The Medical Scientist Training Program at Yale is designed to train physician-scientists who will translate basic and clinical research to problems of human pathobiology. About 12 students each year enter our MSTP and make up -12% of the medical school class. The strength of our Program is the flexibility of the Yale System of medical education and the breadth and depth of the graduate programs at Yale. These programs of medical and graduate education allow MSTP students to customize their educational paths. Graduate training at Yale provide students with opportunities in many biomedical tracks including Cell Biology, Physiology, Genetics, Immunology, Microbiology, Molecular Biophysics &Biochemistry, Neuroscience, Pharmacology, Molecular Cellular &Developmental Biology, and Chemistry. We accommodate students in nontraditional areas such as epidemiology and public health, psychology, computer sciences, sociology and anthropology. New programs in Translational Research (e.g... Clinical Immunology and Cancer Biology), and in Biomedical Engineering provide new opportunities for MSTP students. The Program requires ~8 years to complete but emphasizes interdisciplinary training and correlation with clinical disciplines. Students spend the first two years studying basic sciences of which some courses can be taken for graduate school credit. Clinical medicine is introduced in the 2nd year and emphasizes systems approaches to disease. All students complete 6 months of clerkships in medicine, pads and psychiatry before beginning thesis work. This prepares them for participation in weekly longitudinal clinics in ambulatory medicine, designed for MSTP students during the research years. Students are thus able to relate research training to clinical medicine without compromising lab time. Approximately 74% of our graduates now in academic positions are in clinical departments while 26% are in basic science departments. Our goal of preparing physician-scientists for academic careers has been successful in that -90% of our graduates have peer reviewed research grants. Over the past 36 years the Program has been in existence, >8,000 publications in top journals have appeared.

Public Health Relevance

Basic and translational/clinical research form the basis for all advances in health. We are now at a crossroads in basic science with our understanding of the human genome and our ability to decipher the cellular and molecular basis of normal and pathophysiological processes, and design rational approaches to alleviating disease. The future of medicine depends on the marriage of basic and clinical disciplines: MSTP nhvsician-scienti.sts will lead these endeavors.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32GM007205-37
Application #
8098072
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZGM1-BRT-X (TR))
Program Officer
Preusch, Peter C
Project Start
1975-07-01
Project End
2015-06-30
Budget Start
2011-07-01
Budget End
2012-06-30
Support Year
37
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$2,213,460
Indirect Cost
Name
Yale University
Department
Anatomy/Cell Biology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
043207562
City
New Haven
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06520
Braun, Daniela A; Lovric, Svjetlana; Schapiro, David et al. (2018) Mutations in multiple components of the nuclear pore complex cause nephrotic syndrome. J Clin Invest 128:4313-4328
Horien, Corey; Noble, Stephanie; Finn, Emily S et al. (2018) Considering factors affecting the connectome-based identification process: Comment on Waller et al. Neuroimage 169:172-175
Adler, Miri; Mayo, Avi; Zhou, Xu et al. (2018) Endocytosis as a stabilizing mechanism for tissue homeostasis. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E1926-E1935
Zogg, Cheryl K; Haring, R Sterling; Xu, Likang et al. (2018) The Epidemiology of Pediatric Head Injury Treated Outside of Hospital Emergency Departments. Epidemiology 29:269-279
Zogg, Cheryl K; Jiang, Wei; Ottesen, Taylor D et al. (2018) Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Longer-term Outcomes Among Emergency General Surgery Patients: The Unique Experience of Universally Insured Older Adults. Ann Surg 268:968-979
Scanlon, Susan E; Hegan, Denise C; Sulkowski, Parker L et al. (2018) Suppression of homology-dependent DNA double-strand break repair induces PARP inhibitor sensitivity in VHL-deficient human renal cell carcinoma. Oncotarget 9:4647-4660
Ray, Sreerupa; Breuer, Gregory; DeVeaux, Michelle et al. (2018) DNA polymerase beta participates in DNA End-joining. Nucleic Acids Res 46:242-255
Ricciardi, Adele S; Bahal, Raman; Farrelly, James S et al. (2018) In utero nanoparticle delivery for site-specific genome editing. Nat Commun 9:2481
Bazazi, Alexander R; Vijay, Aishwarya; Crawford, Forrest W et al. (2018) HIV Testing and awareness of HIV status among people who inject drugs in greater Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. AIDS Care 30:59-64
Kudalkar, Shalley N; Beloor, Jagadish; Quijano, Elias et al. (2018) From in silico hit to long-acting late-stage preclinical candidate to combat HIV-1 infection. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 115:E802-E811

Showing the most recent 10 out of 637 publications