Emily O'Brien

Associate Professor in Population Health Sciences
Campus mail:
2400 Pratt Street, Duke Clin. Research Inst. 6th Floor, Durham, NC 27707
Phone:
(919) 668-0670
Email address:
emily.obrien@duke.edu
I am an epidemiologist and health services researcher at the Duke Clinical Research Institute. My research focuses on comparative effectiveness, patient-centered outcomes, and pragmatic health services research in cardiovascular and pulmonary disease.
Areas of expertise: Epidemiology, Health Services Research, and Clinical Decision Sciences
Education and Training
- Ph.D., University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill, 2012
Selected Grants and Awards
- Balancing Risks and Benefits of Direct Oral Anticoagulants in Older Ischemic Stroke Patients with Atrial Fibrillation
- Collaboratory Resource Coordinating Center for Pragmatic and Implementation Studies for the Management of Pain (PRISM) (U24)
- Evaluating fitness-for-use of Electronic Health Records in Clinical Research
- In-hospital Use of Sacubitril/Valsartan and Post-discharge Adherence and Clinical Outcomes Following Hospitalization for Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction
- COVID 19_SUA
- COVID 19_Protocol Development LOI
- HERO Program, HERO Registry, HERO-HCQ Trial
- Jackson Heart Study Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) Working Group and Medicare Data Linkage
- Using PCORnet to Compare Blood Pressure Control Strategies (Subaward to UCSF)
- Caregivers' Reactions and Experience: Imaging Dementia-Evidence for Amyloid Scanning-CARE IDEAS
- Early Adoption of Novel Heart Failure Therapy and Patient-Prioritized Outcomes in Clinical Practice: Results from the GWTG-HF Registry
- Jackson Heart Study Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) Working Group and Medicare Data Linkage
- Patient-centered Research into Outcomes Stroke patients Prefer and Effectiveness Research
- Methodology for Linking Clinical and Administrative Databases
- A Collaboration for Improving Outcomes of African Americans with Heart Failure
- Extraction Vs Capping Pacing and Defibrillator Leads
- Patient-centered Research into Outcomes Stroke patients Prefer and Effectiveness Research