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The Program

  • Successful applicants will be appointed as Junior Faculty with the expectation of ongoing appointments upon completion of the program
  • Scholarships generally last 2 or 3 years. We also offer 1/2 or 2/3-time scholarships, lasting 3 or 4 years. This part-time option allows scholars to maintain parental and caregiving roles. We offer at least two positions every year of the funded program.
  • Scholars, with guidance from their Senior Mentor, develop a Training Plan. The Plan starts wtih coursework drawn from UCSF's Training in Clinical Research and Program In Biomedical Sciences. Each Plan is built around milestones toward independence: publications, presentations, and independent funding.

Didactic Training

  • Scholars will spend at least 75% of their time involved in didactic training or mentored research experience. The distribution of time in activities will differ from Scholar to Scholar, depending on their backgrounds, interests and goals.
  • Monthly Core Seminars in Women's Health will cover biological, medical, social, and economic aspects of sex, gender and chronic disease.
  • Training in Clinical Research Program (TICR): Scholars can participate in the UCSF TICR according to their previous experience and goals. Options range from obtaining a Masters Degree in Clinical Research, a Certificate in Clinical Research or enrolling in selected courses.
  • Program in Biomedical Sciences: Scholars may take courses from the UCSF Program in Biological Sciences and the Program in Biomedical Sciences (PIBS). PIBS is a nationally acclaimed didactic training program in basic science methods. A series of integrated courses includes Biological Regulatory Mechanisms, Cell Biology, Principles in Molecular Genetics, Structure of Macromolecules, Developmental Biology, and Molecular Biology of Animal Viruses. Some PIBS courses are especially designed for trainees in clinical departments who wish to explore current concepts of molecular genetics and cell biology and their application to human biology and disease, including Introduction to Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology.
  • Responsible Conduct of Research (Dr. Bernard Lo): This six-session course is designed to give students a working knowledge of the evolving ethical issues in clinical research, the current regulatory requirements for the conduct of research on human subjects, and an approach to current and future controversies. Students are required to articulate in detail the ethical issues in their own research project and also serve as a mock-IRB member in providing written reviews of ethical issues raised in the protocols of other students in the course.
  • Grant writing (Dr. Elizabeth Holly and Dr. Steve Cummings): This 5-session seminar series focuses on how NIH works and how to write clear K- and RO-1 proposals. Trainees learn to use NIH websites, study and revise samples of abstract, specific aims and other key features of an NIH proposal. Time is also devoted to finding funding from Foundations and pharmaceutical companies with advice about how to locate foundations and companies with relevant interests, approach them, and write clear proposals tailored to each.
  • Writing and Publishing Medical Research (Dr. Warren Browner): This 6-session course focuses on all aspects of scientific presentation including manuscript writing, and poster and oral presentation. Dr. Warren Brown, Executive Editor of the American Journal of Medicine and author of Publishing and Presenting Clinical Research (Williams & Wilkins, 1998) directs the course. Each Scholar will write or rewrite a complete scientific paper during the course.
  • Training in Health Policy and Economics: The Institute for Health Policy Studies (IHPS) at UCSF offers a variety of curricular modules that are taught in flexible formats (courses, intensive workshops, retreats, etc) tailored to meet the needs of fellows and junior faculty. These modules are designed to examine how policy problems are identified, events that occur after an issue is defined, technical mechanisms for addressing policy and economic issues, and how different methodologies might answer questions differently.

Research

Direct research experience will be based in areas of UCSF-Kaiser strength, represented by 13 interdisciplinary research areas. ·

  1. Aging
  2. Alcohol & substance abuse in women
  3. Alternative Medicine
  4. Breast cancer
  5. Cardiovascular disease in women
  6. Diabetes
  7. HIV & Women
  8. Neuropsychiatric disorders in women: dementia and depression
  9. Nutrition
  10. Sex Hormones
  11. Skeletal health in women: osteoporosis and osteoarthritis
  12. Urinary incontinence in women
  13. Women's imaging (mammography, densitometry and magnetic resonance imaging)

·Each research area is represented by a Senior Mentor and has four to six other interdisciplinary resource faculty who are experts in the area and available to assist and collaborate with the Scholars. Each resource area also includes research units, databases, and repositories of biological specimens. These resources will provide opportunities for secondary data analyses, ancillary studies, and systematic reviews.

Mentorship

Scholars will be paired with a senior faculty Mentor from both their research area and academic department.

Role of Senior Mentors:

  • Guide the Scholar toward development of an independent research career.
  • Help the Scholars develop their Training Plans
  • Meet monthly with Scholars; review the plan
  • Attend the Scholar's Start-up seminar
  • Attend Scholar's local research presentations
  • Help the Scholar in making contacts with potential collaborators

Resource faculty within the various research areas will also be available to assist scholars in developing their own independent research careers.

Role of Resource Faculty:

  • Be available to Scholars working in their area of expertise
  • Meet with the Scholar as needed
  • Collaborate with the Scholar on appropriate research projects
  • Attend Scholar's local research presentations
  • Help Scholars make use of databases that the resource faculty member may have
  • Some may serve as mentors

Each scholar will present a 2 to 3 hour "Start-up" Seminar during the first year of their training. These seminars will be interdisciplinary reviews of individual Scholar's research plans with selected local and national experts and potential collaborators. Progress toward building an independent career will measured, in part, by achievement of milestones required of every Scholar: publications, presentations at national meetings and proposals for independent funding.

 

 

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Please direct inquiries to:
Ms. Marc Ellen Hamel
UCSF Coordinating Center
74 New Montgomery, Ste 600
San Francisco, CA 94105
Ph: 415-597-9363
email: mhamel@psg.ucsf.edu

www.whispr.ucsf.edu
Last updated 1/6/01.