The specific aim the UC Davis Emergency Medicine (EM) K12 Training Program, is to provide junior faculty with the critical skills to become successful, independent, federally-funded EM researchers. Within our program, we will train both general EM and pediatric EM (PEM) researchers for a 3-year period, with a special focus on participation and leadership in multicenter research. Our goal is to enhance the science and improve the care of adults and children with acute medical illnesses and injuries that fall within the specific NHLBI domains such as severe trauma, cardiovascular diseases, hematological diseases, and respiratory diseases. We will achieve this with intensive didactic training and mentorship of the scholars in clinical research methods, including clinical epidemiology, health services research, including comparative effectiveness research. We will train 5 post-doctorate scholars from any of a number of disciplines, over the 5-year award period. The need for well-trained EM researchers is critical to the future of the field and for the public health. The PIs of this proposal have particular expertise in trauma research and multicenter research, but have identified an additional pool of talented faculty mentors from many other disciplines and departments. Scholars will have the opportunity to select and interact with experienced research mentors, with strong track records in research productivity and extramural research funding, across multiple disciplines at UC Davis, including EM, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, Surgery, Family and Community Medicine, Public Health Sciences, and the School of Nursing. The broad spectrum of mentors includes experts in cardiology, pulmonology, hematologic and traumatic emergencies, as well as PEM research; the K12 scholars' mentored projects will be focused on one of these areas. Scholars will also interface with other trainees in an established Mentored Clinical Research Training Program (K30), and complete a Masters in Advanced Studies degree. A formal evaluation program will ensure that the EM K12 program is responsive to the needs of the scholars, mindful of changes in EM practice and research. The UC Davis Department of EM is well suited to offer this training program, having demonstrated broad and sustained growth in its research program and productivity over the past decade. In addition to growth in extramural research funding over the past ten years, the Department is a recent recipient of an Institutional Training Grant from the Society for Academic EM (SAEM), which currently funds research fellows in the department, but is insufficient in itself for sustaining multiple research scholars in EM/PEM. The Department demonstrates its support for research with a robust research infrastructure, which includes a Research Director, two Research Managers (one focused on multicenter research), and four full-time clinical research coordinators. The departmental also demonstrates its research commitment by providing funding for junior faculty research projects through an annual competitive process, through monthly research in progress meetings and a required research project for all EM Residents. Finally, UC Davis provides a unique and exceptionally rich environment for training EM researchers in clinical research and preparing them for collaborative research careers in which they will become independently funded. The UC Davis Clinical and Translational Science Center, established in 2006 as one of the vanguard NIH Clinical and Translational Science Awards, houses established interdisciplinary training programs and extensive research resources that will interface with our EM K12 program. Our vision is that the scholars completing the UC Davis EM K12 training program will be prepared with transformative and interdisciplinary approaches to EM/PEM research, leading them to new insights in the specialty of EM, and ultimately resulting in improved care of the patients whom we serve.

Public Health Relevance

The primary objective of the Emergency Medicine K12 program at UC Davis is to provide junior investigators with state-of-the art clinical research training to foster independent careers in emergency medicine research. By completing graduate level courses focused on clinical research, the scholars will be awarded a Master of Advanced Study degree in Clinical Research. With research mentors from not only the Department of Emergency Medicine but from many other departments, each of whom have substantial track records of publications and research funding, the scholars will develop independent research projects that will help propel them into the next level of their academic careers.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Physician Scientist Award (Program) (PSA) (K12)
Project #
5K12HL108964-05
Application #
8894070
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1-CSR-J (M2))
Program Officer
Scott, Jane
Project Start
2011-07-01
Project End
2016-06-30
Budget Start
2015-07-01
Budget End
2016-06-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
$603,160
Indirect Cost
$42,456
Name
University of California Davis
Department
Emergency Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
047120084
City
Davis
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
95618
Johnson, M Austin; Williams, Timothy K; Ferencz, Sarah-Ashley E et al. (2017) The effect of resuscitative endovascular balloon occlusion of the aorta, partial aortic occlusion and aggressive blood transfusion on traumatic brain injury in a swine multiple injuries model. J Trauma Acute Care Surg 83:61-70
Williams, Timothy K; Neff, Lucas P; Johnson, Michael Austin et al. (2017) Automated variable aortic control versus complete aortic occlusion in a swine model of hemorrhage. J Trauma Acute Care Surg 82:694-703
Johnson, M Austin; Davidson, Anders J; Russo, Rachel M et al. (2017) Small changes, big effects: The hemodynamics of partial and complete aortic occlusion to inform next generation resuscitation techniques and technologies. J Trauma Acute Care Surg 82:1106-1111
Johnson, M Austin; Williams, Timothy K; Ferencz, Sarah-Ashley E et al. (2017) The Effect of REBOA, Partial Aortic Occlusion and Aggressive Blood Transfusion on Traumatic Brain Injury in a Swine Polytrauma Model. J Trauma Acute Care Surg :
Adams, Jason Y; Lieng, Monica K; Kuhn, Brooks T et al. (2017) Development and Validation of a Multi-Algorithm Analytic Platform to Detect Off-Target Mechanical Ventilation. Sci Rep 7:14980
DuBois, Jeffrey Anton; Slingerland, Robbert Jan; Fokkert, Marion et al. (2017) Bedside Glucose Monitoring-Is it Safe? A New, Regulatory-Compliant Risk Assessment Evaluation Protocol in Critically Ill Patient Care Settings. Crit Care Med 45:567-574
Datlow, Mitchell D; Gray, Kelly M; Watts, Adriel et al. (2017) Troponin Limit of Detection Plus Cardiac Risk Stratification Scores to Rule Out Acute Myocardial Infarction and 30-Day Major Adverse Cardiac Events in ED Patients. Crit Pathw Cardiol 16:142-146
Russo, Rachel M; Neff, Lucas P; Johnson, Michael Austin et al. (2016) Emerging Endovascular Therapies for Non-Compressible Torso Hemorrhage. Shock 46:12-9
Johnson, M Austin; Neff, Lucas P; Williams, Timothy K et al. (2016) Partial resuscitative balloon occlusion of the aorta (P-REBOA): Clinical technique and rationale. J Trauma Acute Care Surg 81:S133-S137
Mumma, Bryn E; Eggert, James; Mahler, Simon A et al. (2016) Association Between Hospital Practices and Door-in-door-out Time in ST-segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction. Crit Pathw Cardiol 15:165-168

Showing the most recent 10 out of 31 publications