Vincenzo Receives $1 Million Grant for PT Research into Falls of Older Adults

By David Robinson

The Beeson award stems from an initiative by the National Institute on Aging (NIA) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the American Federation for Aging Research, and the John A. Hartford Foundation. Their aim is “to develop a cadre of talented scientists prepared and willing to take an active leadership role in transformative change that will lead to improved health care outcomes,” according to the American Federation for Aging Research website.

Vincenzo is only the third physical therapist to receive the award, which typically goes to physicians.

“I am honored to be a Beeson Scholar and represent UAMS,” said Vincenzo, an associate professor in the College of Health Professions Department of Physical Therapy. “This award will allow UAMS to lead the way to address the public health issues of falls among older adults, which are a leading cause of morbidity, mortality, and decreased quality of life.”

The Beeson award will help her integrate into physical therapy practice the falls prevention self-management plan. She developed the plan in the last three years with funding from her UAMS KL2 award and using the STEADI (Stopping Elderly Accidents, Deaths & Injuries) toolkit developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The STEADI toolkit, established in 2012 for physicians to integrate falls prevention into daily practice, has not been widely adopted, but Vincenzo wants to change that. Her goal is to work with key partners to implement the integrated program as a standard of care in outpatient physical therapy clinics, starting at UAMS.

Vincenzo, center, and Vaughn, right, consult with a patient before a therapy session.

Vincenzo, center, and Vaughn, right, consult with a patient before a therapy session. Images by David Wise

Vincenzo established her fall prevention self-management plan through work supported by a UAMS Translational Research Institute KL2 Mentored Research Career Development Award. She credits the KL2 support that began in 2019 as a key to her success. She received two years (plus a one-year extension) of salary support, research funding, and translational research training, including training in implementation science.

“I would not be where I am without the support of UAMS, the Translational Research Institute, and especially my colleagues in the Department of Physical Therapy, the Office of Community Health and Research, and the Center for Implementation Research,” she said. “The Beeson award will allow me to advance my knowledge and skills as an implementation scientist in aging under the mentorship of Geoffrey Curran, Ph.D., and Jeanne Wei, M.D., Ph.D., who also served as mentors on my KL2.”

Curran is director of the UAMS Center for Implementation Research and professor of pharmacy practice in the College of Pharmacy. Wei is executive director of the UAMS Donald W. Reynolds Institute on Aging and chair of the Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatrics in the College of Medicine.

Translational Research Institute Director Laura James, M.D., said Vincenzo’s success is a great example of how the KL2 program can prepare talented early-career researchers and help them fast track their research programs. James is director of the Translational Research Institute and associate vice chancellor of Clinical and Translational Research.

“Dr. Vincenzo has seized on the opportunities provided by the KL2 program, developing and advancing a plan with significant promise for reducing falls among older adults,” James said. “She has also positioned herself for even greater success as a leader in her field.”

Vincenzo’s KL2 work led to state and national leadership appointments, including chair of the Balance and Falls Special Interest Group – American Physical Therapy Association-Geriatrics (APTA-G); and a member of the APTA-G Board. She is in her second term as chair of the Governor’s Advisory Council on Aging in Arkansas. Vincenzo also recently was invited to attend a meeting at the CDC with other interprofessional clinical and community falls prevention experts.