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  1. University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
  2. Translational Research Institute
  3. Front
  4. Page 29

Front

UAMS Graduates 29 Certified Research Specialists

Twenty-nine UAMS research professionals received Certified Research Specialist (CRS) certificates at a graduation ceremony on Jan. 27. The graduation followed training that occurred in 2016.

The CRS program, managed by the Office of Research Compliance, requires that participants maintain Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) Human Subjects Research training, complete 28 hours of relevant coursework, and pass a comprehensive proficiency exam. Graduates of the program earn the “CRS” credentials and maintain their certification status by completing six contact hours in applicable coursework in subsequent years.

The Translational Research Institute (TRI) requires its research staff to complete and maintain CRS certification, and other UAMS departments have also adopted CRS certification as a job requirement for certain research-related positions.

The 2016 Certified Research Specialist Graduates are:

  • Suzan Blair, College of Medicine (COM), Dermatology
  • Ashley Block, COM PEDS Birth Defects
  • Amanda Bull, COM Geriatrics
  • Pamela Christie, TRI Administration
  • Makethia Curtis, COM, Family and Preventive Medicine
  • Giuseppina Dusio, COM, Nephrology
  • Ashley Funderburg, College of Nursing, Geriatrics
  • Patricia Gminski , COM, Pathology
  • Susan Goolsby, Arkansas Children’s Hospital (ACH), Clinical Nutrition
  • Paul Griffiths, Myeloma Institute
  • Kathleen Hicks, COM, Pulmonary
  • Holly Jarrell, Myeloma Institute
  • Susannah Kirby, TRI Project Support Unit
  • Matthew Kovak , Cancer Clinical Trials
  • Teri Landrum, Nursing Services
  • Austin Lovenstein, ACH Nursing Research
  • Karen Mack, Nursing Services
  • Lisa McIntos, Office of Sponsored Programs Administrative Network
  • Heather Moody, OB/GYN Research
  • Veronica Overton, Psychiatric Research Institute

Filed Under: Front, Newsroom, Uncategorized

Entrepreneurship Series Begins Today, Expands to Other CTSA Institutions

amy-hester-data-warehouse
Amy Hester, Ph.D., R.N., will be the first presenter for this year’s Health Sciences Entrepreneurship Seminar Series.

The 2017 Health Sciences Entrepreneurship Seminar Series begins Feb. 1, with UAMS’ Amy Hester, Ph.D., R.N., director of Nursing Research and Innovation, speaking from 5 – 6 p.m. at the Reynolds Institute on Aging, Jo Ellen Ford Auditorium. 

Hester will present “Innovating in Healthcare: Idea Formation to Revenue Generation and Everything in Between.”

Hester’s research focuses on falls and injury prediction and prevention across the continuum of care. She is the inventor of multiple products and co-founded the biotechnology company HD Nursing, LLC in 2012, for which she is chief scientific officer. 

The UAMS Seminar Series this year is being offered in collaboration with the University of Alabama, Birmingham, University of Kansas Medical Center and the University of Utah – all Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) institutions. The series is sponsored by the NIGMS Systems Pharmacology and Toxicology T32 Training Program, UAMS Translational Research Institute (TRI) and UAMS BioVentures.  

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

Congratulations to Our Yeti Winners!

kandi-stallings-archer-vert
Kandi Stallings-Archer, M.D.

UAMS’ Youzhong Yuan, M.D., Ph.D., in the Department of Pathology, was our third and final Yeti Tumbler winner in drawings  to celebrate UAMS Profiles’ recent system upgrade and first anniversary.

Kandi Stallings-Archer, M.D., won a Yeti Tumbler in our second drawing, and Jonathan Goree, M.D., was our first winner. 

Profiles is a networking tool designed to help researchers, clinicians, educators and other faculty members connect with one another through their research/clinical/academic interests. All faculty members have a Profiles page, and all are encouraged to visit the site and edit/add to their personal profile.  

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

Research Highlighted in 2016 UAMS Achievements

UAMS Achievements

UAMS saw numerous achievements in 2016, including in research. The year was highlighted by a $41.8 million NIH award to oversee a 17-site pediatric clinical trial network that will provide medically underserved and rural children access to clinical studies on the effect of environmental influences on early development. 

Read more: http://bit.ly/2hKc71W

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

‘Medicine with Moursi’ Addresses ARresearch.org Question

In this video from KATV in Little Rock, a viewer of “Medicine with Moursi’” is thinking about joining the ARresearch.org volunteer participant registry, but he has a couple of questions. UAMS’ Mohammed Moursi, M.D., chief of vascular surgery, has the answers.

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Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

Nov/Dec TRIbune Now Available

November/December TRIbune

If new biomedical discoveries are like gold, to borrow the metaphor used by UAMS’ Meredith Zozus, Ph.D., the prospecting days are fast coming to an end. But fear not; the November/December TRIbune newsletter features exciting new and forthcoming biomedical informatics strategies to help ensure that UAMS researchers continue to find “gold.” This issue also includes a story about a TRI-supported study led by Kristie Hadden, Ph.D., that may be unique nationally showing how her UAMS intervention is “moving the needle” through the adoption of a plain-language template. Pearl McElfish, Ph.D., MBA, is our TRI & Me feature, and we include your TRI-supported publications.

Download PDF

Newsletter Archive

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

TRI Recognizes UAMS’ Community Partners at Celebration Dinner

The UAMS Translational Research Institute honored UAMS’ many Arkansas community partners Nov. 18 with its fourth annual Community Partner Celebration.

During the event at the Centre at University Park in Little Rock, Naomi Cottoms, executive director of Tri County Rural Health Network (Tri County), accepted the first Chancellor’s Community Research Partner Award on behalf of her organization.

Tri County has been a partner of the UAMS Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health since 2001. That year the college began a long-term partnership with Tri County, which established the Community Connector Program, and they have jointly presented and published findings on the cost savings generated by this community health worker program.

UAMS Chancellor Dan Rahn, M.D.
UAMS Chancellor Dan Rahn, M.D., was the keynote speaker at the Community Partner Celebration.

UAMS Chancellor Dan Rahn, M.D., the keynote speaker, applauded the work of the community partners. He also focused on the important changes in the way research is conducted with communities typically underrepresented in research.

When deciding what research is going to be conducted, he said, community partners must be involved. Not only should they be involved in deciding whether the research makes a difference in people’s lives, they should help decide whether it makes a difference in their lives according to what matters to the community.

“In picking research questions, we’ve typically begun by considering the importance of the science, and what we learned is that may not really be what matters to the people whose interests we’re here to serve,” Rahn said.

He said he hopes UAMS’ relationships with communities have matured to where they feel empowered to tell researchers the problems they want to tackle.“I thank you for being engaged with us,” he said. “I really want to challenge all of us to get this to the level where you are not just helping us with projects we decided to do, but that you’re actually bringing questions to the table that you need answers to because it’s your community, it’s your lives, and then we respond to that.”

“I thank you for being engaged with us,” he said. “I really want to challenge all of us to get this to the level where you are not just helping us with projects we decided to do, but that you’re actually bringing questions to the table that you need answers to because it’s your community, it’s your lives, and then we respond to that.”

Rahn selected Tri County for the Chancellor’s Community Research Partner Award after the list of nominees was narrowed to two by reviewers at universities outside Arkansas.

Tri County has served as the formal community partner on a grant from the National Institutes of Health National Institute for Minority Health and Health Disparities to study the role of community health workers in engaging minority community members and organizations in research.

Mary Olson, D.Min., of Tri County served as the community co-investigator and Cottoms served as chair of the community advisory board. Tri County was also the community partner on a Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) award, and Cottoms has chaired the TRI Community Advisory Board for the past three years.

The College of Public Health is collaborating on a research project with Tri County called Patients Advancing Their Health (PATH) in the Delta, which involves integrating Community Health Workers into primary care practices to help them serve the needs of their most costly and medically complex patients.

“These projects represent just some of the partnerships between Tri County and the college, and they demonstrate the critical role this organization has played at UAMS,” said Kate Stewart, M.D., M.P.H., who leads the Translational Research Institute’s Community Engagement program. “They have demonstrated the value of community engagement for students who visit the Delta to learn about their work, for researchers who partner with them in the community, and for the members of the community who have benefited from their willingness to work with UAMS.”

Five community groups were recognized as Outstanding Community Partners. They are:

  • Health Impact Assessment Coalition. This coalition is examining how Arkansas’ landlord-tenant laws and the state’s lack of an implied warranty of habitability affects health through the availability of safe, affordable and healthy housing in central Little Rock. The assessment, funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts, focuses on how formerly incarcerated people are impacted by these policies. Several UAMS staff are members of the Coalition Steering Committee.
  • Immerse Arkansas. This organization prepares former foster youth for adulthood. Working with UAMS, students interviewed youth who received services from Immerse Arkansas, then wrote narratives for inclusion in an awareness campaign.
  • Jefferson County Emotional Wellness Taskforce. This taskforce has worked with several UAMS researchers to develop grants that focus on improving mental health outcomes among community members and improving mental health literacy within rural African-American communities. The taskforce has also collaborated with UAMS researchers to develop grants that focus on improving mental health outcomes of those who are incarcerated.
  • Jericho Way. A day resource center for the homeless in Little Rock, Jericho Way has partnered with the Emergency Department Community Health Worker program at UAMS. In this program, patients in the Emergency Department receive one-on-one services from a community health worker who works with them to manage their health and social needs.Transgender Equality Network. This network serves and advocates for the transgender community and has worked to educate the public about transgender issues. It has partnered with the College of Public Health and the Arkansas Transgender Equality Coalition on a national
  • Transgender Equality Network. This network serves and advocates for the transgender community and has worked to educate the public about transgender issues. It has partnered with the College of Public Health and the Arkansas Transgender Equality Coalition on a national Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute community engagement award called Transform Health Arkansas.Other nominees for the Chancellor’s Community Research Partner Award are:

Other nominees for the Chancellor’s Community Research Partner Award are:

Arkansas Community Organizations. This community-based membership organization does community organizing around issues that are important to its members, mostly low-to-moderate income communities in Central Arkansas and Jefferson County. UAMS College of Public Health faculty, staff and students have partnered with Arkansas Community Organizations in completing service learning community research projects for the previous five years through

Arkansas Community Organizations. This community-based membership organization does community organizing around issues that are important to its members, mostly low-to-moderate income communities in Central Arkansas and Jefferson County. UAMS College of Public Health faculty, staff and students have partnered with Arkansas Community Organizations in completing service learning community research projects for the previous five years through a masters- and doctoral- level course on racial and ethnic health disparities.

Arkansas Prevention Research Center Community Advisory Board. The “Dos and Don’ts of Community Engagement” workshop for researchers was developed and implemented by the Arkansas Prevention Research Center’s Community Advisory Board in partnership with faculty and staff from the College of Public Health. The early results of the workshop show that it can help build and sustain community-academic partnerships.

Arkansas Transgender Equality Coalition (ArTEC). This state-wide organization works to advance equality, justice and inclusivity for transgender Arkansans. The College of Public Health is partnering with ArTEC on a national Patient Centered Outcomes Research Institute community engagement award called Transform Health Arkansas. ArTEC is leading this project to engage transgender Arkansans in identifying their most pressing health and health care issues they want to see studied.
Shiloh Baptist Church. The Rev. Johnny Smith and Shiloh Baptist Church in Pine Bluff have partnered with researchers at the UAMS colleges of Medicine and Public Health for more than six years. Smith has served as a community principal investigator on several projects in the Delta.

Shiloh Baptist Church. The Rev. Johnny Smith and Shiloh Baptist Church in Pine Bluff have partnered with researchers at the UAMS colleges of Medicine and Public Health for more than six years. Smith has served as a community principal investigator on several projects in the Delta.

View all of our celebration photos!

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

TRI Issues Call for Pilot Award Applications

The Translational Research Institute (TRI) has issued its 2017 Pilot Award Program request for applications (RFA). 

This RFA seeks proposals for translational biomedical informatics approaches that examine rural health and health care issues. The awards are $50,000 maximum and have a one-year time limit. 

Note that TRI has restructured its Pilot Program to align with the priorities established by the NIH National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS). The intent is to develop novel technologies and methodologies, to test the feasibility of novel approaches, and to stimulate inter-disciplinary collaborations that test generalizable solutions to translational research problems.

In addition to biomedical informatics, future focus areas of TRI pilot awards will include: health concerns and challenges of rural and underrepresented populations; implementation science to incorporate new research findings into the health care system; and community/stakeholder-partnered research. The biannual RFA will rotate among the four emphasis areas. 

Key dates:

  • Letter of Intent Due – Dec. 9, 2016
  • Full applications invited – Dec. 19, 2016
  • Full applications due – March 10, 2017
  • Awardees announced – April 3, 2017

Latest project start/IRB approval date – June 1, 2017 

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

GCP Training Required by Jan. 1, 2017

Amy Jo Jenkins, with Lawrence Cornett, Ph.D., presented about the GCP training requirement during the monthly RESIN meeting.
Amy Jo Jenkins, with Lawrence Cornett, Ph.D., presented about the GCP training requirement during the monthly RESIN meeting.

On Sept. 16, 2016, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) released its Policy on Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Training for NIH Awardees Involved in NIH-Funded Clinical Trials.  This policy applies to NIH-funded investigators and site staff who are responsible for the conduct, management and oversight of NIH-funded clinical trials. 

An NIH Clinical Trial is defined as research studies in which one or more human subjects are prospectively assigned to one or more interventions to evaluate the effects of those interventions on health-related biomedical or behavioral outcomes.  An intervention is defined as a manipulation of the subject or subject’s environment for the purpose of modifying one or more health-related biomedical or behavioral processes and/or endpoints.

Faculty who participate in industry-sponsored trials have already completed this training through industry-led GCP training conducted at site initiative visits. This information should be documented in study binders maintained by study staff.  

The Policy on GCP Training is effective Jan. 1, 2017.  

If you are currently conducting an NIH-funded clinical trial, you will need to complete your training prior to the first of the year.  There are two ways to do this:

  1. Complete GCP training using the CITI program.
  2. Send record/certificate of current GCP training (i.e., from industry-sponsored trial participation) to Catrice Banks-Johnson. 

NOTE: GCP training expires after 3 years.

If you have ambitions of conducting an NIH-funded clinical trial, you are highly encouraged to complete the training now! 

If you are a researcher and have determined this does not apply to you, you are highly encouraged to complete the training now! GCP training is likely to be mandated within the next 6-12 months, as many institutions, journals and other funding sources are trending toward this requirement.

If you have any questions, please contact one of the following institutional offices:

Amy Jo Jenkins
Translational Research Institute
686-5939
AJJenkins@uams.edu

Jennifer Holland
IRB
526-7559
JRHolland@uams.edu

Darri Scalzo
Office of Research Compliance
686-8062
DLScalzo@uams.edu

Larry Cornett, PhD
Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research
686-5347
CornettLawrenceE@uams.edu

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Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

Get Plugged in with Profiles Plug-In!

The UAMS Profiles newsletter, Profiles Plug-In, Volume 2, introduces users to the updated version of the Profiles website. TRI has dramatically improved the look and feel of the site. You’ll also learn how faculty information in Profiles is being used by the UAMS Integrated Clinical Enterprise (ICE) to help create its quarterly scorecard report.  

VIEW ARCHIVE

Profiles

Filed Under: Front, News, Newsroom, Uncategorized

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