CROR Outcomes, HCBS Quality Matters, MRSCICS Matters

CROR Outcomes is a quarterly newsletter featuring research updates on our projects at our RRTC on Employment and Disability.

In the News

  • Edelle Field-Fote Profile

    Throughout her career, Edelle Field-Fote has been conducting research on how combining practice with stimulation promotes neuroplasticity in people with spinal cord injuries.

    In the News

  • Profile on Deborah Crown

    Learn more about Deborah Crown and her career in healthcare that she dedicates to helping others.

    In the News

  • Robotic Exoskeleton Study: Rehab Benefits but Not Ready Yet for Home

    Some patients who have been in wheelchairs for decades can stand and walk over ground again in a robotic exoskeleton, putting them on eye-level with their family and friends for the first time in years.

    In the News

  • Renee Manfredi: Finding her Calling as an Advocate for People with IDD

    Renee, who was diagnosed with autism at age nine, is adding one more task to her calendar in 2021: She will chair a new Participant Council made up of people with various types of disabilities who will advise researchers at the Center for Rehabilitation Outcomes Research (CROR) at the Shirley Ryan 汤头条app in Chicago.

    In the News

  • Lindsay DuBois: Dedicated to Empowering People through Public Health Research

    Learn more about Lindsay DuBois and her dedication to empowering people through public health research.

    In the News

  • Challenges for People with IDD in Employment and Health

    In some respects, life has gotten much better for many Americans with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD). But more than 7 million people in the U.S. with IDD are still facing substantial challenges, disability experts say.

    In the News

  • Person-Centered Planning for People with IDD

    By the 1980s, some social scientists and disability advocates were making the case that people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) should have more say in where and how they lived. Yet when social workers asked people with IDD those questions, the residents were often at a loss.

    In the News