September 20, 2021: Vince Mor to Present on Challenges to Implementing Innovative Programs in Long-Term Care

Photo of Vincent Mor
Dr. Vincent Mor, Co-PI of PROVEN

Dr. Vince Mor, a longtime NIH Collaboratory investigator, will present “Challenges Implementing Innovative Programs in Long Term Care: Examples From Pragmatic Trials” at IMPACT Grand Rounds. Join the grand rounds session on Wednesday, September 22, 2021 from 12:00 to 1:00 pm ET.

From the IMPACT Collaboratory announcement:

Vincent Mor, PhD, is a professor of health services, policy & practice and Florence Pirce Grant Professor in the Brown University School of Public Health, and has been principal investigator of 40+ NIH-funded grants focusing on use of health services and outcomes of frail and chronically ill people. He has evaluated the impact of programs and policies including Medicare funding of hospice, changes in Medicare nursing home payment, and the introduction of nursing home quality measures. He co-authored the Congressionally-mandated Minimum Data Set (MDS) and was architect of an integrated Medicare claims and clinical assessment data structure used for policy analysis, pharmaco-epidemiology and population outcome measurement. Dr. Mor developed summary measures using MDS data to characterize residents’ physical, cognitive and psycho-social functioning. These data resources are the heart of Dr. Mor’s NIA- funded Program Project Grant, “Changing Long Term Care in America,” which examines the impact of Medicaid and Medicare policies on long-term care. These data are also at the core of a series of large, pragmatic cluster randomized trials of novel nursing home-based interventions led by Dr. Mor.

Dr. Mor was a co–principal investigator of the Pragmatic Trial of Video Education in Nursing Homes (PROVEN), an NIH Collaboratory Trial. He now serves as a principal investigator of the IMPACT Collaboratory, a program funded by the National Institute on Aging to build the nation’s capacity to conduct embedded pragmatic clinical trials for people living with dementia and their care partners.