student
New York University College of Nursing
2008
Information Technology Fellowship in Healthcare
Duke Health Technology Solutions & Duke University School of Nursing
2008
Top Student Research Poster: “Online Social Networking and Diabetes”
Southern Nursing Research Society Annual Research Conference
2010
ThinkSwiss Travel Grant
Swiss Confederation – Institute of Nursing Science,
University of Basel, Switzerland
2010
2012 AMIA Nursing Informatics Harriet Werley Award for paper making the
greatest contribution to advance the field of nursing informatics, for: Johnson,
C.J., & Shaw, R.J. (2012). A usability problem: Conveying health risks to
consumers on the Internet. AMIA Annual Symposium Proceedings, Chicago, IL
2012
Distinguished Dissertation Award
Duke University School of Nursing
2013
BAYADA Award for Technological Innovation in Health Professional
Education and Practice, Drexel University College of Nursing and Health
Professions
2015
Early Career Scientist Award, Duke University School of Nursing 2017
Emerging Nurse Researcher Award, Sigma Theta Tau International Honor
Society of Nursing, Dublin, Ireland
2017
Elizabeth C. Clipp Term Chair of Nursing, Duke University 2017-2020
Professional organizations and participation: (offices held, committee assignments, etc.)
Professional Organization Office Held and/or
Committee Assignment
Dates
American Nurses Association Member 2008 – present
American Medical Informatics
Association (AMIA)
Member 2008 – present
AMIA PhD-doctoral student representative 2011 – 2013
15
Editorial boards and manuscript review:
Journal Role Dates
Journal of Clinical Nursing Ad hoc reviewer 2011 - present
Health Informatics Journal Ad hoc reviewer 2012 - present
CIN: Computers, Informatics, Nursing Ad hoc reviewer 2012 - present
Journal of Medical Internet Research Ad hoc reviewer 2013 - present
Journal of General Internal Medicine Ad hoc reviewer 2013 - present
Translational Behavioral Medicine Ad hoc reviewer 2013 - present
Health Affairs Ad hoc reviewer 2014 - present
The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology Ad hoc reviewer 2016 - present
Journal of the American Medical Informatics
Association
Ad hoc reviewer 2016 - present
Nursing Research Ad hoc reviewer 2017 - present
Science Ad hoc reviewer 2017 - present
Grant review:
Grant Reviews & Panels Date(s)
1. Special emphasis panel / Scientific review group 2015/01 ZAG1 ZIJ-4
(J2) - Research and Education on Aging and Technology, NIH National
Institute on Aging
September 2014
2. Special emphasis panel / Scientific review group (SEP) ZDK1-GRB-1
(M1) - Natural Experiment and Pragmatic Research PARs Review, NIH
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
January 2015
3. Reviewer HRA-POR-2015-122, Republic of Ireland, Health Research
board
March 2015
4. Special emphasis panel / Scientific review group ZRG1 HDM-Z (52) R
RFA-EB-15-003: Pediatric Research using Integrated Sensor Monitoring
Systems (PRISMS): Informatics Platform Technologies for Asthma (U54)
August 2015
5. Special emphasis panel / Scientific review group 2017/01 ZGM1 RCB-X
(SC) – Review of SCORE Applications. NIH National Institute of General
Medical Sciences
October 2016
6. Joint Stroke Association / British Heart Foundation Clinical Study in
Stroke Application Review. Grant reviewer.
April 2017
16
Teaching responsibilities:
Classroom and Online Teaching:
Duke University School of Nursing
Course Number Course Name Dates:
Semester/Year
Instructor
N307 Research Methods (MSN) Fall 2013
N415 Introduction to Health Informatics (MSN) Spring 2014
N715/418 Database Systems in Healthcare (MSN) Spring 2014
Spring 2015
Fall 2015
Fall 2016
Fall 2017
N315 Directed Research (ABSN & MSN) Spring 2014
Summer 2014
Fall 2014
Spring 2015
Fall 2015
Spring 2016
N665 Capstone Project (DNP) Spring 2014
Summer 2014
Fall 2014
Spring 2015
Summer 2015
Fall 2015
Spring 2016
N718 Data Analytics 1 (MSN) Summer 2015
Spring 2016
N724 Data Analytics II (MSN) Summer 2016
Teaching Assistant
N224 Leadership and Contemporary Issues in Nursing
(ABSN)
Summer 2011
N414 Data, Information, and Knowledge Representation and
Modeling (MSN)
Spring 2013
Guest Lecturer
17
Course Number Course Name Dates:
Semester/Year
N502 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention (ABSN);
Guest lecture on “eHealth”
Fall 2011,
Spring 2012,
Fall 2012,
Fall 2013,
Spring 2014,
Summer 2014,
Fall 2014
---- Online Social MEDia (Duke MHSc in Clinical
Leadership Program)
Summer 2015
N902 Mobile Health Technologies in Research Fall 2017
N915 Crowdsourcing Fall 2017
Continuing Education:
Location Audience Course Title Date(s)
iNet: Innovative
Nursing Education
Technologies
U.S. Registered
Nurses
Consumer Health Informatics:
IOM Module IV
Summer
2010
Duke University
Medical Center
Duke University
Clinicians
Effects of Nurse Managed
Protocols on the Outpatient
Management of Adults with
Chronic Illness
April 2014
Duke University
Medical Center
Duke University
Clinician Instructors
Online Social Media: A Curation
Tool for Health Education
September
2014
Duke Health
Technology Solutions
Clinicians and IT
staff
Mobile Health Technology for
Precision Medicine and Nursing
Care Delivery
April 2015
Graduate and Post-Doctoral Supervision:
Post-Doctoral Fellows or Associates: n/a
PhD Dissertations
PhD Dissertation Supervision
1. Anna Diane, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2017 – current)
Topic: TBD
Role: Chair
18
PhD Dissertation Supervision
2. Jacqueline Vaughn, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2016 – current)
Topic: Technology Mediated Co-Management in Pediatric Bone Marrow Transplant
Care
Role: Chair
3. Zhao Ni, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2015 – current)
Topic: Mobile health technology for rural care in China
Role: Chair
4. Rachel Hirschey, Duke University School of Nursing (Spring 2014-2017)
Topic: Intervention to Increase Exercise among Breast Cancer Survivors.
Role: Committee Member
5. Ilana Lane, Duke University Department of Psychology (Spring 2014-Summer 2016)
Topic: Online Virtual Communities for Weight Loss
Role: Committee Member
DNP Capstone Projects
DNP Capstone Supervision
1. Kathryn Henderson, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2016 – current)
Capstone: Implementing a Culture of Innovation in Nursing
Role: Chair
2. John Withrow, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2014 – Spring 2016)
Capstone: Improving Suicide Precautions Documentation Compliance and Knowledge
among Nursing Staff in the Emergency Department
Role: Chair
3. Yolanda Johnson, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2013 – Fall 2015)
Capstone: Sustaining Weight Loss through Self-monitoring using a Smartphone Diet
Application
Role: Chair
4. Ingrid Larson, Duke University School of Nursing (Fall 2014 – Fall 2015)
Capstone: Implementing an Evidence-based Pediatric Complex Care Tool
Role: Chair
5. Patricia Riley, Duke University School of Nursing (Spring 2014 – Summer 2015)
Capstone: A Brief Intervention to Promote Walking
Role: Committee Member
6. Jeremy Waddell, Duke University School of Nursing (Summer 2014 – Summer 2015)
Capstone: Implementation of a Low-cost Home-based Intervention to Increase Physical
Activity in Patients with Cardiovascular Disease
Role: Committee Member
19
7. Lorraine Perkins, Duke University School of Nursing (Spring 2014 – Spring 2015)
Capstone: Implementation of an Evidence-based Guideline for the Diagnosis and
Treatment of Overweight and Obesity in Adults in Primary Care
Role: Committee Member
Master’s Theses / Research Projects: n/a
Areas of research interest:
• Health informatics
• Digital health technologies
• Data Science
• Entrepreneurship
• Health maintenance and Health promotion
• Chronic illness management
External support - gifts, grants, and contracts:
1. Research Support
Research: Present—Currently Active
Project Number: 1R15NR015890-01
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 6/2016 – 5/2019
% Effort: 30
PI: Ryan Shaw
Source: NIH National Institute of Nursing Research
Title of Project: From Episodic to Real-Time Care in Diabetes Self-Management
Project Goal: Type 2 diabetes is a serious problem in the U.S. and self-management is critical to
control the disease. This study will use mobile health technologies to identify strategies that help
patients and health professionals use patient-generated data to help patients better self-manage
and overcome challenges with diabetes. The results will serve as a cornerstone for creating tools
to help patients better self-manage disease through the use of mobile health technologies and
real-time patient-provider collaboration.
20
Project Number: R34 PAR-10-005
Status on Grant: Co-PI
Approved Project Period: 8/2015 – 4/2018
% Effort: 10
PIs: Voils & Shaw
Source: NIH National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
Title of Project: A novel IT weight loss solution to provide variable-ratio rewards in real-time
Project Goal: To determine the feasibility of using automated algorithms that analyze dietary
self-monitoring and interim weight loss data to provide real-time reinforcement using variable-
ratio financial incentives.
Project Number: Duke Health Innovation Lab
Status on Grant: Director
Approved Project Period: 7/2016 – 6/2019
% Effort: 15
PI: Shaw
Source: Duke University School of Nursing Endowment
Title of Project: Duke Health Innovation Lab
Project Goal: To develop an interdisciplinary center for developing and testing pioneering
innovations in technology and patient care delivery. The mission of the lab is to position the
Duke University School of Nursing as an agent of transformation at Duke University that will
foster an entrepreneurial spirit, generate clinical innovations, and translate those innovations to
impact the health of individuals, communities, institutions and society.
Project Number: CAGPM Innovation Award
Status on Grant: Co-PI
Approved Project Period: 10/1/16 – 9/30/17
% Effort: Donated
PIs: Shaw & Reuter-Rice
Source: Duke Center for Applied Genomics & Precision Medicine
Title of Project: Aggregating and Visualizing Environmental Biological Physiological and
Outcome Data in Acute Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury
Project Goal: This study is builds upon a developed prototype (Reuter-Rice, Shaw, et al. 2016
disclosure) to recognize individual responses to acute traumatic brain injury and short-term
outcomes. This study will validate the collection of environmental sensor data in acute head-
injured children and aggregate that data with biologic (omic and specific biomarkers), physiologic,
and outcome data.
Research: Pending
21
Project Number: R21 PA-16-161
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 6/2018 – 5/2020
% Effort: 10
MPI: Shaw & Hauser (Pratt Engineering)
Source: NIH National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease & National Institute of
Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
Title of Project: Towards Telerobotic Nursing
Project Goal: During disease outbreaks, such as the Ebola epidemic of 2014–2015, and with
highly infectious diseases such as tuberculosis, there is a high risk of patients spreading disease
to other patients and healthcare personnel. Similar concerns exist for environmental disasters
including nuclear and sever air pollution, among others. Robotics is a promising approach to
address these challenges and could perform care delivery duties inside high-risk clinical areas,
which could reduce infection transmission by minimizing exposure to pathogens and other
biohazards. Our team developed a first-generation prototype robot of such a system and tested it
successfully in a hospital simulation lab. This study will develop the robot to have clinical
function and then will test the capabilities in a simulated hospital first on manikins and then in a
simulated hospital with volunteers.
Project Number: R01 PA-13-302
Score: 21 7%
Status on Grant: Site-PI
Approved Project Period: 1/2018 – 12/2022
% Effort: 20
PI: Corrine Voils
Source: NIH National Heart Lung and Blood Institute
Title of Project: Using Partners to Enhance Long-Term Weight Loss
Project Goal: The proposed study will be the first that involves comparison of a partner-assisted
to a patient-only comprehensive weight management intervention. If effective and cost-effective,
then the partner-assisted intervention could be offered in clinical care to promote weight loss and
its numerous benefits. The uses modern technology to facilitate patient self-monitoring,
including a cellular scale, a wrist-worn accelerometer, and mobile telephone apps to monitor
weight, physical activity levels, and dietary intake. Patients will also receive text messages
between formal intervention contacts that reinforce messages provided by the interventionists.
Project Number: NSF 17-572
Status on Grant: Co-PI
Approved Project Period: 3/2018 – 2/2021
% Effort: 10
PI: Hauser
Source: National Science Foundation
Title of Project: Autonomy Training of Nursing Robots from Human Experience
Project Goal: To improve the Telerobotic Intelligent Nursing Assistant’s (TRINA) utility to
nursing practitioners by automating many of its functions under the direct guidance of
experienced nurses. Doing so will require new research into intelligent user interfaces and
22
inference techniques for training and operating robots with multiple levels of autonomy in
unstructured environments.
Project Number: R21 PA-16-161
Status on Grant: Co-I
Approved Project Period: 5/2018 – 4/2020
% Effort: 10
PI: Cohoen-Wolkowiez
Source: NIH National Institute of Aging
Title of Project: Virtual Reality to Improve Outcomes in older adults
Project Goal: In older patients, hospital-associated physical disability and readmissions are
common and deadly. Virtual reality can be used to increase physical mobility and prevent these
devastating outcomes in this population, however, applicability of VR in older adults is
hampered by a high incidence of VR-induced simulator sickness in these individuals. This
proposal will evaluate the effect and tolerability of interventions to decrease VR-induced
simulator sickness in older adults and by extension improve patient outcomes in this population.
Research: Past
Project Number: Summer 2017 Data+
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: Summer 2017
% Effort: Donated
PI: Ryan Shaw
Source: Information Initiative at Duke (iiD) and the Social Science Research Institute (SSRI) at
Duke University
Title of Project: Visualizing Real Time Data from Mobile Health Technologies
Project Goal: Using data from the NIH 1R15NR015890-01 study, a Data+ team of Duke data
scientists and students will work with our research team to develop data visualizations and
algorithms to make use of self-generated diabetes data from multiple mobile technologies. The
Data+ team will learn how to present longitudinal, time series data back to patients and clinicians
and will develop algorithms that will allow us to send predictive alerts to patients to facilitate
intervention in near real-time. Students will work with an interdisciplinary team including
faculty, clinicians and staff that specialize in nursing, medicine, public health, nutrition,
biostatistics, and health information technology.
Project Number: N/A
Status on Grant: Co-PI
Approved Project Period: 06/15/2015-06/30/2017
% Effort: Donated
PI: Bettger, Co-PI: Shaw
Source: Duke Clinical Research Institute
Title of Project: To develop a mobile application using iPhone’s Researchkit and examine uptake
by the general population for people to evaluate their walking endurance and self-reported health
status.
23
Project Number: N/A
Status on Grant: Co-I
Approved Project Period: 7/1/15 – 6/30/17
% Effort: 5
PI: Bosworth
Source: PhRMA Foundation
Title of Project: Medication Adherence Alliance
Project Goal: Duke University and the Medication Adherence Alliance aim to positively
influence public health by improving the research evidence base for medication adherence
improvement. The Alliance will engage academic researchers and stakeholders in the healthcare
field to enhance the real world implementation and evaluation of adherence strategies and ensure
robust dissemination of research findings.
Project Number: N/A
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 3/2016 – 2/2017
% Effort: donates
PI: Shaw
Source: Duke University School of Nursing CNR Small Grant Program
Title of Project: The Sixth Vital Sign ResearchKit App
Project Goals: (1) To examine uptake by the general population and targeted subgroups of adults
to participate in the 6th Vital Sign iPhone-based study (consent, walk test, self-reported health)/
(2) To measure the 2MWT in an unlimited adult population (spanning the nation, lifespan,
continuum of health). (3) To establish mobile-phone based norms for the 2MWT. (4) To increase
awareness of the importance of mobility on health, survival and quality of life (indirectly
measured)
Project Number: MEDx Colloquia
Status on Grant: PI with Co-PI Tuan Vo-Dinh (Pratt Engineering)
Approved Project Period: 12/2015 – 10/2016
% Effort: Donated
Source: Duke Medicine+Engineering MEDx
Title of Project: The MEDx Mobile & Wireless Technology Colloquia
Project Goal: While momentum has built at Duke around the development and use of mobile and
wireless technologies, challenges remain with collaborations across the University. To realize the
promise of mobile technology for health and healthcare, clinicians and health scientists need to
partner with engineers, computer scientists, and data scientists in the development, design, and
testing of these devices and their data. Thus, the goals of this colloquia are as follows:
1. To provide a forum that brings together faculty, staff and students across the Schools of
Medicine, Nursing, Engineering, and Arts and Sciences to develop an interdisciplinary
community on the use of mobile and wireless technologies
2. To develop collaborative interdisciplinary grant proposals and scholarship
3. To submit collaborative grants in later 2016 / early 2017
24
Project Number: DCI Cancer Survivorship Center Pilot Research Projects
Status on Grant: Co-I
Approved Project Period: 1/2015 – 1/2016
% Effort: 10
PI: Isaac Lipkus
Source: Duke Cancer Institute
Title of Project: Reducing Sedentary Behaviors among Colorectal Cancer Survivors
Project Goal: To develop and obtain feasibility data pertaining to materials focused on educating
CRC survivors about sedentary behaviors (e.g., what are they), their health effects, and strategies
to reduce sedentary behaviors. Data is captured by using a wearable technology, ActiGraph,
which captures energy expenditure and activity. Dr. Shaw leads the technology, analytical, and
data analysis component.
Project Number: DUSON ORA Small Grant Program
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 6/2014 – 5/2015
% Effort: 15
PI: Shaw
Source: Duke University School of Nursing DUSON ORA Small Grant Program
Title of Project: Mobile Health Messages Help Sustain Recent Weight Loss – Phase 2
Project Goal: This study involves 1) integrating an automated messaging function into the
Mobile Health Platform and then 2) translating through automaticity an evidence-based text
messaging intervention for sustaining weight loss into the clinical setting.
Project Number: 1P30NR014139-01 (PI: Anderson)
Status on Grant: PI of pilot grant
Approved Project Period: 12/2013 – 12/2014
% Effort: 10
PI: Ryan J. Shaw
Mentor: Ruth Anderson
Source: Duke University School of Nursing ADAPT Center Small Grant Program (funded by
NINR/NIH)
Title of Project: The Adaptive Leadership Framework in Mobile Health: A Pilot Study for
Weight Loss
Project Goal: This study begins to address the need for patients and clinicians to make meaning
and perform adaptive work and approaches from multiple weight loss data (e.g., weight, physical
activity, and diet) and barriers to weight loss that are captured in real time through mobile
devices.
Project Number: mHealth@Duke Colloquium Grant
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 12/2013 – 12/2014
% Effort: 10
PI: Ryan J. Shaw
Source: Duke University School of Nursing
Title of Project: The mHealth@Duke Consortium and Seminar Series
25
Project Goal: To support the mHealth@Duke interdisciplinary consortium to accelerate research
on the use of sensors and mobile technology to advance the delivery of health care through
improved patient-provider communication and collaborative health care management. Through
our consortium of faculty, students and yearly conference, we do this by: 1) providing a venue
for education and leadership development in the mHealth space and 2) serve as an incubator for
mHealth research by providing a forum for discussing and refining new ideas, identifying
funding resources, and serving to build capacity for novel mHealth technologies.
Project Number: CPPM RFA#2
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 8/2013 – 7/2014
% Effort: 20
PI: Shaw
Co-PI: Hayden Bosworth
Source: Duke Center for Personalized and Precision Medicine
Title of Project: The Mobile Health (mHealth) Platform: Development and Feasibility Evaluation
Project Goal: To begin development of a single unified platform that will collect and deliver
multiple domains of real time health and contextual data from various wireless and mobile
devices that will allow for intra-individual tailoring and personalization of health interventions.
Project Number: TPP-21-021
Status on Grant: Nursing Post-doctoral Research Fellow
Approved Project Period: 8/2012 – 7/2013
% Effort: 100
PI: Hayden Bosworth
Source: Veterans Affairs Office of Academic Affiliations, Health Services Research &
Development
Title of Project: Post-doctoral Training
Project Goal: To explore intervention approaches to chronic illness prevention and treatment,
and contribute to the scientific understanding of chronic illness, health maintenance, and
informatics through published manuscripts, conference presentations, and grant submissions
Project Number: 1F31 NR012599
Status on Grant: Principal investigator, trainee
Approved Project Period: 12/2010-8/2012
% Effort: 100
PI: Shaw (Doctoral trainee) & Constance Johnson (Faculty sponsor)
Source: NIH/National Institute of Nursing Research
Title of Project: A three-month RCT to sustain weight-loss among people with obesity through
targeted short message service (SMS)
Project Goal: To explore the effects of theoretically targeted mobile phone messages on
sustaining weight loss
26
Project Number: CTSA TL1 RR024126-05
Status on Grant: Principal investigator, trainee
Approved Project Period: 7/2010-9/2010
% Effort: 100
PI: Shaw (Doctoral trainee) & Constance Johnson (Faculty sponsor)
Source: NIH CTSA/Duke Translational Medical Institute ‒ Pre-doctoral scholarship
Title of Project: Development and feasibility testing of a targeted weight-loss sustaining text
message intervention
Project Goal: To develop a weight loss sustaining text message intervention and test the
feasibility and acceptability among people with obesity
Project Number: CTSA TL1 RR024126-05
Status on Grant: Principal investigator, trainee
Approved Project Period: 7/2010-9/2010
% Effort: 100
PI: Shaw (Doctoral trainee) & Constance Johnson (Faculty sponsor)
Source: NIH CTSA/Duke Translational Medical Institute ‒ Pre-doctoral scholarship
Title of Project: Information and behaviors people with diabetes seek and partake in online
Project Goal: To determine the health information seeking and social media use on the Internet
among people with diabetes
2. Educational/Training Support
Educational/Training: Past
Project Number: CATALYST Award
Status on Grant: PI
Approved Project Period: 6/2014 – 9/2015
% Effort: 15
PI: Shaw
Source: Duke University School of Nursing
Title of Project: A Catalyst to Use Data Analytics (CLOUD) for Innovating the DUSON
Informatics Program
Project Goal: This multi-phase award will fund faculty training in Data Analytics that will be
used for the development of a future innovative class in Data Analytics for the Master of Science
in Informatics program at Duke University School of Nursing. Further, resources from the
CATALYST team will be leveraged to both develop and build the data analytics course, and also
to improve the current pre-requisite course in Database Systems.
3. Other External Support
27
Other Support: Past
Project Number: Think Swiss Travel grant
Status on Grant: Trainee
Approved Project Period: Summer, 2010
Source: Swiss Confederation – Institute of Nursing Science
Title of Project: Systematic Reviews: Meta-Analysis and Meta-Synthesis in Health Sciences
Project Goal: Summer course at the University of Basel, Switzerland which taught nurse scientist
how to interpret and perform a meta-analysis and meta-synthesis.
Administrative activities and/or committee assignments at Duke:
(School of Nursing, Medical Center, and University)
Duke University School of Nursing:
Activities and/or Committee Assignments Date(s)
Duke American Assembly of Men in Nursing (DAAMN) – Faculty sponsor 2014-2015
DUSON Editorial Writing Task Force, Member Sept 2015
MSN Program, Member 2013-present
PhD Program, Member 2014-present
PhD Program Website Redesign – Faculty lead 2014-2016
PhD Program 10-Year Anniversary – Planning Committee 2016
PhD Program POD – Faculty leader 2015-2016
MSN Judicial Board, Member 2014-present
Dean’s Diversity Committee, Member 2014-present
PhD Admissions Committee, Member 2015-2017
Center for Nursing Discovery Advisory Board, Member 2016-present
DUSON Business Development Advisory Board, Member 2016-present
DUSON Center for Nursing Research, Research Area of Excellence Lead 2016-present
PhD Program Committee, member 2017-present
PhD Admissions Committee, Chair 2017-2019
Duke University Medical Center:
Activities and/or Committee Assignments Date(s)
mHealth@Duke Core Faculty 2012- present
mHealth@Duke Annual Conference Planning Committee, Member 2013- 2017
Duke Center for Applied Genomics and Precision Medicine, Leadership 2013- present
28
Circle, Member
Duke University:
Activities and/or Committee Assignments Date(s)
Duke University Innovation & Entrepreneurship Graduate and Professional
Steering Committee
2016- present
Duke Mobile App Gateway, Faculty Director 2017- present
Duke CTSA Transformative Pilot Agreement Program, Consult Service
Oversight Committee
2017- present
National:
Activities and/or Committee Assignments
Date(s)
mHealth Working Group of the Genomics Roundtable, The National
Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, member
2017- present
_________________ _____________________________________________
Date Signature of Chair
29
Personal Information
Faculty member’s preferred familiar name: Ryan
Home address: 1005 Golf St.
Durham, NC
27705
Home Phone # 917-370-8023