By conducting applied research with ICH, you can build a robust evidence base for your programs and publish your impact so that others can learn from and replicate your work. ICH applies research to practice so that knowledge generated becomes actionable and useful to you and to the broader field.
We have expertise in quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods research and we can support any stage of the research process, from study design all the way to dissemination in academic journals and other venues.
As leaders in health services research and community-based approaches, we can help you select and utilize the most effective methods for answering your specific research questions.
With funding from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, LZC is conducting applied research on the role of narratives in shaping healthcare workers’ implementation of policies that advance immigrant inclusion and well-being.
LZC is conducting a study of the Cambridge Health Alliance’s Asylum Program’s (CHAAP) asylum medicine residency elective in partnership with CHAAP and the Center for Health Equity Education and Advocacy (CHEEA).
The Leah Zallman Center is working with The Hastings Center on a research study to explore the bioethical challenges that clinicians and staff face at community health centers across the country.
The Leah Zallman Center for Immigrant Health Research (LZC) partnered with No Kid Hungry to evaluate a No Kid Hungry grant aimed at addressing food insecurity in immigrant communities and thawing the chilling effects of the public charge ruling.
ICH is conducting a qualitative research study to understand the drivers of disparities in substance use disorder treatment among Black and Latinx patients at Mass General Brigham.