Mark Woodard

Grants and Accounts Manager


Worrell 2164C
woodard@wfu.edu
336.758.4705

Mark Woodard currently serves as the Business Manager for the Health & Exercise Science Department. His professional background includes experience as a research exercise physiologist and project manager on NIH-funded clinical trials; department research projects on which he has participated include the FAST, OASIS, REACT I, and REACT II studies.

Publications

Selected Publications

  • Berry MJ, Woodard CM, Dunn CJ, Edwards DG, and Pittman CL.  “The effects of a mountain bike suspension system on metabolic energy expenditure.”  Cycling Science, 5:8, 1993.
  • Berry MJ, Storsteen JA, and Woodard CM.  “Effects of body mass on exercise efficiency and VO2 during steady-state cycling.”  Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 25(9):1031, 1993.
  • Woodard CM, Berry MJ, Rejeski WJ, Ribisl PM, and Miller HS.  “Exercise training in patients with cardiovascular disease and coexistent knee arthritis.”  Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation, 14(4):255, 1994.
  • Woodard CM, James MK, and Messier SP.  “Computational methods used in the determination of loading rate:  Experimental and clinical implications.”  Journal of Applied Biomechanics, 15(4):404, 1999.
  • Rejeski WJ, Foley KO, Woodard CM, Zaccaro DJ, and Berry MJ.  “Evaluating and understanding performance testing in COPD patients.”  Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation, 20(2):79, 2000.
  • Foy CG, Rejeski WJ, Berry MJ, Zacarro D, and Woodard CM.  “Gender moderates the effects of exercise therapy on health-related quality of life among COPD patients.”  Chest, 119(1):70, 2001.
  • Woodard CM and Berry MJ.  “Enhancing adherence to prescribed exercise: Structured behavioral interventions in clinical exercise programs”.  Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation, 21(4):201, 2001.
  • Foy CG, Wickley KL, Adair N, Lang W, Miller ME, Rejeski WJ, Woodard CM, and Berry MJ.  “The Reconditioning Exercise and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Trial II (REACT II): Rationale and study design for a clinical trial of physical activity among individuals with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease”.  Contemporary Clinical Trials, 27(2):135, 2006.