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National Institutes of Health (NIH). Steward of medical and behavioral research for the NationDistributes 80% of its $30 billion funding in research grants to all 50 states, its territories, and several foreign countries. Mission:NIH is the nation's medical research agency making important medi
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2. National Institutes of Health (NIH)
4. The Translational Research Gap
5. The Translation Gap
8. African American Population African Americans comprise the United States' largest racial minority, accounting for 12.1 percent of the total population in 2000
This population is concentrated largely in the southern states and urban areas
10. Impetus for the CTSA Program Implement biomedical discoveries
Develop, test, and bring new prevention strategies into medical practice more rapidly
Catalyze change - lower barriers between disciplines
Encourage creative and innovative approaches
12. Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA)
13. Goals for the CTSA Program Improve the way biomedical research is conducted across the country
Reduce the time it takes for laboratory discoveries to become treatments for patients
Engage communities in clinical research efforts
Train clinical and translational researchers
15. Atlanta CTSI
An inter-institutional partnership between Emory University, Morehouse School of Medicine, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, and Georgia Tech.
The ACTSI focus is on community engagement, training C&T investigators, and reducing health disparities.
The goal is to extend the CTSA philosophy of interdisciplinary interactions and connectivity to generate partnerships and collaboration beyond the consortium to organizations involved with health care throughout the nation.
It is through multiple partnerships that CTSAs will transform clinical and translational research and bring new scientific advances to health care.Atlanta CTSI
An inter-institutional partnership between Emory University, Morehouse School of Medicine, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, and Georgia Tech.
The ACTSI focus is on community engagement, training C&T investigators, and reducing health disparities.
The goal is to extend the CTSA philosophy of interdisciplinary interactions and connectivity to generate partnerships and collaboration beyond the consortium to organizations involved with health care throughout the nation.
It is through multiple partnerships that CTSAs will transform clinical and translational research and bring new scientific advances to health care.
16. CTSA Consortium – Building Connections at Columbia University Helped inspire Columbia neurologist Petra Kaufmann, M.D., to reach outside her discipline to find a collaborator to build an apparatus to help children with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)
Partnered with Elisa Konofagou, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Radiology to design the prototype
Resulted in a device to help SMA patients use their arms
17. Informatics Pilots Under Development
18. Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) Example:The West Coast Licensing Partnership
Adds value by bundling related technologies over individual tools and technologies
Strengthens inter-institutional relationships between member partners
Increases global access to research tools by promotion of non-exclusive licensing
Provides simple one-stop licensing of technologies from multiple institutions
Saves time and money from negotiating multiple license agreements
19. CTSA Consortium – Building Connections with Business Schools Develop business plans, design, and implement community surveys
Create innovative cross-educational programs
Develop case studies to pilot programs
Collaborate with international colleagues
Prepare cost analyses
Protect CTSA-developed patents
Form industry partnership programs
20. CTSA Consortium – Building Connections at University of California, Davis Dynamics of the commercialization process of new inventions
Moving along the path of research to market
Purpose of intellectual property in the commercialization process
When is an idea worth protecting and why
Options for faculty, students, and staff in commercializing their research
Resources available to navigate the journey from research to commercialization
22. Lack of exposure to industry contacts
Concern that pursing commercialization will hinder academic career opportunities
Failure to include patenting into research strategy, especially among senior researchers
23. Social Networking: A Tool for Biomedical Researchers
24. Twitter http://twitter.com
Brief text messages (<140 characters) – great for mobile devices
Application in health care, emergencies, surveillance
NIH grant notices
Followers
Tracking
25. Twitter at NIH http://www.nih.gov/twitter.htm
Syndicate - To release media content through a syndicate to be published or broadcast through multiple outlets. http://www.nih.gov/twitter.htm
Syndicate - To release media content through a syndicate to be published or broadcast through multiple outlets.
27. CTSAweb.org uses Wiki
28. Social Networking at Harvard CTSA Harvard Catalyst allows researchers to:
Find people
Continue learning
Access resources
29. Social Networking at Harvard CTSA
30. Vanderbilt StarBRITE Provides one stop shopping for research needs:
Identifies resources
Helps find experts
Obtains regulatory support
Accesses templates for research preparation and study conduct
Obtains database development software
Provides institutional application and research approval process support
31. CTSA Social Network Analysis (SNA) Interest Group Explores SNA as a tool to assess communication and collaboration
Visually depict perceived strength of relationships among individual groups, identifying strong and weak connections among them
Show changes over time in relationships, which in turn can demonstrate how the CTSA program is affecting the way individuals or groups are working with each other
32. Mapping the Evolution of Co-Authorship Networks
34. Prediction of a Rift Valley Fever (RVF) Outbreak Collaborators:
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Department of Defense
Walter Reed Army Institute
World Health Organization
US Department of Agriculture
Conclusion:
Report documents a prospective operational prediction of a RVF outbreak
Analysis demonstrates that satellite monitoring and mapping of key climate conditions and land surface ecological dynamics are an important part of public health surveillance
Study shows that satellite monitoring can help reduce the impact of outbreaks of vector-born disease
35. Thomas Edison: A Design Thinker Design Thinking
Methodology imbues the full spectrum of innovation activities with an understanding of what people want and need
Edison’s Approach
Team-based
Multidisciplinary
Good business sense
Nimble budget
Full product launch — light bulb, electric power system, etc.
36. Design Thinkers: Personality Profiles (Harvard Business Review June 2008, Tim Brown) Empathy
Look at work from multiple perspectives (colleagues, clients, end users, and customers)
Integrative thinking
See salient and contradictory aspects of problem and find novel solutions
Optimism
Assume that at least one potential solution is better than the existing alternatives
Experimentalism
Pose questions and explore constraints in creative ways that proceed in entirely new directions
Collaboration
Have significant experience in more than one discipline (engineers & marketers; anthropologists & industrial designers; architects & psychologists)
37. Aravind Eye Care System Guiding Philosophy
38. Taking a Global View of Design Thinking:Aravind Eye Care System in India More than an eye hospital Aravind is:
A social organization committed to the goal of elimination of needless blindness through comprehensive eye care services
An international training centre for ophthalmic professionals and trainees who come from within India and around the world
An institute for research that contributes to the development of eye care.
An institute to train health-related and managerial personnel in the development and implementation of efficient and sustainable eye care programs
A manufacturer of world class ophthalmic products available at affordable costs