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Dr. Kenneth Sherr headshot, where he is pictured smiling from the shoulders up.Kenneth Sherr, PhD, MPH, is a Professor in the Department of Global Health and the co-director of the PhD in Global Health Metrics and Evaluation. Dr. Sherr’s research focuses on developing and testing implementation strategies to support data-driven decision making and service integration into the Primary Health Care framework as a means of increasing the coverage and quality of evidence-based interventions. Dr. Sherr has led the development of implementation science training curricula at the University of Washington Department of Global Health, including the development of the PhD program in implementation science in 2012, and directs the Implementation Science Core of the NIH-supported UW/FH Center for AIDS Research. Dr. Sherr’s contributions to the field of implementation include development of the implementation strategy Systems Analysis and Improvement Approach (SAIA).

 

Dr. Arianna Means headshot, where she is pictured smiling from the shoulders up.Arianna Means, PhD, MPH, is an Associate Professor in the Department of Global Health. Her work generates operational evidence needed to improve the delivery of routine primary healthcare programs, both within health facilities and in communities. She is the implementation science lead for the DeWorm3 Project, a series of large hybrid cluster randomized trials in Benin, India, and Malawi. She designs and manages the DeWorm3 Project’s qualitative research studies, organizational readiness research, operational research process mapping studies, and economic evaluations. She leads implementation science activities for a multi-country network of studies which aim to improve care for acutely ill children in countries with limited resources. Dr. Means also teaches the online Fundamentals of Implementation Science course, training hundreds each year, as well as the annual CFAR implementation science mini-course.

 

Directors from previous years:

 

Dr. Melissa Mugambi headshot, where she is pictured smiling from the shoulders up.Melissa Mugambi, MD, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Global Health. Previously, she served as a Program Officer and Fellow on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation’s Diagnostics Team and as a Prevention Effectiveness Fellow at the US CDC, covering multiple infectious disease and reproductive health diagnostic needs. Dr. Mugambi led research activities in 11 health centers and district hospitals in Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda to evaluate facility infrastructure, data management systems, patient workflow and testing needs in efforts to guide diagnostic investment decisions designed to cut across multiple program strategies. Her current research interests focus on the implementation of health technology interventions and delivery models designed to optimize antenatal care services in low-and-middle income countries and among immigrant populations in the Seattle area.

 

Dr. Bryan Weiner headshot, where he is pictured smiling from the shoulders up.Bryan Weiner, PhD, (retired) was a Professor jointly in the Departments of Global Health and Health Systems and Population Health, and the Director of the Implementation Science Program. Dr. Weiner’s research focuses on the adoption, implementation, and sustainability of innovations and evidence-based practices in health care delivery and other organizational settings. He studied a range of innovations including quality improvement practices, care management practices, patient safety practices, clinical information systems, collaborative service delivery models, cancer prevention and control in communities, and evidence-based diabetes practices. His research advanced implementation science, creating new knowledge about the organizational determinants of effective implementation, introducing and developing new theories, and improving the state of measurement in the field. He is now enjoying retirement.