Dr Paul Volberding addressing the GHS/CFAR retreat, identifying opportunities for GHS to support and abut the research undertaken by UCSF faculty in an international context.
Engaging the public in research using science communicationwellcome.trust
Presented by JDan K. Kaye
Makerere University, Uganda
at the Public Engagement Workshop, 2-5 Dec. 2008, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa, http://scienceincommunity.wordpress.com/
The slide presentation that preceded of the annual Health Datapalooza in Washington DC, PCORI was pleased to participate in the latest installment in the Health Data Consortium and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) Innovators in Health Data Series, a webinar featuring PCORI Executive Director Joe Selby, MD, MPH; NIH Director and PCORI Board of Governors member Francis Collins, MD, PhD; and Philip Bourne, PhD, NIH’s Associate Director for Data Science.
Professor Kamlesh Khunti - Prevention of Chronic DiseaseCLAHRC-NDL
Presentation by Professor Kamlesh Khunti on Prevention of Chronic Disease. Professor Khunti is Director of NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands and leads the Preventing Chronic Disease research theme.
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Future Flight Fridays: Public trust - social science considerationsKTN
Slides from KTN's recent Future Flight Fridays session exploring some of the wider social concerns around Future flight and the priorities we need to consider in order to realise the 2030 vision for future flight in the UK.
Presentation to National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Involvem...Simon Denegri
This presentation includes slides detailing the initial findings from the NIHR Strategic Review of public involvement in research entitled 'Breaking Boundaries.'
Engaging the public in research using science communicationwellcome.trust
Presented by JDan K. Kaye
Makerere University, Uganda
at the Public Engagement Workshop, 2-5 Dec. 2008, KwaZulu-Natal South Africa, http://scienceincommunity.wordpress.com/
The slide presentation that preceded of the annual Health Datapalooza in Washington DC, PCORI was pleased to participate in the latest installment in the Health Data Consortium and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) Innovators in Health Data Series, a webinar featuring PCORI Executive Director Joe Selby, MD, MPH; NIH Director and PCORI Board of Governors member Francis Collins, MD, PhD; and Philip Bourne, PhD, NIH’s Associate Director for Data Science.
Professor Kamlesh Khunti - Prevention of Chronic DiseaseCLAHRC-NDL
Presentation by Professor Kamlesh Khunti on Prevention of Chronic Disease. Professor Khunti is Director of NIHR CLAHRC East Midlands and leads the Preventing Chronic Disease research theme.
If you are in need of professional writing services for your upcoming Capstone design project; then all you need to do is contact us through our easy to use website. Let us know about your project, what you are looking for and when you need your proposal by. From there we will get to work for you and make sure that you are being matched with the right writer to deliver you the assistance that you are looking for.
More information on our website http://www.capstoneproject.net/
Future Flight Fridays: Public trust - social science considerationsKTN
Slides from KTN's recent Future Flight Fridays session exploring some of the wider social concerns around Future flight and the priorities we need to consider in order to realise the 2030 vision for future flight in the UK.
Presentation to National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Involvem...Simon Denegri
This presentation includes slides detailing the initial findings from the NIHR Strategic Review of public involvement in research entitled 'Breaking Boundaries.'
What is Global Health?: Defining Global HealthUWGlobalHealth
As proposed by the Declarations of the Alma Ata and challenged by the Millennium
Development Goals, action by players and stakeholders of diverse specialties and
backgrounds is required to achieve health for all. This assembled expert panel
drawn from different backgrounds will enrich the discussion with their own experiences.
HCV HUB planning and implementation website introduction with a specific focus on the benefits provided to scientific societies. http://hcvhub.deusto.es
What is Global Health?: Miguel Ángel González BlockUWGlobalHealth
As proposed by the Declarations of the Alma Ata and challenged by the Millennium
Development Goals, action by players and stakeholders of diverse specialties and
backgrounds is required to achieve health for all. This assembled expert panel
drawn from different backgrounds will enrich the discussion with their own experiences.
As populations increase, health resources shrink, and access and quality of life equity differences widen, the clarion call for innovation in healthcare is growing louder around the world. Both international groups such as the World Health Organization and national groups, e.g., ministry of health, continue to set aggressive goals and billions have been spent to design and implement global health innovations.
Many global health innovations (GHI) have set high goals but had limited success in implementation or never scaled to serve a wider population. The barriers to implementing global healthcare innovations include policies or political priorities, lack of commitment, limited infrastructure, and limited healthcare staff. Some health entrepreneurs have overcome such barriers; Yet other, well intentioned and planned GHI have not met expectations.
Although some articles provide suggestions for avoiding, overcoming and addressing these barriers, few offer new models for global health innovation. In this research, we offer a four component model that considers the adoptive community, implementation team, the delivery strategy and the delivery approach as key enablers for successful GHI. This model is supported by the literature and in-depth case studies in Uganda, Ghana, Mozambique, and Haiti.
Harvesting Health: Growing Our Own Health Care ProfessionalsGreat Valley Center
Presentation given by Dr. Don Hilty and Michelle Villegas-Frazier from the UC Davis Medical School on the Panel: "Harvesting Health: Growing our own Health Care Professionals" at the Great Valley Center's Sacramento Valley Forum on October 27, 2010 in Chico, CA.
HCV HUB planning and implementation website introduction with a specific focus on the benefits provided to health care professionals. http://hcvhub.deusto.es
HCV HUB planning and implementation website introduction with a specific focus on the benefits provided to patient associations. http://hcvhub.deusto.es
Evidence based medicine in mass gathering public health and emergency medicin...Pubrica
The articles were gathered into their subject matter category, as resolute by the WHO. The types comprised of:
1. Epidemiology
2. Event Operations
3. Disease Surveillance and Outbreak Response
4. Point of Entry Health……
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UCSF Research Admin Board Presentation on CTSI Global Health ProgramGlobalResearchUCSF
Given by Paul Volberding 9/4/12. Describes the Global Research Support Program, a CTSI program to define and address barriers to international research activities undertaken by UCSF researchers.
2. Perspectives on Global
Health Research and UCSF
Past, Present, Future
Pre-HIV epidemic: TB, reproductive rights, parasitic
infections, others. (Department of Epidemiology
and International Health)
GHS: Focused program with aspirations.
Investigative group. Educational effort. HIV not a
central focus as Haile had established ARI in 1996.
HIV: ARI established to counter perception of
fracturing, competing effort. ARI as a
loose, minimally resourced “umbrella” charged with
creating/sustaining a community of science
encompassing individual PIs and larger groups
(CFAR, CAPS, HIV/AIDS Division, GIVI
and, later, DEM).
3. Recent History
Haile Debas steps down from GHS, Jaime
Sepulveda recruited
Strategic planning begun immediately and to some
degree still in progress
Research a key element of planning along with
education and other elements. Structure TBD.
Directions open for adding to GHS research
portfolio:
Grow within existing GHS
Add programs to GHS (GHS as center of “federation”)
GHS as ARI-like umbrella
Combination of above
4. Charge to Collect
Information
GHS Research Team appointed:
Craig Cohen, Paul Volberding: Co-Chairs
Colin Boyle
Phil Rosenthal
Jim McKerrow
Madhavi Dandu
Dominic Montagu
Sarah Royce
Caryn Bern
Georgina Lopez
Met to develop approach
Produced three focused community discussions
5. GHS Research Community Discussions
Parameters, objectives:
Site: All at Mission Bay to reinforce as “home”
Three meetings, each with discipline theme
Basic sciences (drug and assay discovery, etc.)
Clinical/translational sciences
Population, prevention, policy and
implementation sciences
Participants: Wide. Slant to established investigators.
All sites, schools, affiliates.
Objectives: Open but guided dialog, ideas sought,
no input excluded.
Summaries prepared for further consideration.
6. The Community Discussions
Basic Science: August 28th. Genentech Hall. 25
attendees representing
UCSF, Gladstone, GB3, Cancer Center, others.
Clinical Science: August 29th. Genentech Hall. 62
attendees representing
SOM, SOP, GHS, CTSI, Cancer Center, others.
Population Science: September 25th. CVRI. 45
attendees representing
IHPS, orthopedics, OB/GYN, FCM, DGIM, others.
7. Guide for Community
Discussions
Global Health Research at UCSF Community Discussion Guide
Vertical Priorities and Horizontal Linkages (Cross-Cutting Programs)
1. What field(s) of research does UCSF have particular strength which is/has potential for
expansion as a priority area in global health. Discuss why this particular field has promise
for expansion.
2. What field(s) of research does UCSF not currently have considerable strength, but has
potential for expansion in global health.
Include your perspective on why this particular field has promise for expansion.
3. What “horizontal linkages” (e.g. implementation research, drug discovery) does UCSF
have strengths which have potential for further expansion in to global health. Discuss why
this/these horizontal linkages have promise for expansion.
4. What “horizontal linkages” (e.g. implementation research, drug discovery) does UCSF
not have strengths which have potential for further expansion in to global health. Discuss
why this/these horizontal linkages have promise for expansion.
5. What does UCSF lack in regards to disciplines important to global health, and what
strategies could be used to improve multi/interdisciplinary collaboration?
9. Take-Homes for Today’s
Consideration: Meeting 1
The perception of a separation between that community and the clinical and translational
research programs, especially as contained within the CTSI
Supporting graduate student and post-doctoral fellow participation in global health research
GHS needs to approach more basic scientists to further inquire about areas of need, resources
and collaboration
Education plays a central role in the potential expansion of global health research in the basic
science community at UCSF
Potential value in UCSF taking the lead in rebuilding the infrastructure of basic science laboratories
at academic medical universities in resource limited settings
Opportunity for scientists interested in global health to teach basic science abroad
Pilot research grants directed at global health research proposals from early career stage
investigators
Partnerships with private industry in the Bay Area
Oncology was seen as an area where UCSF could become an international leader. It was
advocated as an important disease area with a high burden, with limited strength in many of our
comparison universities
10. Take-Homes for Today’s
Consideration: Meeting 2
Vigorously endorsed cross-disciplinary collaboration
The “verticals” in the clinical research discussion were already quite evolved and well-
funded
Primary task was thought to fall on finding “horizontals” that will make a greater impact
on the community (greater return on investment)
Critical to bridge basic science and clinical and translational research more than we
have done to date
Education and training needs were also identified as crucial areas where investment
could yield a great competitive advantage to our efforts
Clear that many participants were meeting for the first time
Vertical suggestions: Oncology, tobacco control, mental health NCD, maternal/child
health
Horizontal suggestions: Education and remote learning, health disparities, low cost point of
care tests, pathology and lab medicine, ethical and legal issues in global research
11. Take-Homes for Today’s
Consideration: Meeting 3
Most institutions have given up the vertical /horizontal model in the 70’s
Since UCSF has a chance to build a new model, we should offer a
“way of doing Global Health” that is different
A key theme of UCSF is evidenced based medicine and rigorous
science. These could be a central means of differentiating our global
health research identity from competitor institutions.
What made the UCSF response to HIV so effective? It worked because
the trans-disciplinary collaborations worked well
UCSF expertise in HIV/AIDs grew out of both the fundamental basic
science of the university, and the ongoing active interaction of many
people in many disciplines working on HIV issues
Focus on building the infrastructure that facilitates the kind of
interaction that made us HIV leaders.
12. Take-Homes for Today’s
Consideration: Meeting 3
IRAC summarized as example of attempt to break down barriers and engage broader community
in dialog aimed at identifying and reducing barriers to research conduct
Create programs that think about positive outcomes in new ways, in which interventions do not
have to be a set of numbers that often times does not tell us the whole story but set against a
larger frame of health and culture.
Orthopedics/trauma could be a vertical given vibrant program and limited external competition
Education, clinical / research integration, humanitarian research and policy research proposed as
possible “horizontal” linker.
UCSF has content expertise, methodological expertise, expertise in a continuum of care
(prevention thru treatment), expertise in participatory research and community building and
engagement. We need to diffuse this expertise across disciplines, while addressing scalability
Implementation science is important because it can identify gaps in care. UW has a PhD in
implementation sciences aimed at operation efficiencies, where they use expertise from business
and engineering schools to identify efficiencies. UCSF is a great discoverer. We just need to add in
the pragmatism of Implementation science
Policy is addressed at UCSF in pockets- and needs to be brought together. We need to build
stronger links among ourselves and other disciplines
13. Where Next?
Community of global health research large, broad,
complex
Strong desire to work together and decrease isolated
efforts
Suggestion to continue discussions with country, discipline
etc. focus
Broad agreement that education and training crucial
HIV as model of cross-disciplinary collaboration
Structure of GHS as it relates to entire global research
effort evolving and needs clarification and
communication
14. Improvement Opportunities
Time-limited community discussions with regional
or discipline focus
Ongoing discussion group for concentrated
programs (E. Africa)
Support TAG for new funding opportunities and
use RDO
Convene administrative group to compare
models, influence policies
Work with departments re: promotion barriers for
GH investigators