We established the UCSF Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) in 2006 to accelerate the pace of research that improves the health of the public. The overall mission of CTSI has been to improve and transform clinical and translational research infrastructure and training at UCSF and our partner institutions. In the next funding period we aim to use the substantial knowledge, skills, and infrastructure that we have developed to further accelerate the pace of research at UCSF, to export our successes to other institutions, and to create initiatives aimed at improving the health of our own and other communities, through the following aims:
SPECIFIC AIM 1 : To enhance the highly successful activities of the UCSF CTSI, including the development of new initiatives in the areas of Training, Infrastructure/Services, and Advocacy/Culture Change: a) Training: to provide programs for students at all levels, across a spectrum of settings, and including all phases of the improvement of healthcare; b) Infrastructure/Services: to expand services and tools to clinical and translational investigators at UCSF, our partner institutions, and within the broader regional, national, and global communities; and, c) Advocacv/Culture Change: to nurture communication, encourage collaboration, foster innovation, and catalyze the successful conduct of clinical and translational research; to support a diverse faculty; to increase involvement of the community and the responsive of research to its needs; and change the academic culture to promote multidisciplinary, collaborative work.
SPECIFIC AIM 2 : To develop crosscutting initiatives using the knowledge, skills, and infrastructure developed by multiple CTSI programs in the first funding period to accelerate clinical and translational research and its impact on health, well beyond the institutions collaborating in the UCSF CTSI. New initiatives will: a) Bring together local public health and philanthropic groups to work with CTSI to improve the health of the San Francisco Bay Area community through a series of health improvement projects directed at high impact conditions; b) create a model system to accelerate the pace of clinical and translational research that includes streamlining regulation, developing participant recruitment services, providing research management, and bringing research services directly into community practices; and, c) improve the performance, transparency and accountability of research administration within and beyond CTSI by setting challenging goals and tracking performance metrics on public dashboards.
These aims will be achieved by orchestration of activities occurring within and between our 10 programs, supported by a proven governance model, and with strong ties to institutional and community leadership. Our ultimate goal is to bring better health to more people more quickly.

Public Health Relevance

CTSI aims to bring better health to more people more quickly by supporting training, infrastructure, advocacy, and culture change. CTSI achieves this goal not by conducting research but by making it easier for UCSF's superb investigators to conduct research. The current infrastructure and policy environment for clinical and translational research is inefficient, cumbersome and even obstructionist, so CTSI can only meet its goals if it also transforms the way research is done. Its goal is to build innovative infrastructure, tools and services, to transform the core university culture to one which promotes and rewards collaboration and accelerate the clinical application of basic science.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Mentored Career Development Award (KL2)
Project #
5KL2TR000143-10
Application #
8915786
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRR1)
Program Officer
Wilde, David B
Project Start
2006-09-30
Project End
2016-06-30
Budget Start
2015-07-01
Budget End
2016-06-30
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Otolaryngology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
094878337
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94118
Guiastrennec, Benjamin; Ramachandran, Geetha; Karlsson, Mats O et al. (2018) Suboptimal Antituberculosis Drug Concentrations and Outcomes in Small and HIV-Coinfected Children in India: Recommendations for Dose Modifications. Clin Pharmacol Ther 104:733-741
Perito, Emily R; Phelps, Andrew; Vase, Tabitha et al. (2018) Subclinical Atherosclerosis in Pediatric Liver Transplant Recipients: Carotid and Aorta Intima-Media Thickness and Their Predictors. J Pediatr 193:119-127.e1
Chaffee, Benjamin W; Couch, Elizabeth T; Gansky, Stuart A (2018) Adolescents' smokeless tobacco susceptibility by perceived professional baseball players' use. J Public Health Dent 78:5-8
Nordstrom, Matthew; Felton, Erin; Sear, Katherine et al. (2018) Large Vessel Arteriopathy After Cranial Radiation Therapy in Pediatric Brain Tumor Survivors. J Child Neurol 33:359-366
Patel, Rena C; Leddy, Anna M; Odoyo, Josephine et al. (2018) What motivates serodiscordant couples to prevent HIV transmission within their relationships: findings from a PrEP implementation study in Kenya. Cult Health Sex 20:625-639
Feldens, Carlos Alberto; Rodrigues, Priscila Humbert; de Anastácio, Gislaine et al. (2018) Feeding frequency in infancy and dental caries in childhood: a prospective cohort study. Int Dent J 68:113-121
Ishida, Julie H; McCulloch, Charles E; Steinman, Michael A et al. (2018) Authors' Reply. J Am Soc Nephrol 29:2771-2772
Chow, Felicia C; Wilson, Michael R; Wu, Kunling et al. (2018) Stroke incidence is highest in women and non-Hispanic blacks living with HIV in the AIDS Clinical Trials Group Longitudinal Linked Randomized Trials cohort. AIDS 32:1125-1135
Rechmann, P; Chaffee, B W; Rechmann, B M T et al. (2018) Changes in Caries Risk in a Practice-Based Randomized Controlled Trial. Adv Dent Res 29:15-23
Kubo, Ai; Deardorff, Julianna; Laurent, Cecile A et al. (2018) Associations Between Maternal Obesity and Pregnancy Hyperglycemia and Timing of Puberty Onset in Adolescent Girls: A Population-Based Study. Am J Epidemiol 187:1362-1369

Showing the most recent 10 out of 340 publications