The rapidly expanding fund of basic and mechanistic research that is better defining the pathophysiology of human disease must be accompanied by clinician scientists well versed in the clinical investigative techniques required to apply this knowledge and who are acculturated to an environment of integrative science involving close collaboration with fundamental scientists. Programs focusing on health care professional education in basic and translational research, such as the Medical Scientist Training Program, have been demonstrated to be effective for the training of health care professionals in careers in basic medical research. However, complementary programs for training in the complexities of clinical investigation have not been developed or evaluated to the same extent. Furthermore, such programs must instill within the clinician investigator a culture of interaction and collaboration with basic scientists The Aims of this training proposal in predoctoral clinical research propose solutions to some of the major barriers to the effective training in clinical investigation and present a strategy for evaluation of whether the curriculum addresses the critical need for increasing numbers clinician scientists. Specifically, this program will provide to predoctoral nursing, dental, and medical students a novel innovative curriculum of biostatistics, study design and ethical content of research in an interactive team learning approach and delivered as a core curriculum to all students in these respective programs at The Ohio State University, as well as outside institutions for whom videoconference participation will be offered. These students will have the opportunity to enter into a short course experience in the performance of clinical research, and in an intensive year-long curriculum culminating in a Master of Public Health with emphasis in Clinical Investigation. The program will further promote culture of collaborative science by incorporating seminars with basic and translational scientists. Through a career tracking mechanism, it will establish the success of this program through comparison with training delivered to basic and translational scientist trained in the same environment ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Research Resources (NCRR)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
1T32RR023260-01
Application #
7050769
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHD1-MCHG-B (15))
Program Officer
Merchant, Carol
Project Start
2005-09-30
Project End
2010-08-31
Budget Start
2005-09-30
Budget End
2006-08-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2005
Total Cost
$669,785
Indirect Cost
Name
Ohio State University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
832127323
City
Columbus
State
OH
Country
United States
Zip Code
43210
Lester, Joanne; Bernhard, Linda; Ryan-Wenger, Nancy (2012) A self-report instrument that describes urogenital atrophy symptoms in breast cancer survivors. West J Nurs Res 34:72-96
Jeppesen, Kelly Marvin; Hull, Benjamin P; Raines, Matthew et al. (2012) A validation study of the spoken knowledge in low literacy in diabetes scale (SKILLD). J Gen Intern Med 27:207-12
Radulescu, Andrei; Zorko, Nicholas A; Yu, Xiaoyi et al. (2009) Preclinical neonatal rat studies of heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor in protection of the intestines from necrotizing enterocolitis. Pediatr Res 65:437-42
Dzwonczyk, Roger; Fujii, Jeffrey T; Simonetti, Orlando et al. (2009) Electrical noise in the intraoperative magnetic resonance imaging setting. Anesth Analg 108:181-6
Kaspar, Rita Wen; Allen, Hugh D; Montanaro, Federica (2009) Current understanding and management of dilated cardiomyopathy in Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy. J Am Acad Nurse Pract 21:241-9
Kaspar, Rita Wen; Allen, Hugh D; Ray, Will C et al. (2009) Analysis of dystrophin deletion mutations predicts age of cardiomyopathy onset in becker muscular dystrophy. Circ Cardiovasc Genet 2:544-51
Jeppesen, Kelly Marvin; Coyle, James D; Miser, William F (2009) Screening questions to predict limited health literacy: a cross-sectional study of patients with diabetes mellitus. Ann Fam Med 7:24-31