LHS Scholars
Cohort 6

Dr. Arsoniadis is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Surgery, Division of Colon and Rectal Surgery at the University of Minnesota. He completed medical school at the University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, a general surgery residency at the University of Minnesota, and a colon and rectal surgery fellowship at the Cleveland Clinic Florida. He has also completed a Doctor of Philosophy in Health Informatics from the Institute for Health Informatics at the University of Minnesota. His clinical interests include the surgical management of colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, and anorectal disorders. His LHS project studies ways to improve the screening and detection of premalignant anal lesions in high-risk populations, especially HIV+ gay men, in an effort to prevent development of anal cancer. These interests stem from a broader interest in improving the delivery of healthcare to the LGBTQ+ patient population.

Dr. Byrd is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Department of Medicine, Division of Hospital Medicine, at the University of Minnesota. His current work focuses on clinical deterioration, wherein a patient’s condition suddenly and unexpectedly worsens while hospitalized. As an MN-LHS scholar, he aims to optimize and implement an unbiased artificial intelligence algorithm that predicts deterioration before it occurs, allowing for swift clinical intervention. Dr. Byrd attended medical school at the University of New Mexico and completed residency training in internal medicine at Northwestern University. He earned his master’s degree in Health and Biomedical Informatics from Northwestern University.
Cohort 5

Dr. Begnaud is an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Department of Medicine, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine at the University of Minnesota. As an interventional pulmonologist with a passion for lung cancer, she has led the implementation of the University of Minnesota Health Lung Cancer Screening Program since its inception in 2013. Her goal as a MN-LHS scholar is to impact health care delivery to promote a more equitable healthcare system with a focus on improving access to and implementation of lung cancer screening (LCS). Dr. Begnaud holds an MD from Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center.

Dr. Gustavson is a research trained physical therapist and current post-doctoral fellow in Center for Care Delivery & Outcomes Research (CCDOR) at the Minneapolis VA. Her research focuses on using implementation science to promote the uptake and spread of evidence based practice and patient-centered outcomes into healthcare systems, clinical practices, and community based services. Her aim as a learning health system researcher is to implement a telerehabilitation program to enhance access to quality rehabilitation following hospitalization for persons with dementia. Dr. Gustavson has a Doctorate in Physical Therapy from the University of Minnesota and a PhD in Rehabilitation Science from the University of Colorado.
Cohort 4

Dr. Boehmer is an Assistant Professor of Health Services Research at Mayo Clinic and affiliate faculty with the University of Minnesota School of Nursing. She holds a PhD in Nursing and an MPH in Public Health Administration & Policy from the University of Minnesota. Her goal is to conduct research that advances evidence-based care that makes intellectual, emotional, and practical sense in the lives of people, particularly those who face multiple chronic conditions and personal or social complexity. Dr. Boehmer’s time spent in the program will focus on implementing an intervention to support patients on dialysis.

Dr. McKinney is a Post-Doctoral Research Fellow at Hennepin Healthcare where his research focuses on creating culturally sensitive resources to support African-American kidney transplant candidates. As a MN-LHS scholar, Dr. McKinney will be embedded within the Nephrology Department at Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute. While there, he will develop patient-centered resources to improve patient education and consultation on the newly available Hepatitis C positive deceased donor option at the Hennepin Healthcare Kidney Transplant Program. Dr McKinney completed a PhD in sociology from Columbia University in 2018, and a combined Master’s degree in African-American Studies and Sociology from Yale University in 2009.
Cohort 3

Dr. Mroz is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology at the University of Minnesota Medical School. He is actively involved in patient care by providing morphological, flow cytometry and molecular diagnoses for patients that seek care at M Health Fairview. Dr. Mroz’s research interests are focused on two areas: developing novel molecular assays for improved detection of minimal residual disease in hematologic patients, particularly droplet digital PCR; and development and implementation of pharmacogenomic testing within the M Health Fairview System and the State of Minnesota. He received his MD and PhD degrees from the Medical University of Warsaw, followed by 6 years as a Postdoctoral Fellow and Instructor at Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School. He completed residency training in Anatomic and Clinical Pathology at the Department of Pathology, Northwestern University in Chicago, and fellowship training in Hematopathology and Molecular Genetic Pathology at the Department of Pathology, University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.
Cohort 2
- Bjorn Berg, PhD
- Carolyn Bramante, MD, MPH
- Sarah McCarthy, PhD, MPH, LP
- Debbie Pestka, PharmD, PhD
- Christopher Tignanelli, MD, MS

Dr. Berg is an Assistant Professor in the Division of Health Policy and Management at the University of Minnesota. His research is focused on applying operations research and systems engineering methods to problems in health care delivery settings. Dr. Berg’s current work is centered on designing family medicine residency schedules. Balancing inpatient, outpatient, and specialty rotations with continuity of outpatient clinic care represents a complex challenge for residency programs and is central to patient and resident clinic experiences. His time as an MN-LHS scholar will be spent in embedded collaboration with the Department of Family Medicine and Community Health at the University of Minnesota to study balanced residency schedules. Dr. Berg received his PhD in Industrial Engineering from North Carolina State University. Prior to joining the University of Minnesota, Bjorn worked at Mayo Clinic focusing on patient access to outpatient care.

Dr. Bramante is an Assistant Professor at the University of Minnesota. She received her medical degree from the University of Minnesota and completed combined residency training in Internal Medicine and Pediatrics (“Med-Peds”) at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Dr. Bramante stayed at Johns Hopkins for a General Internal Medicine Clinical Research Fellowship, during which she completed training in Obesity Medicine, which includes experience with pharmacotherapy and other interventions for obesity treatment. She is board-certified in Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, and Obesity Medicine. Her clinical and research interests center around obesity treatment and prevention for children and adults. She researches ways to assist daily behavior change at home to achieve weight loss, as well as other weight management interventions. Dr. Bramante sees patients in the Comprehensive Weight Management Center and the Pediatric Weight Management Center at M Health Fairview. She received her MD and MPH from the University of Minnesota.

Dr. McCarthy is a pediatric psychologist and researcher at Mayo Clinic. Her current work focuses on developing and evaluating care delivery models that consider, target, and act upon the diverse psychological and social needs of children with complex chronic diseases and their families. Her prior research has examined the role of children and adolescents in health care communication and decision making. Dr. McCarthy received her doctorate from Emory University and her Masters of Public Health from Harvard University. She completed her postdoctoral fellowship at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children’s Hospital and was a staff psychologist at Dana-Farber Cancer Institute/Boston Children’s Hospital for 6 years. Dr. McCarthy is currently an Assistant Professor of Psychology at Mayo Medical School and provides clinical services to medically ill children and their families through the Pediatric Psychology Consultation Liaison Service and Pediatric Palliative Care Service.

Dr. Pestka is a pharmacist and health services researcher at the University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy. As a practicing pharmacist, she has witnessed many of the gaps in care, inefficiencies in the health care system, and challenges that patients and providers face. These experiences have driven her desire to undertake research that improves patient care by incorporating pharmacists into primary care teams. She has extensive experience working across numerous health care settings with a variety of stakeholders to improve care delivery and patient outcomes. For her MN-LHS project, Dr. Pestka will evaluate the implementation and outcomes of comprehensive medication management services in Fairview Health Services’ population health primary care transformation. She received her PharmD and PhD from the University of Minnesota and continues to work as a pharmacist in the community setting.

Dr. Tignanelli is a trauma and critical care surgeon at the University of Minnesota Medical Center and North Memorial Health Hospital. His current work focuses on reducing variability in the delivery of evidence-based practice for patients with rib fractures and other complex traumatic injuries. He attended medical school at the New Jersey Medical School, general surgery residency at the University of North Carolina, surgical critical care fellowship at the University of Michigan, and recently completed a Master of Science degree at the University of Minnesota School of Public Health’s M.S. in Clinical Research Program. He is currently an Assistant Professor of Surgery in the University of Minnesota Medical School.
Cohort 1

Dr. Danan is a primary care physician and health services researcher at the Minneapolis VA Center for Care Delivery and Outcomes Research (CCDOR). Her current work focuses on developing and implementing trauma-sensitive, patient-centered primary and preventive healthcare practices for women who have experienced sexual assault. Prior research addressed expanding access to evidence-based smoking cessation treatments and overcoming barriers to quitting for women and low socioeconomic status smokers. She attended medical school at the University of California, Davis, completed a Master of Public Health in Community Health Sciences at the University of California, Los Angeles, and served as an internal medicine resident and chief resident at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. She then completed an Advanced Fellowship in Health Services Research at the Minneapolis VA. Dr. Danan is currently an Assistant Professor of Medicine in the University of Minnesota Medical School.

Dr. Schaffhausen completed a Master’s degree from the Stanford Joint Program in Design and has over 6 years of industry experience developing healthcare technology. In 2015, he completed a PhD in engineering from the University of Minnesota and created new methods to identify unmet stakeholder needs, including within healthcare environments. His current research position at Hennepin Healthcare Research Institute focuses on providing organ transplant candidates with patient friendly resources to make informed treatment decisions. His work follows an interdisciplinary approach to applying design thinking processes in healthcare research. His research interests are to improve efficiency and outcomes in health systems through data-driven patient and provider decisions, and Dr. Schaffhausen will spend time as an MN-LHS scholar creating tools to help liver transplant candidates prepare for an organ offer decision.