Megan Bennett Irby

Megan Bennett Irby, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Health and Exercise Science at Wake Forest University where she teaches Epidemiology (HES 360) and brings an intentional focus to the study of public health and the history of public health policy in the United States. Dr. Irby has a broad academic background spanning multiple areas of public health. She holds a BS degree in Health & Exercise Science from Wake Forest University; MS degree in Exercise Physiology from UNC-Greensboro; MS degree in Clinical Population & Translational Science from Wake Forest University; PhD in Human Development & Family Studies from UNC-Greensboro, and completed her post-doctoral training in Community-Engaged Research at Wake Forest School of Medicine.
In her former role with Wake Forest School of Medicine, where she conducted research for more than 15 years, Dr. Irby developed and implemented behavioral interventions informed by the lived experiences of patients, particularly related to the management of chronic pain, reducing barriers that hinder access to care, and improving quality of life among groups experiencing chronic health conditions. Inherent to her work in and outside of the classroom is a dedication to supporting health and quality of life by exploring biopsychosocial factors influencing the wellbeing of various populations, intervening on drivers of poor health, and supporting community health through authentic engagement.
Dr. Irby is a leading Investigator on-going multiple NIH funded grants designed to address health challenges within and across many demographic groups, including work on chronic pain, substance use disorder, brain health, aging, and cancer.
Teaching
- HES 360: Epidemiology
Publications
Research
Dr. Irby is the Principal Investigator (PI) of the on-going Native Pathways to Health project that features partnerships with each of the eight American Indian Tribal communities in North Carolina (funded by the Kate B. Reynold’s Charitable Trust and Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC); co-PI of an NIH-funded Alzheimer’s Disease Research Core initiative designed to create and implement brain health programs; co-PI of Healthy Living Partnerships for Veterans with Migraine (HELP VM) that provides an exercise-based pain education program for military Veterans experiencing chronic migraine (funded by the Salisbury Research Foundation); a leading co-investigator on the IMPACTS (Internet-delivered Management of Pain Among Cancer Treatment Survivors) study (funded by the NIH/NCI/HEAL Initiative); a co-PI on an internet-delivered pain coping skills program for individuals with chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (funded by the NIH/NCI’s Community Oncology Research Program); PI on an NIH/HEAL-funded community-engaged project to develop a pain coping skills training program in the Spanish language; and PI on an NIH/HEAL-funded community engagement project in partnership with the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina aimed at addressing substance use disorder and chronic pain. Additionally, Dr. Irby is a recent recipient of a NIH HEAL Initiative Training Award focusing on the neuroscience of pain among varied populations.
Our Faculty
- Eliott Arroyo
- Kristen Beavers
- Michael Berry
- Peter H. Brubaker
- Jay Campbell
- Carlo Davids
- Crystal Dixon
- Ted Eaves
- Jason Fanning
- Sergi Garcia-Retortillo
- Megan Bennett Irby
- Jeffrey Katula
- Dave Lockwood
- Anthony P. Marsh
- Steve Messier
- Shannon L. Mihalko
- Gary D. Miller
- Claire Newman
- W. Jack Rejeski
- Paul M. Ribisl
- Paige E. Rice
- Natascha Romeo
- Sharon Woodard
- Abbie Wrights