The University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW) and its partner, Marshfield Clinic, remain committed to the challenge of transforming the research culture and environment to further develop clinical and translational science as a distinct discipline. UW approaches this challenge with the unique perspective afforded by the ongoing transformation of the Medical School to a School of Medicine and Public Health, which has mandated creation of a health delivery system based on effective application of current knowledge by turning it into current practice. Achieving this goal is facilitated by the strength UW derives from a strong and committed partnership forged by its Health Sciences Schools/College and Marshfield Clinic. Over the past four years, the institute for Clinical and Translational Research (ICTR), formed as the vehicle to achieve the cultural transformation, has coupled a catalytic investment of new resources with the integration, synergy, and amplification of existing resources to forge substantive changes^ in the research environment and culture for clinical and translational research. Our key goal will continue: to create an environment that facilitates transformation of research at the UW and Marshfield Clinic into a continuum extending from investigation to discovery to translation into practice. To achieve this goal, ICTR will further stimulate the creation of interdisciplinary teams, make available state-ofrthe-art core facilities, expand biostatistical and biomedical informatics resources, forge new partnerships with community organizations, and encourage research participation in the continuum of translational sciences. ICTR will contiriue to develop a cadre of multidisciplinary biomedical and behavioral scientists capable of accelerating translation of research findings into evidence-based policies and practices, which will improve health in the U.S. Such outcomes will be facilitated by the formation of interdisciplinary research teams, which bridge the gulf between the basic scientists at the University and community partners, selected from an extensive well-developed clinical network in Wisconsin. These initiatives will further stimulate evolution of the research culture to fulfill the Wisconsin Idea, a concept linking University efforts to the well-being ofthe residents in Wisconsin.

Public Health Relevance

The University of Wisconsin-Madison and Marshfield Clinic are committed to support multidisciplinary biomedical and'behavioral research that spans basic science to clinical research, often done collaboratively with community partners and to assure that the results of these studies are disseminated to communities to positively impact on health care in the community and the health, of community members.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS)
Type
Linked Specialized Center Cooperative Agreement (UL1)
Project #
4UL1TR000427-10
Application #
9069110
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRR1)
Program Officer
Talbot, Bernard
Project Start
2007-09-17
Project End
2017-05-31
Budget Start
2016-06-01
Budget End
2017-05-31
Support Year
10
Fiscal Year
2016
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Wisconsin Madison
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
161202122
City
Madison
State
WI
Country
United States
Zip Code
53715
Larson, Andrea; Berger, Lawrence M; Mallinson, David C et al. (2018) Variable Uptake of Medicaid-Covered Prenatal Care Coordination: The Relevance of Treatment Level and Service Context. J Community Health :
Dunfield, Elizabeth M; Turek, Michelle M; Buhr, Kevin A et al. (2018) A survey of stereotactic radiation therapy in veterinary medicine. Vet Radiol Ultrasound 59:786-795
Albertini, Mark R; Yang, Richard K; Ranheim, Erik A et al. (2018) Pilot trial of the hu14.18-IL2 immunocytokine in patients with completely resectable recurrent stage III or stage IV melanoma. Cancer Immunol Immunother 67:1647-1658
Sullivan, Sarah; Campbell, Krystle; Ross, Joshua C et al. (2018) Identifying Nontechnical Skill Deficits in Trainees Through Interdisciplinary Trauma Simulation. J Surg Educ 75:978-983
Zens, Tiffany J; Cartmill, Randi; Muldowney, Bridget L et al. (2018) Practice Variation in Umbilical Hernia Repair Demonstrates a Need for Best Practice Guidelines. J Pediatr :
Garcia-Ramos, Camille; Dabbs, Kevin; Meyerand, Elizabeth et al. (2018) Psychomotor slowing is associated with anomalies in baseline and prospective large scale neural networks in youth with epilepsy. Neuroimage Clin 19:222-231
Wiltshire, Jacqueline; Allison, Jeroan J; Brown, Roger et al. (2018) African American women perceptions of physician trustworthiness: A factorial survey analysis of physician race, gender and age. AIMS Public Health 5:122-134
Yu, John-Paul J; Kuner, Anthony D; Kennedy, Tabassum A (2018) Characteristics of Durable Quality Improvement: A 6-Year Case Study. J Am Coll Radiol 15:1749-1752
Schwei, Rebecca J; Schroeder, Michelle; Ejebe, Ifna et al. (2018) Limited English Proficient Patients' Perceptions of when Interpreters are Needed and how the Decision to Utilize Interpreters is Made. Health Commun 33:1503-1508
Stroup, Bridget M; Nair, Nivedita; Murali, Sangita G et al. (2018) Metabolomic Markers of Essential Fatty Acids, Carnitine, and Cholesterol Metabolism in Adults and Adolescents with Phenylketonuria. J Nutr 148:194-201

Showing the most recent 10 out of 1693 publications