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Funding Mechanisms for Gender‐specific Research: Proceedings from a Panel Discussion at the 2014 Academic Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference
Abstract As part of the 2014 Academic Emergency Medicine (AEM) consensus conference “Gender‐Specific Research in Emergency Care: Investigate, Understand, and Translate How Gender Affects Patient Outcomes,” we assembled a diverse panel of representatives from federal and nonfederal funding agencies to discuss future opportunities for sex‐ and gender‐specific research. The discussion revolved around the mission and priorities of each organization, as well as its interest in promoting sex‐ and gender‐specific research. The panelists were asked to provide specific examples of funding lines generated or planned fo...
Source: Academic Emergency Medicine - November 20, 2014 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Basmah Safdar, Marna R. Greenberg, Ayodola Anise, Jeremy Brown, Robin Conwit, Rosemarie Filart, Jane Scott, Esther K. Choo Tags: Proceedings: Panel Discussion Source Type: research

Missing Elements in the Institute of Medicine Report on Graduate Medical Education
The Institute of Medicine (IOM) report on graduate medical education has failed to answer (or even address in some instances) some of the most important questions that the U.S. healthcare system faces concerning graduate medical education . Specifically, the report has not (a) made the case for why $15 billion is the right amount of funding, or even why there should be any public support for graduate medical education at all; (b) discussed how the actual cost of graduate medical education might be computed; (c) assessed how graduate medical education ’s “joint cost problem” might be solved; (d) addressed how the shor...
Source: The American Journal of Medicine - January 20, 2015 Category: Journals (General) Authors: David W. Young Source Type: research

Funding Research in Emergency Diagnostic Imaging: Summary of a Panel Discussion at the 2015 Academic Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference
Abstract As part of the 2015 Academic Emergency Medicine consensus conference “Diagnostic Imaging in the Emergency Department: A Research Agenda to Optimize Utilization,” a panel of representatives from the National Institute of Health's Office of Emergency Care Research, the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, and the Patient‐Centered Outcomes Research Institute was assembled to discuss future opportunities for funding research in this particular area of interest. Representatives from these agencies and organizations discussed their missions an...
Source: Academic Emergency Medicine - November 14, 2015 Category: Emergency Medicine Authors: Alan R. Cherney, Jennifer R. Marin, Jeremy Brown, Ayodola Anise, Steven Krosnick, Kerm Henriksen, Roger J. Lewis, Angela M. Mills Tags: Proceedings—Panel Source Type: research

MedImmune Translational Science Forum convenes bay area leaders on precision medicine
(MedImmune, Inc.) Today, key leaders from academia, industry, government and funding organizations in and around the San Francisco Bay Area will convene for the MedImmune California Translational Science Forum to discuss innovative approaches to address precision medicine's big data challenges and opportunities in bioinformatics and drug discovery. Notable program speakers will include: Dr. Elizabeth Baca, Senior Health Advisor, Governor's Office of Planning and Research and Dr. Gerd Binnig, Founder and Chief Technology Officer, Definiens (Nobel Laureate).
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - May 23, 2016 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: news

CAEP 2015 Academic Symposium: Current State and Recommendations to Achieve Adequate and Sustainable Funding for Emergency Medicine Academic Units
Research Articles Eddy S. Lang, Jennifer D. Artz, Ryan D. Wilkie, Ian G. Stiell, Claude Topping, François P. Belanger, Marc Afilalo, Tia Renouf, Anthony Crocco, Kelly Wyatt, Jim Christenson, Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine, Volume 18 Supplement S1, pp S10-S17Abstract
Source: Canadian Journal of Emergency Medicine - June 26, 2016 Category: Emergency Medicine Source Type: research

Lost in Translation: NIH Funding for Family Medicine Research Remains Limited
Departments of Family Medicine (DFMs) in the United States consistently received around 0.2% of total research funding dollars and 0.3% of all awards awarded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) across the years 2002 to 2014. We used the NIH Reporter tool to quantify the amount of funding and the number of grants received by DFMs from the NIH from 2002 to 2014, using criteria similar to those applied by previous researchers. NIH funding to DFMs as remained fairly consistent across the time period, at roughly 0.2% of total NIH funding and 0.3% of total grants awarded. Changing these proportions will likely require con...
Source: Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine - September 8, 2016 Category: Primary Care Authors: Cameron, B. J., Bazemore, A. W., Morley, C. P. Tags: Policy Briefs Source Type: research

Federal Research Funding for Family Medicine: Highly Concentrated, with Decreasing New Investigator Awards
A small proportion of National Institutes of Health and other federal research funding is received by university departments of family medicine, the largest primary care specialty. That limited funding is also concentrated, with roughly a quarter of all National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality funding awarded to 3 departments, almost half of that funding coming from 3 agencies, and a recent trend away from funding for new investigators.
Source: Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine - September 8, 2016 Category: Primary Care Authors: Cameron, B. J., Bazemore, A. W., Morley, C. P. Tags: Policy Briefs Source Type: research

Society of Behavioral Medicine supports implementation of high quality lung cancer screening in high-risk populations
AbstractThe Society of Behavioral Medicine (SBM) supports the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommendation of low-dose computed tomography (LDCT) screening of the chest for eligible populations to reduce lung cancer mortality. Consistent with efforts to translate research findings into real-world settings, SBM encourages health-care providers and health-care systems to (1) integrate evidence-based tobacco treatment as an essential component of LDCT-based lung cancer screening, (2) examine the structural barriers that may impact screening uptake, and (3) incorporate shared decision-making as a clinic...
Source: Translational Behavioral Medicine - September 18, 2016 Category: Global & Universal Source Type: research

Women in Medicine and Patient Outcomes
If you are aware of the disparities between genders in academic medicine, recent publications show multiple areas with opportunities for improvement. Jena and colleagues found that female physicians in academia were less likely than their male counterparts to have reached the rank of full professor (11.9% vs 28.6%). Serge et al reported that start-up funding packages —which help launch faculty careers—were 67.5% higher for men than for women ($980 000 vs $585 000). Finally, Jena and colleagues reported that salaries for female academic physicians are $19 879, or 8.0%, lower than those of their male colleagues.
Source: JAMA Internal Medicine - December 19, 2016 Category: Internal Medicine Source Type: research

An Update: NIH Research Funding For Palliative Medicine 2011 –2015
Journal of Palliative Medicine , Vol. 0, No. 0.
Source: Journal of Palliative Medicine - August 9, 2017 Category: Palliative Care Authors: Elizabeth Brown R. Sean Morrison Laura P. Gelfman Source Type: research

ParaGen raises $4m for regenerative medicine scaffold
ParaGen Technologies said it raised more than $4 million for the regenerative scaffold its portfolio companies use for a variety of treatments. Columbus, Ohio-based ParaGen said its four companies – RenovoDerm, Atreon Orthopedics, Vascular Genesis and Tarian Medical – tailor the scaffold material to product lines in the wound care, orthopedic, peripheral vascular and hernia markets, respectively. Ikove Venture Partners led and organized the round, according to ParaGen, which is joint venture between the VC shop’s incubator and Nanofiber Solutions, which developed the core technology. “This funding provid...
Source: Mass Device - December 7, 2017 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Brad Perriello Tags: Funding Roundup Regenerative Medicine paragentechnologies Source Type: news

Derfner Foundation funds novel research in regenerative medicine at Kessler Foundation
(Kessler Foundation) Kessler Foundation has received funding from the Derfner Foundation to support applying rehabilitation research to the area of regenerative medicine ('regenerative rehabilitation').
Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health - May 7, 2018 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Source Type: news

Gender Disparities in Medical Student Research Awards: A 13-Year Study From the Yale School of Medicine
Purpose The Liaison Committee on Medical Education mandates instruction in research conduct, and many U.S. medical schools require students to complete a research project. All Yale School of Medicine (YSM) graduating students submit a research thesis, and ~5% are awarded highest honors. Gender disparities exist in areas related to physician research productivity, including academic rank, research funding, and publications. The authors asked whether gender disparities exist for medical student research. Method The authors conducted a retrospective review of 1,120 theses submitted by graduating medical students from 200...
Source: Academic Medicine - May 31, 2018 Category: Universities & Medical Training Tags: Research Reports Source Type: research

Scholarly Research Projects Benefit Medical Students’ Research Productivity and Residency Choice: Outcomes From the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Purpose Many medical schools require scholarly research projects. However, outcomes data from these initiatives are scarce. The authors studied the impact of the Scholarly Research Project (SRP), a four-year longitudinal requirement for all students at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine (UPSOM), on research productivity and residency match. Method The authors conducted a longitudinal study of non-dual-degree UPSOM graduates in 2006 (n = 121, non-SRP participants) versus 2008 (n = 118), 2010 (n = 106), and 2012 (n = 132), all SRP participants. The authors used PubMed for publication data, National Resident...
Source: Academic Medicine - November 1, 2018 Category: Universities & Medical Training Tags: Research Reports Source Type: research