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FINAL PROGRAM<br />

37 TH ANNUAL MEETING & SCIENTIFIC SESSIONS<br />

THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 2016<br />

11 a.m. – 12 p.m. Midday Meeting: Evidence-Based Behavioral Medicine SIG Midday Roundtable<br />

International Terrace<br />

Moderators: E. Amy Janke, PhD, University of the Sciences, Philadelphia, PA; and Joanna Buscemi, PhD, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL<br />

This will be an open-area session with time for networking. Drs. Janke and Buscemi will review Evidence-Based Behavioral Medicine SIG business<br />

including the SIG special issue paper and collaborations with the Cochrane Collaboration. The Outstanding Trainee Award will be presented.<br />

11 a.m. – 12 p.m. Midday Meeting: Student SIG Presents: Internship Meet and Greet<br />

Cabinet<br />

Moderators: Brenna N. Renn, MA, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX; and Courtney Stevens, MA, University of Colorado-Boulder, Boulder, CO<br />

This informal and interactive meet-and-greet will feature representatives and/or current interns from several Psychology internship sites that<br />

provide specialized training in behavioral medicine. Come prepared to network, learn about site-specific training opportunities, and get your<br />

questions answered.<br />

This session not eligible for continuing education credit.<br />

11 a.m. – 12 p.m. Midday Meeting: Physical Activity SIG Presents: Meet the Physical Activity Experts<br />

Columbia 6<br />

Moderators: Melissa A. Napolitano, PhD, George <strong>Washington</strong> University, <strong>Washington</strong>, DC; and Beth Lewis, PhD, University of Minnesota,<br />

Minneapolis, MN<br />

The purpose of this midday meeting is to provide an opportunity for junior SBM members to meet with experts in the physical activity field. The<br />

experts will include Abby King (older adults, state-of-the-art communication technologies; community-based participatory research perspectives<br />

to address health disparities among disadvantaged populations), Bess Marcus (theory-based measurement and interventions, technology and<br />

behavioral medicine, culturally tailored interventions), Loretta DiPietro (aging and physical activity, accelerometry, metabolic risk factors, physical<br />

activity and public health), Cheryl Albright (interventions targeting sedentary behaviors, physical activity, and obesity/weight management using<br />

technology such as Google TV). This midday session will create a helpful environment to assist junior researchers in advancing their own science.<br />

This session not eligible for continuing education credit.<br />

THURSDAY<br />

11 a.m. – 12 p.m. Midday Meeting: Scientific and Professional Liaison Council, Technology SIG, American Medical<br />

Informatics Association, and Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association Present: The<br />

State of Science in Applying Bioinformatics to Enhance Patient Engagement<br />

Columbia 8<br />

Moderators: Miho Tanaka, PhD, MPH, Department of Veterans Affairs, <strong>Washington</strong>, DC; David K. Ahern, PhD, National Cancer Institute, Rockville,<br />

MD; Sherri Sheinfeld Gorin, PhD, Columbia University/National Cancer Institute/NYPAC, New York, NY; and Doug Fridsma, MD, PhD, Karen<br />

Greenwood, and Nancy Lorenzi, PhD, FACMI, American Medical Informatics Association, Bethesda, MD<br />

This session will bring informatics researchers and behavioral scientists together to identify good practices for the use of information technology<br />

to facilitate patient engagement/patient-centered care. Presenters will identify the key factors for linking the use of technology with enhanced<br />

patient engagement and patient centered care. Due to innovations in mobile apps and social media technologies, opportunities to enhance patient<br />

engagement in health care are great. Many health care plans and research entities have implemented mobile apps and social media approaches<br />

to engage patients in medical decision making and self-management of their health conditions. The impact of these technology-mediated<br />

interventions on patient-centered care is not yet fully understood, however, either conceptually or empirically. We have limited scientific knowledge<br />

about the types of informatics tools or interventions that facilitate patient engagement/patient centered care, what types of intervention designs<br />

are promising, and in which health care contexts the informatics tools/interventions work best. These are critical questions to be explored during<br />

this midday session. The session will be amplified by a special collection of related articles published by the Journal of the American Medical<br />

Informatics Association and co-marketed with SBM.<br />

This session not eligible for continuing education credit.<br />

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