Leadership and Administrative Core (LAC) The theme of the UCSF OAIC is ?Predictors, Outcomes, and Amelioration of Late-life Disability: A Focus on Vulnerable Populations.? We are dedicated to better understanding and addressing late-life disability in vulnerable populations ? vulnerable due to either medical vulnerabilities (such as cancer with comorbid lung disease and cognitive impairment) or to social vulnerabilities (such as isolation or homelessness). During our first cycle, the UCSF OAIC leaders developed a dynamic and collaborative center that has made key contributions to science and investigator development in our thematic niche. In our second cycle, we will build on our work that is shifting paradigms in aging, and improving clinical care. We will facilitate enrollment and retention of vulnerable elders into research studies, break new ground in the innovative use of national data resources, promote aging sciences across a wide range of disciplines, and contribute to the national OAIC community. The LAC will be the glue that coordinates the OAIC cores and maintains collaboration. The LAC will focus on tangible metrics of research productivity: publications in high impact journals and new NIH funding. To achieve these goals, we will focus on nine specific aims. They allow the Center to excel in its mission of developing superb investigators and supporting the highest-quality science.
Our aims also focus on building partnerships with other programs at UCSF such as our CTSI, RCMAR, and ADRC. The LAC has the following Specific Aims: 1. To provide coordination across OAIC cores, assuring that cores work together collaboratively. 2. To provide day-to-day management of the UCSF OAIC, including managing administrative tasks such as the annual progress report and communications with the OAIC coordinating center. 3. To manage fiscal matters, review use of Core resources, and make reallocation decisions. 4. To lead outreach efforts, linking the OAIC with other UCSF centers and the national OAIC network. 5. To assess scientific opportunities for new uses of Core resources, and to plan for such uses, with special consideration of opportunities for translation between clinical research, practice and policy. 6. To assess and plan areas of collaboration among UCSF OAIC Cores and with other OAICs. 7. To solicit, review, and fund proposals for REC awards and PESC projects in collaboration with those cores. 8. To organize activities of the UCSF OAIC advisory and review panels. 9. To monitor Core progress and implement necessary remediation. The LAC leader, Dr. Covinsky, and LAC co-leader, Dr. Steinman, will foster a mission driven culture of excellence, achievement, intellectual generosity, and collaboration, pushing the UCSF OAIC team to support research that translates into better care and for vulnerable older adults.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Aging (NIA)
Type
Center Core Grants (P30)
Project #
5P30AG044281-07
Application #
9737811
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZAG1)
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2019-07-01
Budget End
2020-06-30
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Type
DUNS #
094878337
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94118
Quartuccio, Michael; Simonsick, Eleanor M; Langan, Susan et al. (2018) The relationship of health literacy to diabetes status differs by sex in older adults. J Diabetes Complications 32:368-372
Zapata, Carly; Lum, Hillary D; Wistar, Emily et al. (2018) Feasibility of a Video-Based Advance Care Planning Website to Facilitate Group Visits among Diverse Adults from a Safety-Net Health System. J Palliat Med 21:853-856
Givens, Jane L; Sudore, Rebecca L; Marshall, Gad A et al. (2018) Advance Care Planning in Community-Dwelling Patients With Dementia. J Pain Symptom Manage 55:1105-1112
Brown, Rebecca T; Covinsky, Kenneth E (2018) Frailty as an Outcome in Geriatrics Research: Not Ready for Prime Time? Ann Intern Med 168:361-362
Sudore, Rebecca L; Heyland, Daren K; Lum, Hillary D et al. (2018) Outcomes That Define Successful Advance Care Planning: A Delphi Panel Consensus. J Pain Symptom Manage 55:245-255.e8
Cullaro, Giuseppe; Sarkar, Monika; Lai, Jennifer C (2018) Sex-based disparities in delisting for being ""too sick"" for liver transplantation. Am J Transplant 18:1214-1219
Utne, Inger; Løyland, Borghild; Grov, Ellen Karine et al. (2018) Distinct attentional function profiles in older adults receiving cancer chemotherapy. Eur J Oncol Nurs 36:32-39
Wong, Melisa L; McMurry, Timothy L; Schumacher, Jessica R et al. (2018) Comorbidity Assessment in the National Cancer Database for Patients With Surgically Resected Breast, Colorectal, or Lung Cancer (AFT-01, -02, -03). J Oncol Pract 14:e631-e643
Petrillo, Laura A; Gan, Siqi; Jing, Bocheng et al. (2018) Hypoglycemia in Hospice Patients With Type 2 Diabetes in a National Sample of Nursing Homes. JAMA Intern Med 178:713-715
Seib, Carolyn D; Chomsky-Higgins, Kathryn; Gosnell, Jessica E et al. (2018) Patient Frailty Should Be Used to Individualize Treatment Decisions in Primary Hyperparathyroidism. World J Surg 42:3215-3222

Showing the most recent 10 out of 234 publications