The NHGRI Action Plan for Training of Underrepresented Minority Groups in Genomics Dialogue with Professional Societies Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
PERSONALIZED MEDICINE: Planning for the Future You, Your Biomarkers and Your Rights.
Advertisements

April 5 th, 2011 FAMILY HISTORY AND THE PUBLICS HEALTH.
San Diego EXPORT Center Improving Health Equity through Research, Training, Education, & Outreach C OUNCIL C OUNCIL C OMMUNITY C LINICS OF REHDI County.
Delivering care to the underserved: Increasing the Numbers of Minority Physicians Ruben Gonzalez MD CCRMC.
Graduate Psychology Education Program Graduate Psychology Education Program Behavioral Health Psychology Training on the U.S.- Mexico Border.
Judith L Miller, MS, LGC April  Explosion of scientific knowledge ◦ The “Age of Biology” ◦ Sophisticated and complex medical diagnostics and treatments.
Overview of Mentored K Awards Shawna V. Hudson, PhD Assistant Professor of Family Medicine and Community Health UMDNJ-RWJMS The Cancer Institute of New.
What’s NIH? National Cancer Institute National Eye Institute National Heart, Lung, and Blood Inst. National Human Genome Research Inst National Institute.
WORKSHOP SUMMARY NHGRI Training and Career Development Programs Workshop held April Fishers Lane Rockville, MD Presented by Training and.
Child Health Disparities Denice Cora-Bramble, MD, MBA Professor of Pediatrics, George Washington University Executive Director Goldberg Center for Community.
Opportunities for Small Businesses to Address Minority Health and Health Disparities Derrick C. Tabor, PhD, SBIR/STTR Program Official National Institute.
Project: IMHOTEP Initiated in Participants to date: 11 week summer program 84% of participants from HBCU’s Components: Epi/Biostats & Occupational.
THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT: IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH CARE, RESEARCH AND SOCIETY Washington, DC March 25, 2002 Alan E. Guttmacher, M.D. National Human Genome.
The Impact of the Human Genome Project on Public Health Practice
The Specifics of By Charles Gilpin. What is Health Psychology?  Definition: A field of psychology that contributes to both behavioral medicine and behavioral.
Addressing the Challenges of Graduate and Post-graduate Training in the Geosciences Margaret Leinen Assistant Director for Geosciences National Science.
Mortality in the Post-Genome World DNA has been called the “molecule of life.” As such, it necessarily has significance in a discussion of death and mortality.
Personalized Medicine in the Era of Genomics Wylie Burke MD PhD Department of Medical History and Ethics Center for Genomics and Healthcare Equality University.
Providing Access to Higher Education: The University of California Experience UC Counselor Conferences September 2014.
UNC 7th Annual Summer Public Health Research Institute on Minority Health UNC 7th Annual Summer Public Health Research Institute on Minority Health William.
1 NIH Grant-Writing Workshop Leora Lawton, Ph.D. Executive Director, Berkeley Population Center Summer 2015 Dlab Workshop Session 5: Human Subjects and.
Human Genome Project Janice S. Dorman, PhD University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing.
Degree Programs in Public Health: A Canadian Perspective Sylvie Stachenko Dean, School of Public Health Global Summit on Education and Training in Heart.
Introduction to Molecular Epidemiology Jan Dorman, PhD University of Pittsburgh School of Nursing
Clinical Academic Trainees’ Conference 3 November 2012 Clinical Lecturers and Post-doctorates Dolores Conroy PhD Director of Research Fight for Sight.
MINORITY OPPORTUNITIES IN RESEARCH NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF GENERAL MEDICAL SCIENCES Division of Minority Opportunities in Research.
Georgia Wiesner, MD CREC June 20, GATACAATGCATCATATG TATCAGATGCAATATATC ATTGTATCATGTATCATG TATCATGTATCATGTATC ATGTATCATGTCTCCAGA TGCTATGGATCTTATGTA.
The Human Genome the human genome consists of ~3 billion bp and 30,000-35,000 genes (haploid state) it would fill about 150,000 phone book pages with A’s,
Maria C. Mejia de Grubb, MD, MPH; Barbara Kilbourne, PhD; Courtney Kihlberg, MD, MSPH; and Robert Levine, MD. Department of Family and Community Medicine.
American Society for Microbiology (ASM) “ASM, Opportunities for Microbiologists Around the World” Dr. Thong Kwai Lin ASM Ambassador to Southeast Asia.
SCIENCE AND MATHEMATICS TEACHER INITIATIVE Improving the Undergraduate Pipeline to Math and Science Teaching Credentials Program Overview.
EMBRACING CHANGE: SOCIETAL AND WORKPLACE IMPLICATIONS OF THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT June 6, 2001 New Orleans AIHCE Alan E. Guttmacher, M.D. Senior Clinical.
09/13/02 Department of Nutrition Sciences Unique organizational structure Department highlights Overview of programs Education & training Clinical & community.
Quentin R. Burdick Grant Interdisciplinary Learning in Rural Healthcare at East Tennessee State University East Tennessee State University.
Indiana Institute For Personalized Medicine David A Flockhart MD, PhD Professor of Medicine, Genetics and Pharmacology Indiana University.
Hispanic Center of Excellence A lbert Einstein College of Medicine.
TITLE VI of the HIGHER EDUCATION ACT of 1965 (as amended) and the FULBRIGHT-HAYS ACT U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION.
Mainstreaming Genetic Medicine: A Golden Opportunity for Genetic Counselors National Society for Genetic Counselors November 4, 2001 Francis S. Collins,
NSF IGERT proposals Yang Zhao Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering Wayne State University.
 There will always be change  No one can predict the future.
Collegiate Cancer Council C C C The Founders Our Council.
©2006 Howard Hughes Medical Institute. WHY DO RESEARCH? WE NEED YOU! Shortage of physician- scientists in the U.S. Opportunity to improve current therapies.
ELSI: Ethical, Legal and Social Issues surrounding availability of genomic information DOD and NIH devoted ~3-5% of annual HGP budgets to ELSI research.
1 Genomics and the Human Condition Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. Dedication of Ken Olsen Science Center Gordon College September 27, 2008.
Other Intramural Training Opportunities at NCI Scientific DisciplinesProgram Population-based research, environmental & genetic determinants of cancer.
Susan R. Kayar, PhD Health Scientist Administrator Research Infrastructure NCRR, NIH Funding Opportunities through the National Center for Research Resources.
Personalized Medicine Dr. M. Jawad Hassan. Personalized Medicine Human Genome and SNPs What is personalized medicine? Pharmacogenetics Case study – warfarin.
Genomics, Medicine, and Society American College of Radiology May 13, 2003 Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.
Medical Research and Education: Ethics Association of American Universities April 22, 2002 Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D.
Cancer 101: A Cancer Education and Training Program for [Target Population] Date Location Presented by: Presenter 1 Presenter 2.
GENOMICS TO COMBAT RESISTANCE AGAINST ANTIBIOTICS IN COMMUNITY-ACQUIRED LRTI IN EUROPE (GRACE) H. Goossens (Coordinator), K. Loens (Manager), M. Ieven.
Reducing Health Risks 6/13/ Effective ways to reduce the risks from other factors Take action to avoid or reduce known risks Obtain regular check-ups.
Science Funding (otherwise known as how to make your PI really happy and find someone to pay for you to do what you love)
Foundation Doctors’ Academic Meeting Kathryn Adcock Wellcome Trust March 2011.
WHAT IS THE IMPACT OF THE HUMAN GENOME PROJECT FOR DRUG DEVELOPMENT? Arman & Fin.
Improving health in minority communities by…  Increasing access to both preventive medicine and the healthcare system  Distributing information about.
The VA-UN Alliance Program Collected Data and Evaluation Richmond, VA January 15,
© 2007 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 2 Genetics: You and Your Family Health History.
Creative approaches to developing and disseminating culturally appropriate genetics education information to African American communities Valerie Robinson.
1 Copyright © 2012 by Mosby, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Copyright © 2008 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 11 Genomics in Public Health.
Science for Global Health: Fostering International Research Collaboration James Herrington, PhD, MPH Director Division of International Relations Fogarty.
HIP Buffet: Mapping Your Career with NIH
The Influence of Domain-Specific Metric Development on Evaluation and Design: An Example from National Institutes of Health Technology Development Programs.
Welcome to Contemporary Health Issues
Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine
American Indian or Alaskan Native
NIGMS Training Programs – Opportunities for Synergies with SEPA
Future Trends in Health Education
Policy Approaches to Address Health Disparities
Future Trends in Health Education
Presentation transcript:

The NHGRI Action Plan for Training of Underrepresented Minority Groups in Genomics Dialogue with Professional Societies Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D. National Human Genome Research Institute April 15, 2002

Two universal principles of human genetics Virtually all diseases (except some cases of trauma) have a genetic component There are no perfect human specimens – all of us carry a significant number of DNA glitches

Sickle cell anemiaAdult onset diabetesAIDS

ATGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGATCCATTTTA TACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTTTACCCCATG CATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCAGCATCCATC CATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGG ACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACT TCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATG ATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATA GCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTAC TGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCAT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTC ATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCAGCATCCATCCATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTAT GCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTAC TGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCAT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACA TATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTAT GCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTAC TGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCAT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACA TATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATAGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGA CTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGA CTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGC ATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCAGCATCCATCC ATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGA CTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTC GTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGAT ATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACGC CGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTG A typical page of the human instruction book

ATGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGATCCATTTTA TACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTTTACCCCATG CATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCAGCATCCATC CATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGG ACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACT TCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATG ATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATA GCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTAC TGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCAT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGCCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTC ATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCAGCATCCATCCATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTAT GCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTAC TGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCAT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACA TATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTAT GCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTAC TGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCAT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACA TATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATAGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGA CTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGA CTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTT CGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGC ATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTATTCTAAACACATCCCAGCATCCATCC ATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCTATGCCGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGA CTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACGACTGCATCGTACTGACTGCACATATCGTCATACATAGACTTC GTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACATATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACTTTACCCATGAT ATCGTCATCGTACTGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCCACACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACGC CGATCGTACGACACATATCGTCATCGTACTGCCCTACGGGACTGTCTAGTCTAAACACATCCATCGTACTGACTGCATCGTACTG Our instruction books are not quite the same

How do health disparities arise? Most genetic variation is shared amongst all groups, though frequencies of disease-associated variants may vary. Differences in disease incidence between populations may also be due to diet, lifestyle, or other environmental factors. Sorting this out requires research on large numbers of individuals where both environment and heredity are carefully investigated.

In order for all populations to benefit fully from genomic medicine, all populations need to be part of genomic research

The major contributing genes for diabetes, heart disease, cancer, mental illness, Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease, asthma, etc. will be identified within the next 5 – 7 years.

Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications An integral component of the Human Genome Project

Predictive genetic tests available for a dozen conditions -- Interventions to reduce risk available for several of these -- Will reasonably effective legislative solutions to genetic discrimination be in place? BUT…. Mainstreaming of individualized preventive medicine -- Will access be inequitable? Will health disparities persist? -- Pharmacogenomics is standard of care for several drugs

Gene-based designer drugs available for diabetes, Alzheimer’s… -- Gene therapy standard of care for several conditions BUT…. Genomic therapeutic revolution in full swing -- Intense debate underway on non-medical uses of genetics

None of this can happen without the best and brightest minds of the current scientific generation

National Human Genome Research Institute National Institutes of Health Minority_Activities/index.htm

GOAL 1/ African American, Alaskan Natives, Hispanic American, Native Americans, and Pacific Islanders. 2/ Ethical, legal and social implications of genetics and genomics research. To increase the number of underrepresented 1 minorities trained in genomics and ELSI 2 research

PRINCIPLES Underrepresented communities must be involved. Opportunities must be available at all career levels. Programs must be anchored in institutions involved in genome and ELSI research. All NHGRI programs must be responsive to the Plan. Plan must have achievable goals, measurable outcomes, appropriate reviews, and undergo evaluation.

1.Research Training 2.Research Collaborations 3.Education 4.Outreach/Communications 5.Partnerships COMPONENTS

Research Training Opportunities in Genomics U.S. Universities and Research Institutions Fellowships in Genomic and ELSI Research Career Development Awards Support for Research Experiences Travel Awards for Courses and Scientific Meetings Dissertation Awards for Research in ELSI Topics

Research Training Opportunities in Genomics NHGRI’s Bethesda Campus Fellowships Visiting Investigators’ Program for Faculty Summer Research Internships Summer Short Course in Genomics for Faculty

1.Research Training 2.Research Collaborations 3.Education 4.Outreach/Communications 5.Partnerships COMPONENTS

Partnerships National Institute of General Medical Sciences Undergraduate/ graduate traineeships and travel awards in genomics and ELSI Postdoctoral fellowships in research and teaching Institutional training grant to the Meharry/ Vanderbilt Consortium Expansion of the ‘Minority Access to Research Careers’ program into genomics

Partnerships Professional and Scientific Societies Goal: Pursue innovative approaches to increase the number of underrepresented minorities that are pursuing doctoral studies in genomics, including ELSI research