grant

Infectious Disease Training in Clinical Investigation

Organization UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTALocation MINNEAPOLIS, UNITED STATESPosted 1 Sept 2003Deadline 30 Jun 2026
NIHUS FederalResearch GrantFY2024Communicable DiseasesInfectious Disease PathwayInfectious DiseasesInfectious DisorderTrainingclinical investigation
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Full Description

Abstract
This T32 training program, which is closely associated with the University of Minnesota adult

Infectious Diseases physician fellowship program, is designed to prepare MD, MD/PhD, and

other post- doctoral trainees for successful careers as clinical, epidemiological, and translational

investigators in Infectious Diseases. There is a focus on emerging / reemerging infections and

global health. The program has 4 post-doctoral slots per year and on average accepts 2 new

trainees annually, usually following an initial year of clinical Infectious Diseases training.

Trainees undergo a 2-to-3 year intensive research experience, either locally or at an affiliated

international site, supervised by one or more of 27 expert faculty mentors who represent diverse

disciplines and departments within the Medical School, School of Public Health, College of

Pharmacy, and College of Veterinary Medicine.

Trainees participate in didactics (including in Responsible Conduct of Research,

biostatistics, and grant-writing), a journal club, and a research conference series, plus local,

regional, and national Infectious Diseases conferences. Trainees can obtain an MS-Clinical

Research degree or an MPH in Epidemiology, can take individual courses within the School of

Public Health, and can take a Global Health course that qualifies them to sit for the American

Society of Tropical Medicine & Hygiene (ASTMH) Certificate examination in Tropical Medicine

(CTropMed). Oversight of trainee progress is by the Program Director and a Scholarship

Oversight Committee, which meets semiannually with each trainee. Trainee selection and

program governance are by the Program Director and a Steering / Selection Committee.

Continuous program improvement is guided by feedback from current and former trainees, the

Scholarship Oversight Committee, and an External Advisory Committee.

Of the 32 total T32 trainees to date, 17 (53%) were women, 5 (16%) were under-

represented minorities, and 2 (6%) have had disabilities requiring accommodations. Five fellows

still are in training, and of the program's 27 graduates, 12 (44%) now have research-intensive

careers with ≥75% research effort; another 8 (30%) have research-related academic careers.

Overall, 7 (26%) have been awarded NIH K Career Development Award (CDAs), VA CDAs, or a

Foundation CDA, and another 4 (15%) have K08 or K23 applications currently submitted, 5

(18.5%) have R01, U01, VA Merit, or VA Cooperative Studies Program awards as the PI.

Program graduates have disseminated to 7 states, mostly in the upper Midwest.

Grant Number: 5T32AI055433-20
NIH Institute/Center: NIH

Principal Investigator: David Boulware

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