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| Funder | NATIONAL CENTER FOR ADVANCING TRANSLATIONAL SCIENCES |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | University of Minnesota |
| Country | United States |
| Start Date | Sep 18, 2023 |
| End Date | Jul 31, 2030 |
| Duration | 2,508 days |
| Number of Grantees | 3 |
| Roles | Principal Investigator; Co-Investigator |
| Data Source | NIH (US) |
| Grant ID | 10930889 |
Abstract. Clinical and translational science (CTS) is at the crossroads of major technology advances requiring academia-community partnerships anchored on trust for effective & rapid deployment of best practices. UMN CTSA Hub will build on proven commitments to accelerate impactful CTS. Aim 1 will provide novel
infrastructure to reduce research barriers and accelerate translation to practice via a new Office of Clinical Research and Community Affairs to augment CTSI’s capacity to respond to and facilitate robust and sustainable community relationships transcending single investigator projects. Aim 2 will deliver high quality
and efficient research services and resources via Clinical Research Support Center (85 staff) that will lessen trial barriers and support all aspects of study design, biostatistics, bioinformatics, regulatory compliance, contracts and more. Accelerating diversity, equity and inclusion progress will facilitate connectivity to our
diverse population. A learning health system (LHS) and continuous quality improvement program will expedite implementation of novel enhancements. Aim 3 will cultivate and train a strong, diverse CTS workforce with new tools and programs; develop and test novel trial processes and participant satisfaction; then disseminate
and implement learnings locally and nationally. Tailored enhancements will personalize CTS training for community, academic and workforce professionals, with attention to diversity, informed consent for non- English speakers, an investigator primer, research career development series and more. CTSI’s Rural Health
Program offers an Equity Postdoctoral Fellowship and year-long community leader training in health policy & leadership. Cultural competency training will facilitate engagement with our multicultural community. Trained community health workers (CHWs) will advance research dissemination into practice and community. Aim 4
will foster leadership, team science and data sharing to support collaborations including leadership programs, professional coaching, vertically integrated retreats, team function seminars, Northern Leadership for Innovative Team Science program adapted for junior faculty and incentives to gain CTSI leadership skills.
Health Informatics will support advanced data management, analytic infrastructures plus electronic health record & LHS information systems. Aim 5 strives for health equity and against structural racism by deploying an Equity Framework and antiracist research practices to train CHWs and Hub Partners for broad community
input and decision-making. We will build a national population level geo-database of quantifiable measures of cultural and economic variables using a novel Multidimentional Measures of Systemic Racism Portal to link health and clinical data, define national impact of structural racism on study enrollment and data collection with
a validation project on early childhood cognitive function after prenatal methamphetamine exposure. Impact. With a novel infrastructure, a diverse next generation of leaders and a well-trained diverse workforce, our Hub and regional community will co-develop and implement CTS advancements to improve health.
University of Minnesota
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