The UCLA CTSI is an academic-clinical-community partnership designed to accelerate scientific discoveries and clinical breakthroughs to improve health in the most populous and diverse county in the United States. An ethnic, economic and cultural mosaic, Los Angeles County provides challenges for health and disease research that few counties replicate. Our mission is to create a borderless clinical and translational research institute that brings UCLA innovations and resources to bear on the greatest health needs of Los Angeles. We are aligning our strengths to support clinical and translational science that is in full partnership with and responsive to the needs of our Los Angeles community. Our UCLA CTSI is bridging disciplinary and institutional boundaries to create transdisciplinary teams focused on the greatest opportunities as well as the greatest needs in our region. CTSA funding will accelerate our progress in achieving our transformative mission and allow the UCLA CTSI to make significant contributions to the goals of the national CTSA consortium. To accomplish our mission the UCLA CTSI has established five goals: 1) Create an academic home for clinical and translational science that integrates and builds on the many strengths of UCLA and its partners, 2) Build transdisciplinary research teams to accelerate and translate discovery to improve health, 3) Transform educational and career development programs to promote the next generation of clinician investigators and translational scientists, 4) Advance and expand strong bi-directional academic-community partnerships to ensure that new scientific discovery is relevant to community needs and, 5) Serve as a national resource for collaborative research through regional, statewide and national CTSA consortia. In transforming our research enterprise, the UCLA-CTSI is guided by core principles including team science, flexible research infrastructure and community engagement. The UCLA CTSI is built on a strong foundation of success in discovery, translational science, community engagement and health services research. Unique resources of the UCLA CTSI include close collaborations with world-leading centers, institutes, schools and programs with which we will co-fund and conduct our clinical and translational science. With institutional support in the pre-award period, the UCLA CTSI has taken significant strides to transform its approach to clinical and translational biomedical research. CTSA funding will accelerate our progress in achieving our transformative mission and allow the UCLA CTSI to make significant contributions to the goals of the national CTSA consortium.

Public Health Relevance

Los Angeles County offers an ideal environment for developing effective translational strategies and faces challenges including subpopulations who are underrepresented in all phases of research. Further its fragmented health care systems require implementation, dissemination and diffusion research for scientific discovery to have a large social impact. As the US population becomes more diverse in the 21^'Century, our experiences and successes will offer a model for health improvement nationwide.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Linked Specialized Center Cooperative Agreement (UL1)
Project #
8UL1TR000124-02
Application #
8270469
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRR1-CR-3 (01))
Program Officer
Talbot, Bernard
Project Start
2011-06-01
Project End
2016-02-29
Budget Start
2012-03-01
Budget End
2013-02-28
Support Year
2
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$15,079,371
Indirect Cost
$3,333,186
Name
University of California Los Angeles
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
092530369
City
Los Angeles
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
90095
Wang, Hong; Chen, Xiaolin; Li, Gang (2018) Survival Forests with R-Squared Splitting Rules. J Comput Biol 25:388-395
Arevian, Armen C; Bell, Doug; Kretzman, Mark et al. (2018) Participatory methods to support team science development for predictive analytics in health. J Clin Transl Sci 2:178-182
Elkhoury, Fuad F; Simopoulos, Demetrios N; Marks, Leonard S (2018) MR-guided biopsy and focal therapy: new options for prostate cancer management. Curr Opin Urol 28:93-101
Dean, Andy C; Morales, Angelica M; Hellemann, Gerhard et al. (2018) Cognitive deficit in methamphetamine users relative to childhood academic performance: link to cortical thickness. Neuropsychopharmacology 43:1745-1752
Del Pino, Homero E; Harawa, Nina T; Liao, Diana et al. (2018) Age and Age Discordance Associations with Condomless Sex Among Men Who Have Sex with Men. AIDS Behav 22:649-657
Ho, Allen S; Kim, Sungjin; Tighiouart, Mourad et al. (2018) Quantitative survival impact of composite treatment delays in head and neck cancer. Cancer 124:3154-3162
Videlock, Elizabeth J; Mahurkar-Joshi, Swapna; Hoffman, Jill M et al. (2018) Sigmoid colon mucosal gene expression supports alterations of neuronal signaling in irritable bowel syndrome with constipation. Am J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol 315:G140-G157
Kuhn, Taylor; Kaufmann, Tobias; Doan, Nhat Trung et al. (2018) An augmented aging process in brain white matter in HIV. Hum Brain Mapp 39:2532-2540
Zhou, Zhenqi; Ribas, Vicent; Rajbhandari, Prashant et al. (2018) Estrogen receptor ? protects pancreatic ?-cells from apoptosis by preserving mitochondrial function and suppressing endoplasmic reticulum stress. J Biol Chem 293:4735-4751
McEwen, Sarah C; Siddarth, Prabha; Abedelsater, Berna et al. (2018) Simultaneous Aerobic Exercise and Memory Training Program in Older Adults with Subjective Memory Impairments. J Alzheimers Dis 62:795-806

Showing the most recent 10 out of 2215 publications