+ All Categories
Home > Documents > CTSI-Funded Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

CTSI-Funded Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Date post: 06-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: milt
View: 35 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Description:
CTSI-Funded Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes. Susan Autry, University of Southern California Mike Conlon, University of Florida. Pilot Program Goals. Investments to help meet overall CTSI goals: $s to help start new research ideas or advance to next step - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Popular Tags:
18
CTSI-Funded Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes Susan Autry, University of Southern California Mike Conlon, University of Florida
Transcript
Page 1: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

CTSI-Funded Pilot Programs:Function, Operation and Outcomes

Susan Autry, University of Southern CaliforniaMike Conlon, University of Florida

Page 2: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes
Page 3: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Pilot Program Goals

Investments to help meet overall CTSI goals:

• $s to help start new research ideas or advance to next step

• Young investigator investment• RFPs to foster specific outcomes/behaviors

Page 4: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

USC RFP categories, eligibility, size

Page 5: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

UCSF Pilot Funding RFPs• Pilot Research Award for Junior Investigators• Pilot Research Awards for Junior Investigators Utilizing CTSI Clinical Research

Services (CTSI-CRS)• General Pilot Award Program in HIV/AIDS• Pilot Research Awards in Research Policy• Mobile Health Research• Novel Clinical/Translational Methods Catalyst Awards• New Direction Awards• Post Childbearing Professional Development Leave• Shared Instrument Awards• Multi-center Start-Up Planning Awards• Multidisciplinary Research Project Planning Award• Under-represented Faculty in Clinical and Translational Research Awards

Page 6: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Openly Developed Proposals

Page 7: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

UF RFP categories, eligibility, sizeCategory Eligibility Maximum Award

Trainee Degree seeking MS, MPH, MD, PhD w/ mentor

$7,500

Jr. Investigator Tenure track w/ mentor $20,000

Novel Methods and Technologies

All faculty and mentored trainees $25,000

Major Initiative(discontinued)

$100,000

Applications must demonstrate alignment with CTSI strategic goals

For 2012, the UF RFP emphasized use of the CTSI core laboratories and/or collaboration with the CTSI Communications Research Program

Previous RFPs have emphasized the data warehouse and community engagement

Page 8: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Application Preparation

• Publicity of the opportunities• Timeline• Letters of Intent [do you use them and how]• Proposal length and format• Review criteria• Limit number of proposals by one investigator

in a cycle or RFP?• Mentor notification required?

Page 9: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Review Committees

• Review process – transparency critical– Triage to committee– In person discussion vs asynchronous review

• Composition of committees• Managing COI• Scoring – process and how used• Funding decisions – not by score alone• Feedback to investigator

Page 10: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Award Requirements

• Notification – pre-award letter– Award letter – lays out requirements

• Required documents– IRB / IACUC approvals etc

• Budget restrictions– Faculty salary– subawards

• Budget period• Carry over

Page 11: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Post Award Management

• Who is responsible• How is project progress tracked– Financial vs progress/outcome

• Frequency• Metrics• ROI

Page 12: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Pilot Program Management

• Funds available per year• Number of cycles per year• Staffing to manage– FTE and types

• Review committees– Number and composition– Staffing support

• Involvement/coordination with other intramural funding programs

Page 13: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

IT systems used

• Integrated/comprehensive or by function:• Proposal Submission• Triage to committee chairs• Submitting scores and comments• Feedback to investigators

Page 14: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Impact of the Pilot Program

• Short term and long term– Varies with type of RFP

• Investigators viewpoint• Research programs created• Collaborations created• Presentations and papers• External funding

Page 15: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Challenges• Developing well articulated RFPs that enable

you to meet goals• Trainees and junior investigators• Avoiding conflict of interests in reviews• Budget periods/ carry over• Changing the culture

Page 16: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

UCSF Pilot Funding Program (2007-10)

• Invested $1 million annually• 608 applications submitted, 118 awarded funding • Awards have resulted in 89 presentations, 50 publications• 77 submissions for extramural funding resulting in $7.02

million in new funding. • Web-based application and review process was so

efficient, other major campus pilot-funding agencies engaged with CTSI to create the UCSF Research Allocation Program (RAP) and now provides about $3.4M in annual pilot funds.

Page 17: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

USC Pilot Funding ROI

• 90 Presentations• 30 publications

Page 18: CTSI-Funded  Pilot Programs: Function, Operation and Outcomes

Florida Pilot Program Examples

• Program has funded 31 of 89 proposals over 3 years for a total of $906K.

• A 2009 pilot award of $50K for ethanol monitoring to Dr. Sara Jo Nixon led to a $1.8M grant to a team including Dr. Nixon.

• A 2010 pilot award of $20K to Dr. Michael Weiss established a 7 hospital consortium for brain cooling of neonates with Hypoxic Ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) that has treated 40 infants, prevented life-long disability for 5 and reduced care costs by $12M


Recommended