Georgia CTSA Newsletter

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Georgia CTSA
Weekly eRoundup

July 24, 2020

In this edition:


Feature
Did You Know?
Funding & Related Information
Education
Research Resources
Innovation & Translation
Community
Events
 
 

Feature

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Georgia CTSA Leads Serosurvey for CDC and FEMA COVID-19 Responders

Georgia CTSA and Emory University including the Emory Medical Laboratory assisted the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) in conducting a serosurvey to assess the presence of antibodies to SARS-CoV-2 among their workforce who are participating in the COVID-19 response. Georgia CTSA completed more than 1,200 blood draws for a COVID-19 serology (antibody) testing for CDC first responders ...

 
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Speed Networking on COVID-19 via Zoom

Join faculty from across Georgia CTSA for an energetic evening of networking at our version of The Gong Show on September 23 from 4:00 – 5:30PM via Zoom! Emory School of Medicine Dean Vikas Sukhatme will emcee as attendees present their research in 3 minutes or less with the goal of seeking new collaborators. Presenter slots are limited, so register early. Non-presenters are welcome to attend to learn about their colleagues’ work and collaborate.
 
Register
 
 
 

Did You Know?

 
 
 

Georgia CTSA Leader Co-authors Community Engagement Book

Tabia Henry Akintobi, PhD, MPH, Georgia CTSA Community Engagement Program Director and Professor, Community Health and Preventive Medicine, Associate Dean, Community Engagement, and Director, Prevention Research Center at Morehouse School of Medicine (MSM) co-authored The Morehouse Model: How One School of Medicine Revolutioned Community Engagement and Health Equity. This new book by MSM experts provides lessons learned for community engagement. “To establish ongoing collaborative projects requires genuineness, transparency, and trust from everyone involved,” says Akintoibi. “Citizen participation is a critical element for facilitating behavioral change.” The Morehouse Model is available in Barnes and Noble and Amazon bookstores.
 
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Funding & Related Information

 
 
 

Fast Grants – COVID 19 Funding Opportunity: Open Deadline Until Funding is Depleted

Fast Grants funders have committed over $40M to funding Fast Grant awardees. If you are a scientist at an academic institution currently working on a COVID-19 related project and in need of funding, you should consider applying for a Fast Grant. Fast Grants are between $10k to $500k and decisions are made in under 14 days. Please contact your RAS unit and Kristin Anderson (kristin.anderson@emory.edu) to inform them of your intent to submit.
 
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WHSC COVID-19 Center for Urgent Research Engagement (COVID-19 CURE) and Awards Program – Rolling Acceptance until December 15

The Woodruff Health Sciences Center (WHSC) announces the launch of the WHSC COVID-19 CENTER for URGENT RESEARCH ENGAGEMENT (COVID-19 CURE) and Awards Program, made possible by generous philanthropic support from the O. Wayne Rollins Foundation and the William Randolph Hearst Foundation. The CURE Center was created to facilitate high-impact science and discovery towards improved COVID-19 treatment and prevention research. The funds can be used to support new COVID-19 focused researchers, equipment/instrumentation, technical support, pilots and enhancing facilities for this work. In addition, COVID-19 CURE will act as a hub, facilitating and helping to prioritize Emory COVID-19 research activities. http://georgiactsa.org/documents/news/COVID-19-CURE.pdf.
 
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RADx-UP Initiative – Accepted Through August 2020

RADx-Underserved Populations (RADx-UP) will establish a network of community-engaged projects to improve access to and acceptance of testing in underserved and vulnerable populations. The overarching goal of this $500M effort is to understand factors that have led to disproportionate burden of the pandemic on these populations, so that interventions can be implemented to decrease the disparities. Applications for this first phase will be accepted through August 2020 for FY20 funding. A second phase will be staggered to provide flexibility and to allow for adaption to the ever-changing needs that may be present as this pandemic evolves. Visit www.nih.gov/RADx to learn more.
 
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RADx / NIH POCTRN: Innovative Technologies to Increase U.S. Capacity for COVID-19 Testing – Rolling Submission

The National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) is urgently soliciting proposals and can provide up to $500M across multiple projects to rapidly produce innovative SARS-CoV-2 diagnostic tests that will assist the public’s safe return to normal activities. Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics (RADx), is a fast-track technology development program that leverages the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Point-of-Care Technology Research Network (POCTRN). NIBIB will support the full range of product development including commercialization and product distribution.
 
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R01, R21 Pair of COVID-19 Emergency FOAs – Rolling Submission

NIAID issued two funding opportunity announcements (FOAs) to support research on Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) and Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19). The two FOAs are ideal for applicants proposing new coronavirus-related research projects. The scope and nature of your proposed research project should guide your decision whether to apply through the R01 or R21 FOA. They feature rolling submission, meaning you can apply as soon as it is ready and NIAID will review it in an expedited fashion.
 
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COVID-19 Resources and Guidance: Information You Need, When and Where You Need It

For up-to-date NIH COVID-19 information, including: Informational Videos; Proposal Submission & Award Management Resources; Human Subjects & Clinical Trials Guidance; Animal Welfare; Frequently Asked Questions regarding flexibilities for grantees and; Funding Opportunities, please visit the link below.
 
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NSF Faculty Early Career Development Program CAREER – Due August 11

Proposal deadline has been extended in consideration of the challenges facing many in our country. The Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program is a foundation-wide activity that offers the National Science Foundation's most prestigious awards in support of early-career faculty who have the potential to serve as academic role models in research and education and to lead advances in the mission of their department or organization. NSF encourages proposals from early-career faculty at all CAREER-eligible organizations and especially encourages women, members of underrepresented minority groups, and persons with disabilities to apply.
 
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2020-2021 Cognitive Empowerment Program's Innovation Accelerator - Pre-Proposals Due August 12

With the aim of speeding up development, testing and dissemination of evidence-based interventions for MCI, the Innovation Accelerator (IA) core is offering seed grants to support research in the following areas: therapeutic programming, technology and the built environment. The funded projects should result in innovative solutions, strategies or methodologies developed through a culture of collaboration among students, researchers, clinicians and people with MCI in less than 12 months’ time. Proposals can range from semester to year-long research projects and smaller proposals can target funds to convene valuable discussions, gather data, develop methods and metrics or to prototype new designs and technologies. For questions, email Kimberly Bass Seaton at kimberly.seaton@design.gatech.edu.
 
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NOSI NCI Emergency Administrative Supplements for Research and Training Continuity of Postdoctoral Fellows During COVID-19 – Due August 14

The National Cancer Institute (NCI) announces an opportunity for current NCI funded Principal Investigators whose postdoctoral fellows have temporarily lost stipend support from a non-profit funder because of the COVID-19 global pandemic may apply for an administrative supplement to cover the postdoctoral fellow’s salary plus applicable F&A for the time and effort devoted to the NCI funded grant. Please contact Tiffany Worboy (tworboy@emory.edu) if you have any questions.
 
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Martin Delaney Collaboratories for HIV Cure Research (UM1 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) – Emory Internal Due August 17

The purpose of this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is to address the problem of HIV persistence in people living with HIV treated with suppressive antiretroviral drug regimens. The application must include at least one private sector entity to facilitate rapid translation of basic discovery research into therapeutic development and testing. Collaboratory research should be milestone-based and should be focused on specific innovative approaches to characterize and quantify persistent HIV-1 reservoirs and/or understand and predict post-treatment control of viral rebound, identify and test therapeutic strategies to control viral rebound after discontinuation of antiretroviral therapy, and identify and test strategies to eradicate or permanently inactivate rebound-competent HIV. Application budgets are limited to $3.5 million direct costs per year and should reflect the actual needs of the proposed project. The total project period must be 5 years. Please contact Holly Sommers at hsomme2@emory.edu for questions.
 
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Martin Delaney Collaboratory for Pediatric HIV Cure Research (UM1 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) – Emory Internal Due August 17

This Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is soliciting applications to support research on HIV cure in pediatric populations. This FOA will support coordinated basic, clinical, and applied research focused on developing strategies to achieve an HIV cure, defined as either sustained viral remission or eradication of HIV infection. This funding opportunity will target perinatally infected children and adolescents and young adults up to 24 years of age with a primary focus on early treated children. Application budgets are limited to $3.5 million direct costs per year and should reflect the actual needs of the proposed project. The total project period must be 5 years. Please contact Holly Sommers at hsomme2@emory.edu for questions.
 
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RWJF Evidence for Action: Approaches to Advance Gender Equity from Around the Globe – Due August 26

The goal of this $1 Million funding opportunity is to translate and adapt knowledge from around the world to the United States on approaches that can improve health or the determinants of health by improving gender equity. Contact Connor Cook at Connor.Cook@emory.edu if you have any questions.
 
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Arthur Vining Davis Foundation Grants for 2 Initiatives: Private Higher Education and Interfaith Leadership & Religious Literacy – LOI Due August 28

Arthur Vining Davis Foundation Grants is offering funding for 2 Initiatives. Higher Ed grants typically support projects that improve student outcomes or enhance faculty leadership. Grants typically range from $25,000 to $300,000. The Interfaith Leadership and Religious Literacy program area seeks to promote religious literacy and create opportunities for courageous multi-faith conversations and collaborations. Grants typically range from $100,000 - $300,000. Contact your RAS unit and Jessica.McDaniel@emory.edu.
 
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Burroughs Wellcome Fund Seeking Career Awards at the Scientific Interface (CASI) – Due September 1

CASI provides $500,000 over five years to bridge advanced postdoctoral training and the first three years of faculty service. These grants are intended to foster the early career development of researchers who have transitioned or are transitioning from undergraduate and/or graduate work in the physical/mathematical/computational sciences or engineering into postdoctoral work in the biological sciences, and who are dedicated to pursuing a career in academic research. Please contact Tiffany Worboy (tworboy@emory.edu) if you have any questions.
 
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Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Culture of Health Prize – Due October 15

The RWJF Culture of Health Prize honors U.S. communities. The purpose of the Prize is to elevate the compelling stories of places where residents are working together to transform education, jobs, transportation, housing, and more. The prize is $25,000. Contact Connor.Cook@emory.edu.
 
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RWJF Pioneering Ideas: Exploring the Future to Build a Culture of Health – Open through 2020

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation seeks proposals that are primed to influence health equity in the future. We are interested in ideas that address any of these four areas of focus: Future of Evidence; Future of Social Interaction; Future of Food; Future of Work. Additionally, we welcome ideas that might fall outside of these four focus areas, but which offer unique approaches to advancing health equity and our progress toward a Culture of Health.
 
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Education

 
 
 

2021 Schmidt Science Fellows in partnership with the Rhodes Trust – Due August 20

Schmidt Science Fellows, in partnership with the Rhodes Trust, aims to develop the next generation of science leaders to transcend disciplines, advance discovery, and solve the world’s most pressing problems. Fellows will receive a stipend of $100,000 and are supported by the program to undertake a full-time, postdoctoral study for at least one year in a world-leading laboratory in a field different from their existing area of expertise. For questions on the internal selection process please contact Holly Sommers (hsomme2@emory.edu). For program questions, please contact Jessica McDaniel (jessica.mcdaniel@emory.edu).
 
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Dr. Richard Allen Williams Scholarship for Medical Students – Due August 28

The Association of Black Cardiologists, Inc. (ABC) is pleased to announce the Dr. Richard Allen Williams Scholarship for African American and other minority 1st or 2nd year medical students who show promise in medical research, cardiology and academic medicine. Two $5,000 scholarships will be awarded to recipients in honor of Dr. Richard Allen Williams. Winners will be announced by September 25, 2020.
 
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NIH Neuroscience Development for Advancing the Careers of a Diverse Research Workforce (R25 Clinical Trial Not Allowed) – Due September 2

The NIH Research Education Program (R25) supports research education activities in the mission areas of the NIH. The overarching goal of this R25 program is to support educational activities that encourage individuals from diverse backgrounds, including those from groups underrepresented in the biomedical and behavioral sciences, to pursue further studies or careers in research. Application budgets are limited to a maximum of $250,000 direct cost per year and must reflect the actual needs of the proposed project. The maximum project period is 5 years. Please contact Holly Sommers at hsomme2@emory.edu for questions.
 
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Featured Section

 
 

Seeking Mentors: Grant Writing Consultation

The new Georgia CTSA Grant Wise service offers the opportunity for one-on-one feedback from experienced senior faculty on grant writing. We are soliciting experienced faculty to serve as volunteer mentors. If you have experience in writing grants and you enjoy mentoring, we need you! After completing the online volunteer form, we will be in touch should we receive a request that matches your expertise. Contact lauren.james@emory.edu
 
Volunteer Form
 
 
 

Research Resources

 
 
 

Genome Editing Survey – Due July 31

The Emory Integrated Core Facilities and the Woodruff Health Sciences Center are gathering feedback to help determine the needs for genome editing services at Emory University. We are in the process of developing genome editing services for cell lines (knock-in and knock-out) through our Emory Integrated Genomics Core. In order to gather useful information about the needs of Emory investigators for these services, we have created a survey. Please click the link below. The survey should require about 5 minutes.
 
Survey
 
 
 
 

COVID-19 Collaboration Platform

The COVID-19 Collaboration Platform brings unassociated research teams working on the same clinical research questions together to share protocols, data, and evidence. COVID-19 Collaboration Platform offers support managing collaborations, including expedited and prioritized help from the Trial Innovation Network and SMART IRB to form multi-site trials; expert statistical advice for aggregated analyses, and free data storage and anonymization through vivli.org.
 
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National COVID Cohort Collaborative (N3C)

The National Center for Data to Health and NCATS are leading the creation of a national, centralized, secure portal for COVID-19 clinical data. The cloud-based collaborative portal will allow for the development of machine learning and other informatics tools that require a large row-level dataset and will be overseen by a data access committee. This portal will provide additional assets needed to rapidly develop the analytics that clinical centers and physicians need now.
 
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Case Study Reporting Tool Built by the FDA/NIH: CURE ID

CURE ID is an internet-based repository that lets the clinical community report novel uses of existing drugs for difficult-to-treat infectious diseases through a website, a smartphone or other mobile device. The platform enables the crowdsourcing of medical information from health care providers to guide potentially life-saving interventions and facilitate the development of new treatments for neglected diseases. CURE ID is a collaboration between the FDA and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
 
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Virtual Studio Consultations Are Here!

Georgia CTSA is now offering Virtual Studios to meet your research brainstorming needs. Our on-site presence has temporarily changed, but our desire to help you plan and collaborate regarding existing and potential research has not paused. Examples of areas where we have served past customers with expert brainstorming include locating collaborators and resources, hypothesis generation, study design, implementation, analysis and interpretation, translation and manuscript development of research topics. Contact the Georgia CTSA Coordinating Center by emailing Karen Lindsley at klindsl@emory.edu or Submit a Request for a Studio Consultation.
 
Submit a Request
 
 
 
 

Georgia CTSA Ethical Dilemma of the Week

Authorship: Read This, But Don't Tell Anybody (PDF)
 
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Innovation & Translation

 
 
 

Georgia Tech Biomedical Engineering Capstone Fall 2020 Call for Projects - Due August 1

What's the answer to your "I wish I had..." or, "What if we could...?" when it comes to your ideas for novel medical device technology? What if you could partner alongside and advise a Georgia Tech Biomedical Engineering (BME) team to investigate and develop a solution for that idea in just 16 weeks? You can! BME Capstone is currently seeking project proposals for the Fall 2020 semester. During GT BME Capstone, each Capstone team works over 500 manhours per project to ideate, design, and prototype real solutions that address unmet clinical needs. If you have identified a health-care challenge that needs to be solved, Capstone teams are eager to work on it.
 
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Community

 
 
 
Feature Image

Please Consider Participating in the All of Us Research Program

The Georgia CTSA recently partnered with the All of Us Research Program. All of Us is a health research program funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Its goal is to help researchers better understand why people get sick or stay healthy. The mission of the All of Us Research Program is simple: to speed up health research and medical breakthroughs. To do this, All of Us is asking one million people from across the U.S. to share their health ...

 
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Events

 
 
 

10x Genomics Visium Spatial Solutions: Applications & Workflow – July 28

Join us for our first part Visium Spatial Gene Expression Learning Series. This three-part series will introduce spatial gene expression profiling together with protein co-detection and show you how to quickly get started with your tissue profiling experiments. Each session will be 50 minutes followed by a live Q&A. Attendees who participate in all three sessions will receive a certificate of completion and be eligible for a “Thank You” promotion.
 
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Data Publication and Citation: How do I get credit for promotion? – July 31

Please join us from 2:00 PM – 3:00 PM via Zoom with presenters Lance Waller, Director of the WHSC-Data Science initiative and Jen Doty, Research Data Librarian at Woodruff Library to learn more about data publishing.
 
Register
 
 
 
 

Emory Integrated Genomics Core and 10x Genomics – August 5

Please join us for a virtual scientific seminar from 10:00 AM -11:00 AM via Zoom for an overview of single cell experimental design, sample preparation, single cell multi-dimensional profiling, and bioinformatics approaches.
 
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Featured Section

 
 

Blue Sky Group: Adolescent Sexual Health – August 27

Join researchers and clinicians from across the Georgia CTSA for a session on Adolescent Sexual Health from 12:00 PM- 1:30 PM via Zoom. Blue Sky Groups are unstructured meetings that provide a unique opportunity for attendees to drive the agenda as well as utilize the session as a catalyst for future collaborations and research opportunities.
 
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Featured Section

 
 

Speed Networking on COVID-19 – September 23

Join faculty from across the Georgia CTSA for an energetic and dynamic evening of networking at our version of The Gong Show from 4:00 PM – 5:30 PM via Zoom! Emory School of Medicine Dean Vikas Sukhatme will emcee this event as attendees present their research in three minutes or less with the goal of seeking new collaborators. But beware, if you exceed your time, be prepared to be gonged off the virtual stage! Presenter slots are limited, so register early. Non-presenters are welcome to attend to learn about their colleagues’ work and find new collaborators.
 
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Featured Section

 
 

Save the Date: Georgia CTSA Clinical and Translational Conference - March 4 - 5, 2021

Mark your calendar and join us in 2021 as we bring together researchers from across the region to present the best new clinical and translational research and build collaborative partnerships. More information, registration, and call for abstracts will be announced in the coming months. We are closely monitoring the COVID-19 pandemic and will make a decision later this year whether to proceed virtually or in person at Callaway Resort & Gardens.
 
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For more information on Georgia Clinical & Translational Science Alliance (Georgia CTSA), please visit www.GeorgiaCTSA.org. Do you have news, seminars, or events of interest to clinical and translational researchers? Send them to GeorgiaCTSA@emory.edu by noon on Thursday. To suggest subscribers or unsubscribe to the listserv please email GeorgiaCTSA@emory.edu.

Please include the following citation in any publications resulting from direct or indirect Georgia CTSA support, "Supported by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number UL1TR002378. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health." KL2 Scholars should also list KL2TR002381 and TL1 Trainees should also list TL1TR002382.