Skip to main content

Dr. Rosman has an active multidisciplinary research program that uses longitudinal clinical databases, prospective cohort studies, machine learning, and data science approaches to examine modifiable risk factors, care patterns, and clinical outcomes in patients with arrhythmias and implanted cardiac devices. Her work also focuses on improving women’s cardiovascular health across the lifespan and developing personalized, technology-based approaches to cardiovascular risk prediction and disease management.

Dr. Rosman is currently funded by a NIH/NHLBI K23 Career Development Award to examine gender differences in physical activity in patients with implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs). This work aims to leverage long-term physical activity data obtained from a built-in ICD accelerometer to study patterns of inactivity after ICD implant, develop outcome-driven activity thresholds, and examine preferences for technology-based care among men and women with ICDs. She also serves as the Principal Investigator (PI) for the UNC Cardiovascular Device Surveillance Registry and as the PI/co-investigator for several ongoing studies of social/environmental determinants of cardiovascular health, interventions to improve adherence and utilization of remote cardiac monitoring technology, and novel risk factors for heart disease and stroke in young adults.


UNC AFFILIATIONS:

(DOM) Cardiology, Department of Medicine (DOM)

CLINICAL/RESEARCH INTERESTS:

Apps-Devices, Behavior, Cardiovascular disease, Health Informatics, Quality of Life, Women's Health