J. NRSA Training Core

NIH RePORTER · NIH · TL1 · $442,952 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Academic Medical Centers have the responsibility to train the next generation of biomedical scientists and physician scientists for careers in clinical and translational research. Our Scientific Teams Advancing Research Translations (START) Program will utilize a team science approach to develop the clinical and translational research skills of graduate students and MD-fellows who align with CTSA goals of advancing therapeutics, clinical interventions and behavioral modifications to improve health. The Objectives of the START Program are to provide one year of stipend for graduate and MD-PhD students and MD-fellows to conduct focused research and develop fundamental, quantitative skills involved in clinical and translational research as components of a research PhD or MS (for scholars with clinical terminal degrees) degree. Students participate in workshops that teach project development, grant writing, manuscript writing, and other professional development skills, including best practice strategies to optimize communication skills, particularly in communicating with a non-scientific audience. Students have Team Science experiences as a vertically integrated training experience. Graduate- and MD-PhD students conducting clinical and translational research will be matched with an MD-fellow to experience T3-T5 types of research projects directed to improve population health. This will include activities with high school and undergraduates from our pipeline programs, to reinforce the impact clinical and translational research has on human populations within our community. In addition, students participate in bi-annual conferences to present their current studies in a team-based environment and use the Individual Development Plan (IDP) to optimize the training experiences of our trainees. The START Program organizes a workshop with the trainee’s mentors to establish best practice in mentoring. START Program leadership also mentor graduates of START Program for successful careers as scientists and physician-scientists at MCW. The outcomes of the START Program align with the CTSA goals of advancing therapeutics, clinical interventions and behavioral modifications to improve health.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10132144
Project number
2TL1TR001437-06
Recipient
MEDICAL COLLEGE OF WISCONSIN
Principal Investigator
David C Brousseau
Activity code
TL1
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$442,952
Award type
2
Project period
2015-08-18 → 2025-05-31