SFSU has positioned itself to become one of the most research-active comprehensive minority-serving undergraduate institutions in the country through an integrated plan for increasing biomedical and behavioral research. Faculty and administrators share a vision of research as an integral component in the experience of educational excellence and, with the support of programs such as RIMI and MBRS, have worked diligently to ensure that our diverse students are provided with opportunities to contribute to the nation's research enterprise. We now propose to implement a new RIMI program to assist the behavioral science faculty in competing successfully for research funding while increasing the health disparities research capacity of faculty through strong collaborative research partnerships with one of the country's premiere research intensive universities. The first of these goals will be accomplished through an annual Faculty Professional Development program that engages each participating faculty member in focused, intensive grant writing activities with an external mentor from a major research university. Through these mentorships and ongoing workshops, SFSU faculty will write competitive proposals and obtain funding for innovative research into health disparities. The mentored experience will allow them to develop critical research networks and collaborative proposals for leading-edge health disparities research, as well as involve students directly in their research and develop new connections at research-intensive institutions where their students may later wish to pursue advanced studies. The second major goal will be accomplished through two major collaborative research partnerships, one by Drs. Denetclaw (SFSU) and Holleran (UCSF) studying ectoderm dermomyotome signaling through filopodia, and the other by Drs. Yoo (SFSU) and Ewing, Aviv and Levine (UCSF) investigating social support and quality of life among breast cancer survivors of diverse ethnicities. These partnerships will strengthen the capacity for biomedical and behavioral health disparities research at SFSU and will develop productive collaborations between minority faculty and UCSF researchers. Our proposed RIMI program thus presents an ideal opportunity to provide SFSU faculty and students with new mechanisms for achieving excellence in biomedical and behavioral research.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD)
Type
Exploratory Grants (P20)
Project #
5P20MD000544-04
Application #
7126879
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZMD1-LW (05))
Program Officer
Hunter, Deloris
Project Start
2003-09-30
Project End
2008-09-29
Budget Start
2006-09-30
Budget End
2007-09-29
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$970,586
Indirect Cost
Name
San Francisco State University
Department
Type
Other Domestic Higher Education
DUNS #
942514985
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94132
Vergara, Hernando Martínez; Ramirez, Julio; Rosing, Trista et al. (2018) miR-206 is required for changes in cell adhesion that drive muscle cell morphogenesis in Xenopus laevis. Dev Biol 438:94-110
Yoo, Grace J; Sudhakar, Anantha; Le, Mai Nhung et al. (2017) Exploring Coping Strategies Among Young Asian American Women Breast Cancer Survivors. J Cancer Educ 32:43-50
Levine, Ellen G; Yoo, Grace; Aviv, Caryn (2017) Predictors of quality of life among ethnically diverse breast cancer survivors. Appl Res Qual Life 12:1-16
Yen, Ten-Yang; Bowen, Spencer; Yen, Roger et al. (2017) Glycoproteins in Claudin-Low Breast Cancer Cell Lines Have a Unique Expression Profile. J Proteome Res 16:1391-1400
Batt, Anna R; St Germain, Commodore P; Gokey, Trevor et al. (2015) Engineering trypsin for inhibitor resistance. Protein Sci 24:1463-74
Levine, Ellen G; Vong, Stephen; Yoo, Grace J (2015) Development and Initial Validation of a Spiritual Support Subscale for the MOS Social Support Survey. J Relig Health 54:2355-66
Arsuaga, Javier; Borrman, Tyler; Cavalcante, Raymond et al. (2015) Identification of Copy Number Aberrations in Breast Cancer Subtypes Using Persistence Topology. Microarrays (Basel) 4:339-69
Timpe, Leslie C; Li, Dian; Yen, Ten-Yang et al. (2015) Mining the Breast Cancer Proteome for Predictors of Drug Sensitivity. J Proteomics Bioinform 8:204-211
Yoo, Grace J; Levine, Ellen G; Pasick, Rena (2014) Breast cancer and coping among women of color: a systematic review of the literature. Support Care Cancer 22:811-24
Santos, Maricel G; Handley, Margaret A; Omark, Karin et al. (2014) ESL participation as a mechanism for advancing health literacy in immigrant communities. J Health Commun 19 Suppl 2:89-105

Showing the most recent 10 out of 43 publications