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CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE AWARDS The Importance of Community Engagement

CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE AWARDS The Importance of Community Engagement. J. Lloyd Michener, MD Professor and Chair Director, Duke Center for Community Research Department of Community and Family Medicine Duke University School of Medicine Ohio State University

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CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE AWARDS The Importance of Community Engagement

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  1. CLINICAL & TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCE AWARDSThe Importance of Community Engagement J. Lloyd Michener, MD Professor and Chair Director, Duke Center for Community Research Department of Community and Family Medicine Duke University School of Medicine Ohio State University Department of Family Medicine January 22, 2009

  2. Re-engineering Clinical Research Interdisciplinary Research Innovator Award Public-Private Partnerships Bench Bedside Practice • Building Blocks and Pathways • Molecular Libraries • Bioinformatics • Computational Biology • Nanomedicine • Integrated Research Networks • Clinical Research Informatics • NIH Clinical Research Associates • Clinical Outcomes Translational Research Initiatives Cross-cutting: Harmonization, Training

  3. NIH Clinical and Translational Science Awards . . . and Beyond • Catalyze change - break silos, break barriers, and break conventions • Advance the new intellectual discipline of clinical and translational science • Integrate resources and training • Identify and remove impediments to clinical and translational science

  4. Clinical and Translational Science Award (U54) Trans-NIH collaboration First RFA released October, 2005 reviewed in summer of 2006 for October 2006 funding U54 mechanism Cooperative agreement between awardee academic institution and NIH Multi-faceted research program Complex award mechanism: Combined U54, T32 and K12 5 year award

  5. Building a National CTSA Consortium Case Western Reserve Albert Einstein OSU University of Pittsburgh Northwestern University of Michigan University of Washington University of Rochester WA Harvard Boston University Tufts University ME MT ND OHSU MN OR VT WI Yale NH Mayo Clinic NY ID MI Weill Cornell MA SD Columbia University of Wisconsin WY Rockefeller Univ. of Utah IA NJ University of Iowa UC, Davis University of Pennsylvania PA NE NV Univ. of Colorado University of Chicago Johns Hopkins UCSF Indiana University IL IN Washington University, St. Louis OH UT WV CO VA Stanford KS MO CA KY Duke Vanderbilt UNC TN AZ Scripps OK NM AR SC UT Southwestern Emory GA AL Univ of Alabama at Birmingham MS LA TX UT San Antonio AK UT, Houston FL Participating Institutions HI Since 2006 Since 2007 Since 2008

  6. Key Functions NIH & other government agencies Clinical Research Ethics Trial Design Advanced Degree-Granting Programs Biomedical Informatics CTSA Academic Center Industry Clinical Resources Participant & Community Involvement Biostatistics Regulatory Support Healthcare organizations

  7. Strategic Planning • Goal One: Enhancing National Clinical and Translational Research Capability • clinical research management • research infrastructure • phenotyping - human and preclinical models • Goal Two: Enhancing the Training and Career Development of Clinical and Translational Scientists

  8. Strategic Planning • Goal Three: Enhancing Consortium-Wide Collaborations • National Resource Inventory • Data Sharing Network • Social Networking Initiative • Goal Four: Enhancing the Health of Our Communities and the Nation • National Model for Community Engagement • Inform Public Health Policy Through Research

  9. Consortium Governance & Organization Recent CTSA Community Engagement Activities • Established 4 topic-based workgroups: • Community-Based Academic and Practice partnership Workgroup • Education Workgroup • Resource Development • Regional Workshops Workgroup • Workshop May 9, 2008 in Bethesda, MD: “Accelerating the Dissemination and Translation of Clinical Research into Practice” • May 14-15, 2009 NIH workshop: “Improving Health WITH Communities: The Role of Community Engagement in Clinical and Translational Research” • 5 Regional Workshops 2008 Jointly Sponsored by NCRR and APTR/CDC: Governance Manual available at http://ctsaweb.org/Docs/CTSA_Governance_Manual.pdf

  10. Supplemental Projects Consultation Service Provide consultation for each CTSA to strengthen community practice links PRIMER Practice network research infrastructure needs among CTSAs Recent CTSA Community Engagement Activities

  11. CTSAWeb.org

  12. The Duke Center for Community Research (DCCR) Moving the Community from Subject to Collaborative Partner • Goal: Improve the health of the community through: • Community engagement in research • Integration of practices into research structure • Linking communities, practices, researchers • Components: 1. Community Research Liaison Center 2. Community Health Research Training Center 3. Electronic Health Record 4. Demonstration Projects Regulatory Affairs Project Leaders and the Portal Office

  13. 1. Community Research Liaison Center • The connection between Duke and local communities, practices, and organizations • A virtual library: • For researchers to learn about communities • For community groups to learn about themselves • For practices to identify opportunities for improvement • Outreach and training to assist communities with data and to connect communities with researchers Status: 23 grants funded, submitted or under development • 14 community-wide health committees staffed

  14. 2. Community Health Research Training Center • Train and prepare researchers and learners to work successfully with communities • Electronic training modules • On-site training programs Status: required training for clinicians and researchers begun with online modules and classes (2500 trained to date) • www.aamc.org/mededportal • go to “Find Resources”; enter keyword: community engaged research

  15. 3. Electronic Health Record • Covers citizens of Durham County • Captures data for Durham County • Develop analytic techniques • Data capture and co-variates • Meshing advanced laboratory data with long term outcomes • Produce improvement of community health status Status: Implemented in Duke practices, data analyses underway with community partners

  16. 4. Demonstration Projects • Pilot projects to see if teams of community groups, clinicians, and researchers can improve health • $ 1 million for 1 year for planning • RFA for pilot projects released Summer 2008. Requirements: • Input, support, and commitment from community • Well-integrated design for prevention/care; • Budget that demonstrates effective use of resources; • Evaluation plan that establishes measurable markers

  17. Projects: Adolescent Health Asthma Breast Cancer Cancer Cardiovascular Disease Chronic Kidney Disease Diabetes Diabetes HIV/AIDS Insurance for Small Businesses Maternal/child health Obesity (0-5) Obesity (Latinos) Obesity and Wellness Organ Donation Pain Management Prostate Cancer Seniors (Aging in Place) Seniors (Fall Prevention) Substance Abuse Substance Abuse (Youth) Youth Violence Project Status • Number of Proposals Received: 22 • Number of Team Members: 413 • Duke affiliated: 237 (57%) • Durham: 176 (43%) • Number of Community Agencies, Organizations, and Businesses Represented: 90

  18. More information: • CTSA: http://www.ctsawiki.org/wiki • Community Engagement Training Modules:www.aamc.org/mededportal • go to “Find Resources”; enter keyword: community engaged research • Durham Projects: http://forms.dukehealth.org/dccr/dtmi.nsf/rfp • Michener JL, Yaggy S, Lyn M. Warburton S, Champagne M, Black MA, Cuffe M, Califf R, Gilliss C, Williams RS, Dzau VJ. Improving the Health of the Community: Duke’s Experience with Community Engagement. Acad Med. 2008; 83:408-413 • Principles of Community Engagement CDC/ATSDR Committee on Community Engagement Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Public www.cdc.gov/phppo/pce

  19. New Challenges Require New Solutions… …Solutions that Combine Innovation with Community Engagement

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