Mikael Anne Greenwood-Hickman, MPH

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“My research uses a combination of epidemiologic and qualitative methods to understand older adult health and lived experience, with the goal of informing new interventions to help prevent cognitive decline and support healthy, active lifestyles as people age.”

Mikael Anne Greenwood-Hickman, MPH

Senior Collaborative Scientist, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute

Biography

Mikael Anne Greenwood-Hickman, MPH, brings a mixed methods approach to geriatrics and aging research. Through the application of both quantitative and qualitative methods, her work aims to better understand the lives and behavior of older adults in order to build interventions and tools to preserve cognitive and physical function and promote wellbeing.

Since completing her Master of Public Health in epidemiology at the University of Washington in 2014, Ms. Greenwood-Hickman has served in several roles within public health research teams, including as a data manager, programmer, and project manager. In 2021, Ms. Greenwood-Hickman formally joined the KPWHRI faculty as a collaborative scientist, bringing her operational knowledge and management skills to bear on her scientific portfolio.

Ms. Greenwood-Hickman’s research interests and work are primarily focused on understanding physical activity and sedentary behavior patterns among older adults and developing and testing interventions to promote physical activity and reduce sedentary time. She has been an active collaborator on the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) Study’s Activity Monitoring sub-study since 2018. As part of this work, she has a particular interest in research that links data gathered by accelerometers (activity trackers that electronically detect up-and-down, side-to-side, and back-and-forth motion) to cognitive and physical function outcomes in later life. Her current work in ACT explores applications of the 24-hour activity cycle framework to the epidemiology of aging. Outside of ACT, Ms. Greenwood-Hickman leads accelerometer data collection and processing for ongoing intervention and observational studies using a variety of research and commercial accelerometers and platforms. She pairs this work with qualitative analysis efforts that seek to elucidate participants’ lived experience engaging in physical activity and sedentary behavior research and behavior change.

Areas of research focus

Recent Publications

Rosenberg DE, Greenwood-Hickman MA, Zhou J, Cook AJ, Mettert KD, Cooper J, Arterburn D, Green BB, Walsh-Bailey C, Kerr J, Owen N, Dunstan D, McClure JB Protocol for a randomized controlled trial of sitting reduction to improve cardiometabolic health in older adults 2021 Dec;111:106593. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2021.106593. Epub 2021-10-16. PubMed

Greenwood-Hickman MA, Nakandala S, Jankowska MM, Rosenberg DE, Tuz-Zahra F, Bellettiere J, Carlson J, Hibbing PR, Zou J, Lacroix AZ, Kumar A, Natarajan L The CNN Hip Accelerometer Posture (CHAP) Method for Classifying Sitting Patterns from Hip Accelerometers: A Validation Study 2021 Nov;53(11):2445-2454. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000002705. Epub 2021-05-24. PubMed

Palazzo L, Hsu C, Barnes DE, Gray MF, Greenwood-Hickman MA, Larson EB, Dublin S Patient and caregiver perspectives on a tool to increase recognition of undiagnosed dementia: a qualitative study 2021 Oct 26;21(1):604. doi: 10.1186/s12877-021-02523-0. Epub 2021-10-26. PubMed

Greenwood-Hickman MA, Dahlquist J, Cooper J, Holden E, McClure JB, Mettert KD, Perry SR, Rosenberg DE "They're Going to Zoom It": A Qualitative Investigation of Impacts and Coping Strategies During the COVID-19 Pandemic Among Older Adults 2021 May 19;9:679976. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.679976. Epub 2021-05-19. PubMed

Carlson JA, Tuz-Zahra F, Bellettiere J, Ridgers ND, Steel C, Bejarano C, LaCroix AZ, Rosenberg DE, Greenwood-Hickman MA, Jankowska MM, Natarajan L Validity of Two Awake Wear-Time Classification Algorithms for activPAL in Youth, Adults, and Older Adults 2021 Apr 22;4(2):151-162. doi: 10.1123/jmpb.2020-0045. Epub 2021-04-22. PubMed

 

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