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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

CTSA UM1 Program at Wake Forest

$40.3M USD

Funder NATIONAL CENTER FOR ADVANCING TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCES
Recipient Organization Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Country United States
Start Date Jul 01, 2024
End Date Jun 30, 2031
Duration 2,555 days
Number of Grantees 3
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10841190
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT The emergence of large integrated health systems linked by common informatics platforms offers an unprecedented opportunity to study the impact of new therapies, healthcare delivery models, and strategies to mitigate health disparities in real world settings. Such integrated systems also offer opportunities to test

approaches to implement and scale evidence-based practices, to address gaps in translational science, and to become Learning Health Systems (LHS). The Wake Forest (WF) Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) has pioneered the integration of the academic mission into the LHS framework including T0-T4

translation, scholarship, and education while also addressing the social determinants of health and promoting the vitality of the communities served. WF leads as the academic core of Advocate Health – the nation’s fifth largest not-for-profit health system serving nearly 6 million patients across the Southeast and Midwest United

Sates. The aLHS is Advocate Health’s guiding vision, and the WF CTSI is its central resource for supporting translational science across the entire system. The size of the health system offers a unique opportunity to develop, demonstrate, and disseminate novel care models in a wide range of settings. With this funding, the

WF CTSI will drive the realization of the full potential of an aLHS and create a model for advancing translational science in a large academic health system. The need for such a model is urgent, given the ongoing consolidation of academic and non-academic health systems in the United States and the challenges in conducting research

in busy practice settings. All activities and initiatives to advance translational science will be grounded in a culture of accountability for enhancing diversity, equity, and inclusion. WF CTSI’s vision will be achieved through the four specific aims: 1) Support an inclusive and highly effective governance structure that promotes a culture of

continuous quality improvement, enables timely response to regional and national health emergencies, supports proactive dissemination and implementation, and enables active participation in CTSA-sponsored trials; 2) Recruit and train a highly competent and diverse aLHS workforce and engage the full range of patient and

community stakeholders who are essential to improving health and mitigating health disparities; 3) Provide resources to promote innovative pragmatic study designs, support pilot studies that address key translational roadblocks, and satisfy the needs of the aLHS research community for timely access to data from electronic

health records, population surveys, omics analyses, and other sources; and 4) Enhance translational efficiency through projects testing novel methods (e.g., respondent driven sampling to improve patient recruitment, integrating patient generated data into the EHR). Innovations made in achieving these aims will be shared

through and beyond the CTSA national network.

All Grantees

Wake Forest University Health Sciences

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