In this seminar Dr. Mercier will describe the utility of mobile health data to expand our understanding of health, participation, and wellbeing among adults after major injury. She will discuss various study methods for gathering and analyzing mobile health data. Primarily these data are derived from passively collected sensor data on the smartphone or wearables and self-reported ecological momentary assessments via smartphone-based questionnaires. Dr. Mercier will also cover preliminary lessons learned about creating individualized predictive models, group trajectories, participant enrollment and retention, and the clinical utility of this data.
Hannah Mercier is Assistant Professor in the Occupational Therapy Program at the School of Health Professions at Stony Brook University on Long Island, New York. Dr. Mercier’s research interests are the effects of disabling health conditions on participation and interventions to mitigate these, including the development and implementation of individualized mobile health interventions. Her expertise is in adult neurologic rehabilitation, digital assessment and mobile health interventions, community mobility and social engagement after disability, health self-management.
Lugar de celebración: Se puede asistir a la sesión a través de Microsoft Teams (enlace al seminario) o desde el seminario IX de la Facultad de Medicina de la UAM (C./Arzobispo Morcillo 4, 28029 Madrid).
Facultad de Medicina. Universidad Autónoma de Madrid. Calle del Arzobispo Morcillo 4. 28029 Madrid. Tel.: +34 914 975 486. Correo electrónico: informacion.medicina@uam.es