Georgia CTSA Newsletter
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Georgia CTSA Weekly eRoundup
September 27, 2019
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| | | | The Georgia CTSA established the Presidents' Award of Distinction for Team Science and the Team Science Award of Distinction for Early Stage Research Teams to reward and promote excellence in multi-disciplinary research teams within the Georgia CTSA. The winning teams will receive a monetary award for continued research and will be recognized at the 2020 Southeast Regional Clinical and Translational Science Conference, February 27 - 29, 2020. | | Read More | |
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| | | | This free annual event will take place October 12 from 9 am - 3 pm at the Andrew and Walter Young YMCA. The family-friendly programming includes health screenings, fitness classes, educational workshops, STEAM activities, healthy food shopping, live entertainment and more. This venue is a great opportunity to feature community-engaged research initiatives and other public facing events designed to support health communities. | | Register, Exhibit, or Serve | |
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| | The purpose of this Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) is to initiate a new CFAR-series funding mechanism, the CFAR-HBCU. CFAR-HBCU awards are intended to foster inter-institutional research synergies between faculty at Atlanta-based HBCUs and Emory University; provide grantsmanship, research, career, and/or peer mentoring for awardees; and enable the collection of pilot data for an NIH K or R application in a high priority area of HIV research. | | Read More | |
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| | The Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation (ADDF) supports promising research projects from around the world to develop new drugs for Alzheimer's and related dementias, including vascular, Lewy body, and frontotemporal dementias. The goal is to accelerate the development of therapies through four core areas: Drug discovery, Clinical trials, Biomarkers, and Prevention. | | Read More | |
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| | Woodruff Health Sciences Center (WHSC) strategic plan is Innovative Discovery. To help facilitate research initiatives as part of this theme, the Innovative Discovery executive sponsors have established a new pilot funding mechanism for early-career investigators in WHSC to utilize two new 10X single cell sequencing technology platforms. | | Read More | |
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| | The Michelson Prizes are scientific awards of $150,000 given annually to young investigators who are applying disruptive concepts and inventive processes to advance human immunology, vaccine discovery, and immunotherapy research across major global diseases. The 2020 Michelson Prizes will focus on advances in human immunology to accelerate the development of more effective vaccines and immunotherapies.
| | Read More | |
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| | The Emory-Georgia Tech Healthcare Innovation Program (HIP), in partnership with the Emory Synergy Award Program, Georgia Clinical & Translational Science Alliance (Georgia CTSA), Emory Healthcare Innovation Hub, Emory Health Services Research (HSR) Center, Winship Cancer Institute (Winship), Emory+Children¿s Pediatrics Institute, and Georgia Institute of Technology is pleased to announce the thirteenth round of research seed grants in Healthcare Innovation. Seed grants will fund multi-investigator & multi-disciplinary teams examining healthcare services and clinical effectiveness. Awards will support innovative approaches that address issues of healthcare quality, costs, and/or access that are consistent with the goals of the Healthcare Innovation Program. | | Read More | |
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| | Nominate faculty to participate in three new Scialog (science dialog) conferences launching in 2020. Each conference will bring together about 50 Fellows (early career scientists from their first year on the faculty through soon after tenure) and 10 Facilitators (senior faculty who guide the discussions) over 3.5 days, with the goal of launching innovative, collaborative, interdisciplinary projects with one-year grants of $50,000 per Fellow on each funded team | | Read More | |
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| | The application period has recently opened for the NAM Emerging Leaders in Health and Medicine Program (the ELHM Program). Last year's scholars: https://nam.edu/programs/emerging-leaders-forum/emerging-leaders-in-health-and-medicine-scholars-2018-19/
| | Learn More | |
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| | The RWJF Health Policy Fellows program is an outstanding opportunity for exceptional mid-career health professionals, behavioral/social scientists, and others with an interest in health and health policy. | | Learn More | |
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| | The Office of Strategic Coordination (Common Fund) intends to publish a funding opportunity announcement (FOA) to support one Multisite Clinical Center for the NIH Common Fund supported Acute to Chronic Pain Signatures (A2CPS) Program. Collaborative teams combining expertise in pain management and large clinical trials will be crucial to the success of the studies. | | Read More | |
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| | The Center for AIDS Research at Emory University (CFAR) is now accepting applications for the 2nd annual Planning for Success (PfS) NIH R-level Grant Writing course. All course sessions are held online, via Zoom, on the second Tuesday of each month from 2:00 pm - 4:00 pm ET. The course is open to faculty from Emory University, HBCUs in the Southeast, and all CFARs. | | Read More | |
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| | In anticipation of the February 2020 deadline for the NIH K Career Development Award for new proposals (and resubmission proposals for March), the Office of Postdoctoral Education will be offering the NIH K Grant Writing Tutorial. The series will address the following K Award categories: K01, K07, K08, K22, K23, K25, K99/00 as well as VA CDA and other career development awards. The classes will include didactic presentation, discussion, and Q&A. Time permitting, Dr. Janet Gross will provide an individual read and review of your proposal.
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| | Learn the NIH grant structure and review process, how to use key elements of grantsmanship to help you win funding and have confidence in your ability to execute your plan. With specific focus on NIH R grants, you will learn to strategically design your grant writing timeline, organize your proposal, meet new NIH grant requirements, and more. | | Register | |
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| | Phlebotomy 101 is a two-day classroom and clinical, hands-on training to venipuncture offered through the Georgia CTSA Clinical Research Centers (GCRCs). The course is offered quarterly to research coordinators from Emory, Morehouse School of Medicine and UGA. | | Class Schedule | |
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| | The goal of the program is to support and enhance career development for junior faculty (MD, PhD, MD/PhD, PharmD) committed to a career in clinical and/or translational research. The Georgia CTSA is committed to assisting junior faculty at partner institutions to become independent, established, and ethical clinical and/or translational research investigators. Register for the free two-session KL2 Application Workshops on December 5 and 12. | | Read More | |
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| | The Emory BIRCWH program, short for Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health, is a highly selective career development program for junior faculty interested in women's health research and/or sex/gender science. The ultimate goal of the BIRCWH program is to train junior faculty, through a mentored research and career development experience, to become independent investigators who use novel, interdisciplinary approaches to advance the science of women¿s health and sex/gender research.
Communicable disease research (HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria, influenza, HCV/HBV, bacterial and fungal diseases, antimicrobial resistance, etc.) is an area of focus for the Emory BIRCWH program.
| | Learn More | |
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| | The overall goal of the Growing Gene and Cell Therapy (GGACT) cooperative is to support investigators to rapidly translate complex gene and cell therapies to early phase, investigator-initiated clinical trials. While the cooperative can offer support in many ways, we do not offer direct financial project support or financial support for clinical trials. | | Read More | |
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| | The Georgia CTSA has partnered with ACT Network to bring real-time cohort exploration and discovery to its researchers. ACT uses a web interface in a HIPAA-compliant manner, without require study-specific IRB approval. It offers open access to a national network of academic medical research centers and generates aggregate patient count data. Emory and Morehouse School of Medicine researchers can now explore patient populations, confirm and demonstrate feasibility, and find potential partners for multi-site studies. Access for Georgia Tech and UGA researchers is in development. | | Read More | |
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| | The Georgia CTSA Clinical Research Centers - Emory University Hospital (GCRC-EUH) site is now open every second Saturday of the month. This is to expand our services offered to investigators and provide flexible visit options. | | Read More | |
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| | In order to migrate study data from the current eIRB system to the upgraded one, there needs to be a strategic submission slowdown, currently planned for January 7 - January 31. Please note that the IRB will not process or accept the submission of any continuing reviews during the slowdown period. Please read on to learn how the slowdown may affect your studies. | | Read More | |
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| | Mentoring: A Letter of "Non-Recommendation" (PDF) | | Read More | |
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| | As of September 1, the new Pediatric Institute is in effect. As part of that transition, Children's Healthcare and Emory developed a revised IRB reliance agreement for collaborative research (research in which both Children's and Emory are engaged). | | Read More | |
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| | The Research Registry Toolkit is designed to support teams creating and managing research registries. Each section includes examples, best practices, and tools to guide conversations about research registry development and maintenance. | | Read More | |
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| | The statistics research group directed by ISyE associate professor Yajun Mei, is now offering free consulting for data-analysis questions in the domain of bio-related initiatives on the GA Tech Campus, every Monday from 10:30am to 11:30am in Room 3317 of the Petit Building. | | Read More | |
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| | Dr. Kevin Dobbin, UGA co-Director for the Georgia CTSA Biostatistics, Epidemiology, & Research Design (BERD) Program, is offering a free internet-based statistical consulting clinic for UGA clinical and translational researchers (faculty, graduate students, post-docs) every Tuesday from 3:30pm-4:30pm. The virtual stat clinic is via Zoom video conferencing, and users must have UGA login credentials to access. | | Request Meeting Link | |
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| | A free weekly walk-in statistical consulting clinic for Morehouse School of Medicine faculty, staff, and students from 10:00 a.m.-noon in MRC Annex, Bldg. F, S-14 Conference Room. | | Read More | |
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| | For more than 17 years, Georgia Bio has presented Georgia's premier bioscience and medtech conference welcoming 500+ CEOs, senior executives, scientists and public policy officials from Georgia and across the nation. Join us as we showcase Georgia's leadership in innovation, from basic research to manufacturing, to improve the health and well-being of people, animals and the environment. | | Register | |
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| | | 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 ... | | Read More | |
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| | One-day symposium at Emory University Cox Hall to learn about recent advances in Mass Spectrometry (MS) and about available MS resources within Georgia to support your research. This will be a great opportunity to collaborate with other scientists in your state and to exchange protocols and ideas. | | Read More | |
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| | Develop the skills necessary to build and maintain your research team by leveraging existing teams research. Graduate students, post-docs, and all levels of academic faculty are all welcome to attend this workshop. For more information, contact lauren.james@emory.edu.
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| | Please join The Morehouse School of Medicine Office of Community Engagement as it hosts a Master Class Lecture Series on Making the Media Connection Work, led by Dr. Rashad Richey, MB, PhD, multi-media personality, professor and chief editor-at-large for Rolling Out. This lecture is designed for individuals and organizations who need a systems-based approach to mastering media dynamics to increase their market impact. | | Register | |
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| | The electronics integrated with stretchable/bendable structures and various microsensors that monitor the temperature, pressure, sweat, bioelectricity, body hydration, etc., have a wide range of applications in the human healthcare sector. Wearable technology in healthcare includes electronic devices that consumers can wear and are designed to collect the data of users' personal health. Learn more at this forum at Georgia Tech-Institute for Electronics & Nanotechnology (GT-IEN). | | Read More | |
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| | Learn more about the impact of biodiversity on human health and the role of biodiversity in disease, ecology and planetary health at Emory University, Cox Hall Ballroom. | | Read More | |
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| | The Georgia CTSA has partnered with the Coulter Translational Program to offer the Bench2Market Talks series that was created to provide free commercialization guidance to the university research community. We cover topics on how to take your technology from the lab to commercial success and explore market opportunities surrounding entrepreneurial and innovative ideas. Panel discussions are led by industry experts that share their insights and lessons learned through first-hand experience. | | Read More | |
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| | Convening national and state leaders at the UGA Center for Continuing Education & Hotel in Athens, GA, the State of the Public¿s Health Conference is designed to drive discussion to improve the health of all Georgians. This year - through workshops, poster sessions and presentations - we will explore solutions for some of the most pressing public health issues affecting Georgia communities, including maternal and child health, HIV, rural health, and health equity. | | Learn More | |
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| | Join researchers and clinicians from across the Georgia CTSA for a session on Cardiovascular Inflammation. Discuss the burning issues regarding cardiovascular inflammation, where the field is going, and ideas for cross-institutional collaborative research projects. Share your experience, learn from others, enjoy opportunities for interdisciplinary networking and find potential collaborators. | | Register | |
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| | Think Big Symposium Series - Luminary Lecture by Gary H. Gibbons, MD, Director of the National, Lung and Blood Institute, NIH. 'The Promise of Precision Medicine: Harnessing New Technologies for Public Health Impact'. Thursday, October 31, 12:15-1:15PM. Claudia Nance Rollins Auditorium, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University. Register: www.thinkbig.emory.edu. | | Learn More | |
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| | Medical device manufacturers, biodesign innovators, regulatory and QA professionals and academics can register now for the 7th Annual UGA/FDA Medical Device Regulations Conference. The 7th Annual UGA Medical Device Regulations Conference will be held at the University of Georgia Gwinnett Campus in Lawrenceville, GA on November 6 & 7, 2019. Networking reception at the Hampton Inn, 6010 Sugarloaf Pkwy., November 6, 6:00 pm - 7:30 pm. | | Register | |
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| | Save the date! This conference & workshop will be held at the Emory Convocation Hall. Join the NEISE Listserv for more information. Email Kate.Micek@emory.edu to join.
| | Read More | |
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| | Many existing drugs have uses outside of their original indication, a phenomenon known as drug repurposing. The conference is intended for researchers, clinicians, philanthropic leaders, policymakers, and population health leaders interested in the opportunities to improve medical and population health
outcomes through use of repurposed drugs and nutraceuticals, especially in the areas of cancer and brain health. | | Read More | |
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| | The annual conference describes how the Georgia CTSA can support your research and increase grant funding; allows attendees to network with national leaders and NIH staff in translational science and education; and share research with others and develop new collaborations. | |
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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. |
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