Filtered By:
Management: Funding

This page shows you your search results in order of relevance. This is page number 3.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 11357 results found since Jan 2013.

A 10-Year Analysis of Representation of Women in Patent Applications and NIH Funding in Vascular Surgery
There has been an increasing focus on gender disparities in the medical field and in the field of vascular surgery specifically. We aimed to characterize gender representation in vascular surgery innovation over the past 10 years, using metrics of patents and NIH support.
Source: Annals of Vascular Surgery - April 8, 2023 Category: Surgery Authors: Helen Xun, David P. Stonko, Earl Goldsborough, Alana Keegan, Tara Srinivas, Sanuja Bose, Katherine M. McDermott, M. Libby Weaver, Caitlin W. Hicks Tags: Clinical Research Source Type: research

NIH Funding Among Vascular Surgeons is Rare
Our assessment of 55 active NIH funded research projects found that only 1% of vascular surgeons receive NIH funding. Furthermore, 3 SVS research priorities are not addressed by NIH projects. Future efforts should focus on increasing NIH funding among vascular surgeons and ensuring coverage of SVS priorities by NIH projects.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - June 14, 2023 Category: Surgery Authors: Amin A. Mirzaie, Michol A. Cooper, M. Libby Weaver, Christopher R. Jacobs, Morgan L. Cox, Scott A. Berceli, Salvatore T. Scali, Martin R. Back, Thomas S. Huber, Gilbert R. Upchurch, Samir K. Shah Source Type: research

Sonavex Secures NIH Grant to Pursue New Vascular Surgery Applications
Last week, Sonavex, a Baltimore-based medical device company, announced receipt of a $3M Phase IIB Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant for prospective clinical studies and ongoing research and development of its EchoMark and EchoSure devi...
Source: Medgadget - September 3, 2019 Category: Medical Devices Authors: Medgadget Editors Tags: Cardiology Surgery Vascular Surgery Source Type: blogs

Gender disparities in academic vascular surgeons
Previous studies have identified significant gender discrepancies in grant funding, leadership positions, and publication impact in surgical subspecialties. We investigated whether these discrepancies were also present in academic vascular surgery.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - February 27, 2020 Category: Surgery Authors: Matthew Carnevale, John Phair, Paola Batarseh, Samantha LaFontaine, Erin Koelling, Issam Koleilat Source Type: research

A national co-design workshop of a mobile-based application for vascular access as a patient decision aid
This report summarizes the findings.METHODS: A 30-min interactive session was allocated with the session delivered in four sections: (1) demographic data was collected; (2) an overall opinion was obtained about current patient information sources and satisfaction with these; (3) the participants were asked a series of eight questions regarding the main problem areas previously identified; (4) following a 6-min demonstration video, the participants were then re-asked the same questions to determine if the VA App would improve/worsen these areas.RESULTS: Completed data from 30 participants showed great variation in all demog...
Source: The Journal of Vascular Access - June 10, 2022 Category: Surgery Authors: David Kingsmore Ramsay Meiklem Karen Stevenson Peter Thomson Matt Bouamrane Mark Dunlop Source Type: research

Drastic Increase in Hospital Labor Costs Leads to Sustained Financial Loss for an Academic Vascular Surgery Division During the COVID-19 Pandemic
A large, tertiary, single center, retrospective study demonstrates significant erosion of vascular surgery financial margin in the setting of dramatic increases in nursing labor costs during the pandemic. Given this widespread and unsustainable trend, supplemental government funding will be required to avoid financial catastrophe on a regional and national level.
Source: Journal of Vascular Surgery - July 13, 2022 Category: Surgery Authors: Clayton J. Brinster, G. Thomas Escousse, Phillip A. Rivera, W.C. Sternbergh, Samuel R. Money Source Type: research

Industry Funding Negatively Impacts Publication Of Vascular Surgery Trials
Discontinued and unpublished randomized clinical trials are a common problem resulting in publication bias and loss of potential knowledge. Characteristics of these trials within vascular surgery remains unknown.
Source: Annals of Vascular Surgery - January 20, 2023 Category: Surgery Authors: Mary A. Binko, Katherine Reitz, Rabih A. Chaer, Edith Tzeng, Mohammad H. Eslami, Natalie D. Sridharan Source Type: research

Regulator of Angiogenesis and Vascular Function: A 2019 Update of the Vasoinhibin Nomenclature
Jakob Triebel1*, Juan Pablo Robles2, Magdalena Zamora2, Gonzalo Martínez de la Escalera2, Thomas Bertsch1 and Carmen Clapp2 1Institute for Clinical Chemistry, Laboratory Medicine and Transfusion Medicine, General Hospital Nuremberg and Paracelsus Medical University Nuremberg, Nuremberg, Germany 2Instituto de Neurobiología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Querétaro, Mexico Proteolytic cleavage of prolactin (PRL), the human anterior pituitary hormone fundamental for lactation can generate vasoinhibin, a peptide-hormone with endocrine, paracrine, and autocrine ef...
Source: Frontiers in Endocrinology - April 9, 2019 Category: Endocrinology Source Type: research

Next Phase of NIH Preprint Pilot Launching Soon
Last month, the National Library of Medicine (NLM)announced plans to extend its NIH Preprint Pilot in PubMed Central (PMC) and PubMed beyond COVID-19 to encompass all preprints reporting on NIH-funded research. The second phase of the pilot, launching later this month, will include preprints supported by an NIH award, contract, or intramural program and posted to aneligible preprint server on or after January 1, 2023.In preparation for the launch of this second phase, we have updated PMC and PubMed site features to help users of these databases incorporate the increased volume of preprints into their discovery workflows. S...
Source: PubMed Central News - January 10, 2023 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: news

Second Phase of the NIH Preprint Pilot Launched
Today, we are pleased to announce the launch of the second phase of the NIH Preprint Pilot with the addition of more than 700 new preprint records to PubMed Central (PMC) and PubMed. This second phase expands the scope of the Pilot to include preprints resulting from all NIH-funded research. Eligible preprints are those acknowledging direct support of an NIH award or authored by NIH staff and posted to bioRxiv, medRxiv, arXiv, or Research Square, on or after January 1, 2023. NLM will automatically include the full text of the preprint (as license terms allow) and associated citation information in PMC and PubMed, respectiv...
Source: PubMed Central News - January 30, 2023 Category: Databases & Libraries Source Type: news