# Institute for Integration of Medicine & Science: A Partnership to Improve Health

> **NIH NIH UM1** · UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HLTH SCIENCE CENTER · 2024 · $5,584,747

## Abstract

Project Summary-Abstract
South-Central Texas is home to San Antonio and Austin, both among the nation’s
fastest growing cities. San Antonio, the gateway to South Texas, is the 7th largest city and the largest minority-
majority Hispanic/Latino city in the US, whereas Austin is 11th largest. The region also includes many rural
counties and several on the US-Mexico border. Given our demographics and rapid growth, our area foreshadows
future challenges facing US healthcare, underscoring the national applicability of solutions devised by our hub.
In 2006, UT Health Science Center San Antonio established the Institute for Integration of Medicine &
Science (IIMS) as the academic home for translational research initiatives, training the translational science
workforce, formalizing key strategic partnerships, and creating a community of scholars within a learning
healthcare system. Building upon our optimized clinical and translational research infrastructure, IIMS now
proposes a 4th cycle of CTSA support in response to PAR-21-293. Our hub seeks to be exceptional in solving
clinical and translational science (CTS) roadblocks, translating discoveries into reduced disparities and improved
healthcare outcomes across our multi-cultural population. We strive to make our vision a reality through robust
strategies for supporting CTS across institutional partners and collaborating organizations, catalyzing successes
for transdisciplinary research teams, and implementing programs that produce a creative, collaborative, and
culturally diverse translational science workforce. We will achieve our goals through the strategic deployment of
resources and expertise developed during 3 cycles of CTSA funding. Our proposal leverages optimized strengths
across the spectrum of clinical and translational research to establish the capacity and infrastructure required for
high-impact CTS programs. Thus, IIMS will pivot from the study of specific targets/diseases (i.e., clinical
translational research) to the discovery of generalizable principles that apply to many targets/diseases (CTS),
addressing rate-limiting steps and transforming translation from an empirical process into a predictive science.
This guiding tenet is embedded within each Element and Module of this proposal, as well as across our pipeline
of training and workforce development programs. We posit that synergies across hub partners will yield CTS
innovations and contribute meaningfully to the National CTSA Consortium. Our over-arching Specific Aims are:
 1. Catalyze the acceleration of CTS discovery and health disparities impact within a vibrant academic home
 synergistically integrated with our strategic partners and actively engaged with our diverse communities
 2. Capitalize on our extraordinary Hispanic and military/veteran population base to diversify and enhance
 our interdisciplinary clinical and translational science workforce
 3. Implement innovative strategies for evaluation and continuous improvement ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10893515
- **Project number:** 5UM1TR004538-02
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS HLTH SCIENCE CENTER
- **Principal Investigator:** ROBERT A CLARK
- **Activity code:** UM1 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $5,584,747
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2023-07-25 → 2030-06-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10893515

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10893515, Institute for Integration of Medicine & Science: A Partnership to Improve Health (5UM1TR004538-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10893515. Licensed CC0.

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