Among the faculty at the University of Kansas are a group of very talented scientists pursuing women's health research in the Schools of Allied Health, Medicine, Nursing, Pharmacy and Engineering. The existence of this talented research base in women's health ignited the interest of our leadership and resulted in a successful application for a University of Kansas Medical Center (KUMC) BIRCWH Faculty Development Program (2005-2010) to formally establish and strengthen the women's health research enterprise at the University of Kansas. All four Schools and others on the main campus are partners in this proposed renewal. Interdisciplinary research among Schools is strongly emphasized. The KUMC Schools of Allied Health and Nursing are strong partners with Medicine and Pharmacy, ranking 12 and 31 in the nation for NIH funding, respectively. Mentors are In five thematic areas related to women's health: (i) Women's Reproductive Health;(ii) Maternal Health;(iii) Pathogenesis of Diseases Prevalent in Women;(iv) Drug Design, Drug Delivery, and Pharmacogenomics;and (v) Prevention, Intervention, and Health Disparities. After the grant was funded, the KUMC BIRCWH K12 program provided advanced training and career guidance for 10 junior faculty members pursuing interdisciplinary research in women's health. Four years into the funded project, 7 IWHR Scholars have received extramural funding and at least 11 junior level (assistant professor) faculty members have been hired in tenure-track positions pursuing women's health research at the University of Kansas. Our long term objective is to foster career development of junior faculty pursuing basic, translational, behavioral, clinical and health services research relevant to women's health at the University of Kansas. In addition, interactions of mentors from multiple disciplines occurring during training of IWHR Scholars has fostered new research collaborations related to women's health among established faculty and heightened awareness of the need for women's health research at our institution. Successful renewal of the KUMC BIRCWH K12 Program will continue to positively impact the pursuit of women's health research in Kansas.

Public Health Relevance

To improve the health of all women through research and investigation of the gender and racial differences that affect prevention, diagnosis and treatment of disease in women.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Physician Scientist Award (Program) (PSA) (K12)
Project #
5K12HD052027-08
Application #
8312640
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-PSE-H (50))
Program Officer
Davis Nagel, Joan
Project Start
2005-09-01
Project End
2015-06-30
Budget Start
2012-07-01
Budget End
2013-06-30
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$500,001
Indirect Cost
$37,037
Name
University of Kansas
Department
Pathology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
016060860
City
Kansas City
State
KS
Country
United States
Zip Code
66160
Dewi, Mira; Carlson, Susan E; Gustafson, Kathleen M et al. (2017) Programming of infant neurodevelopment by maternal obesity: potential role of maternal inflammation and insulin resistance. Asia Pac J Clin Nutr 26:S36-S39
Cauble, Jennifer S; Dewi, Mira; Hull, Holly R (2017) Validity of anthropometric equations to estimate infant fat mass at birth and in early infancy. BMC Pediatr 17:88
Raghavan, Rama; Hyter, Stephen; Pathak, Harsh B et al. (2016) Drug discovery using clinical outcome-based Connectivity Mapping: application to ovarian cancer. BMC Genomics 17:811
Hull, H R; Thornton, J; Paley, C et al. (2015) Maternal obesity influences the relationship between location of neonate fat mass and total fat mass. Pediatr Obes 10:245-51
Hu, Bin; Kieweg, Sarah L (2015) Contact Line Instability of Gravity-Driven Flow of Power-Law Fluids. J Nonnewton Fluid Mech 225:62-69
Ozias, Marlies K; Li, Shengqi; Hull, Holly R et al. (2015) Abdominal visceral adiposity influences CD4+ T cell cytokine production in pregnancy. Cytokine 71:405-8
Pathak, Harsh B; Zhou, Yan; Sethi, Geetika et al. (2015) A Synthetic Lethality Screen Using a Focused siRNA Library to Identify Sensitizers to Dasatinib Therapy for the Treatment of Epithelial Ovarian Cancer. PLoS One 10:e0144126
Black, Lora L; Johnson, Rhonda; VanHoose, Lisa (2015) The Relationship Between Perceived Racism/Discrimination and Health Among Black American Women: a Review of the Literature from 2003 to 2013. J Racial Ethn Health Disparities 2:11-20
Sethi, Geetika; Kwon, Youngjoo; Burkhalter, Rebecca J et al. (2015) PTN signaling: Components and mechanistic insights in human ovarian cancer. Mol Carcinog 54:1772-85
Hull, Holly R; Carlson, Susan E (2014) Cognition. World Rev Nutr Diet 109:36-53

Showing the most recent 10 out of 62 publications