University of Wisconsin–Madison

Month: January 2020

UW-CTRI Contributes to U.S. Surgeon General Report on Tobacco Cessation

UW-CTRI staff contributed a chapter to the new report from US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams on smoking cessation. UW-CTRI Research Director Dr. Timothy Baker, Outreach Director Rob Adsit, and UW-CTRI Director Dr. Michael Fiore wrote chapter 7 in the report, “Clinical-, System-, andPopulation-Level Strategies that Promote Smoking Cessation.” UW-CTRI Librarian Dr. Wendy Theobald assisted …

More than 260 Health Professionals Take New Online Course on the ‘Bucket Approach’

More than 260 people have taken the new online Bucket Approach training for clinicians to learn how to help patients with serious or significant mental illness to quit smoking. The course, developed by UW-CTRI Researcher Dr. Bruce Christiansen, offers 8.25 free continuing education credits. The project is funded by the State of Wisconsin Department of Health Services …

Danielle McCarthy Receives Mentorship Award

UW-CTRI Associate Director of Research Dr. Danielle McCarthy is the recipient of a 2020 UW-Madison Postdoc Mentoring Award from the UW-Madison Postdoctoral Association. McCarthy was nominated by UW-CTRI Postdoctoral Research Associate Dr. Nayoung Kim, who since 2017 has conducted research under McCarthy’s tutelage. Together, they have developed multiple manuscripts in clinical and population research, delivered …

Esteemed Researcher Dr. Robin Mermelstein Continues Collaboration with UW-CTRI

Dr. Robin Mermelstein’s connection with UW-CTRI goes back 20 years and continues on a new grant. “I feel incredibly honored to be part of the CTRI team,” she said. “They are the premiere experts in smoking cessation delivery, doing cutting-edge treatment on how to make it work. I admire their creativity and pragmatism, working within …

BREATHE 2 Collaborator Wrote the Code that Advanced UW-CTRI Research

Dr. Wei-Yin Loh has written computer software code from scratch spanning 80,000 lines that has revolutionized UW-CTRI’s ability to predict important outcomes. Nowadays, computer code is available for free on the Internet (known as “open source”) but, when Loh started writing his computer code to help predict variables in 1990, it wasn’t that easy. “The …