Promoting Clinical and Translational Science Training and Career Development for Residents Funded Grant uri icon

description

  • PROJECT SUMMARY The goal of this Stimulating Access to Research in Residency (StARR) proposal is to recruit, train, and mentor a multidisciplinary group of exceptional UCSF postgraduate resident investigators in acquiring rigorous clinical and translational research skills, conducting high-impact and clinically relevant research, and launching promising research careers in cardiovascular, respiratory, or non-malignant hematologic diseases. This application builds on a large and diverse faculty with expertise in clinical and translational research, a strong institutional track record in multidisciplinary postgraduate research training, and an existing, successful Resident Research Training Program developed by our Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI) that provides a strong foundation for this initiative. Our StARR program will emphasize clinical and translational research, defined broadly to include early translational research involving human tissues, clinical and epidemiologic investigations, population-based science, and dissemination research to translate scientific findings into real-world settings. We have already designed an intensive, 12-month, contiguous resident research training program that emphasizes rigorous training in clinical and translational research methods, recognizing that many clinician scholars seeking to pursue clinical or translational research lack formal methodologic research training. For this application, we have worked closely with residency leaders from eight clinical departments (internal medicine, pediatrics, anesthesia, laboratory medicine, general surgery, integrated vascular surgery, emergency medicine, and obstetrics and gynecology) to develop a detailed plan for recruiting and selecting the most promising resident investigators who can bring diverse clinical perspectives to cardiovascular, pulmonary, or hematologic science. With StARR funding, we propose to enhance residents' research and career development opportunities, cultivate their relationships with experienced faculty mentors, and guide them in obtaining future research funding, while simultaneously fulfilling all board credentialing requirements. In this application, we aim to: 1) recruit and train 3 outstanding clinical residents annually from a diverse set of residency programs who have the potential to develop successful research careers in cardiovascular, respiratory, or non-malignant hematologic diseases; 2) guide these residents in obtaining more advanced methodological, analytic, and collaborative research skills appropriate for their level of training; 3) create and support effective, influential, and long-lasting research mentor relationships during and after residency; 4) integrate residents into a community of other scientists-in-training to facilitate networking and exchange of ideas; and 5) guide residents in successfully competing for other forms of research support that will pave the way for them to pursue long-term clinical and translational science careers.

date/time interval

  • 2023 - 2028