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How To Increase the Impact Of Your Work…And Why It Matters

Discover strategies to maximize the impact of your work in behavioral medicine and contribute to the advancement of the field. From interacting with policy makers and the press, to joining community organizations and utilizing social media, learn how to make a difference. Join the Civic and Public Engagement Committee (CPEC) to further enhance your influence.

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How To Increase the Impact Of Your Work…And Why It Matters

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  1. How To Increase the Impact Of Your Work…And Why It Matters Brought to you by the Civic and Public Engagement Committee (CPEC) Formerly known as the Public Policy Leadership Group

  2. Behavioral Science Under Attack Forbes-- 10/7/13 “All research carried out within or supported by NIH is not equal, and the projects carried out by its NCCAM — are clearly a weak link…. many of its projects are trivial and almost all of the interventions tested have proven to be worthless.”

  3. Wall Street Journal 7-25-13– “Most of these ill-advised projects are funded by NSF’s Social, Behavioral and Economics Directorate. The social sciences grants were evaluated with more rigor when they were organizationally within the NSF's Biology Directorate. When these grants were split off, scientific rigor gave way to cronyism and narcissistic self-regard.”  

  4. New York Times –7-19-13 “the social sciences have stagnated. They offer essentially the same set of academic departments and disciplines that they have for nearly 100 years: sociology, economics, anthropology, psychology and political science. This is not only boring but also counterproductive, constraining engagement with the scientific cutting edge and stifling the creation of new and useful knowledge.”

  5. USA Today – September 30, 2013 Rethinking science funding: House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, (R-VA) and Chairman of the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology and Representative Lamar Smith, (R-TX)wrote “we have recently seen far too many questionable grants, especially in the social, behavioral and economic sciences.”

  6. Behavioral scientists

  7. What can I do to increase the impact of my work (and the field of behavioral medicine)?

  8. Strategies to influence thought High impact Interact with policy makers Interact with press Join community organizations Write editorials Social media Join the CPEC! Low impact Publish research in scientific journals Attend professional conferences See patients Teaching

  9. CPEC’s Mission To increase the policy and public impact of behavioral medicine. • Letter sign-on campaigns • Editorials • Capitol Hill visits • Tracking legislation • Social media • Educating membership

  10. Stories

  11. Editorials Katula JA, Vitolis MZ, Morgan TM, et al. The Healthy Living Partnerships to Prevent Diabetes Study: 2-year outcomes of a randomized controlled trial. Am J Prev Med 2013;44:S324–S332. Pagoto S., Lemon SC., Whiteley J. on behalf of the SBM Public Policy Leadership Group. Behavioral weight loss counseling: Reimbursement policy limits implementation of the evidence. NEJM. 2013; N69(5), 485-486. Daumit GL, Dickerson FB, Wang NY, et al. A behavioral weight-loss intervention in persons with serious mental illness. N Engl J Med 2013;368:1594-602. Pagoto S, Lemon SC., Pbert L., Van Dorsten B., Whiteley J. on behalf of the SBM Public Policy Leadership Group. Evidence for community-based approaches to weight loss: a case for revising the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services reimbursement structures. American Journal of Preventive Medicine. 2013 Aug;45(2):e17-8. PubMed PMID: 23867037.

  12. Sherry.pagoto@umassmed.edu

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