Research Collaboration
We support the discovery and implementation of new evidence for integrated, person-centered care.
We are expert listeners.
We bring our expert listening skills to the key tasks of stakeholder engagement and qualitative evaluation.
We partner with research groups in a variety of ways, from joining your team as an ongoing contributor to providing advisory support and subject matter expertise.
We work with healthcare providers and researchers to implement and evaluate new programs.
We can help:
Lead practice facilitation and implementation support for pragmatic health services research
Engage stakeholders in co-designing evaluation and intervention strategies
Facilitate focus groups and interviews with patients, workforce members, and other stakeholders
Collect, analyze, and summarize qualitative data
Write reports and manuscripts summarizing research findings
We offer a reliable and thoughtful approach to research collaboration.
Our goal is to maintain easy partnerships and produce excellent results. You can count on us to be a flexible, dependable, and proactive contributor to the success of your project.
Collaborator Experiences
“Ariel is a dream of a colleague and thought partner. She embraces challenges, is data-driven, asks thoughtful questions, offers creative solutions, and genuinely cares about every team member and stakeholder as a human being. She would be a huge asset to any health services research team!”
“Ariel is thorough, thoughtful, knowledgeable, and incredibly pragmatic. She brought a wealth of experience to our project to implement and evaluate a new health system intervention – she partnered collaboratively with our care teams and offered reflective insights along the way that helped our complex implementation go more smoothly. I couldn’t have asked for a better collaboration.”
“Here are some broad brushstrokes of a person-centered approach. Be curious. Bring a humble beginner’s mind to your helping relationships, not assuming you already know what’s happening and what’s needed.”
— Miller and Rollnick