Research Affairs: Researcher's Alert for April 20, 2015 http://myllu.llu.edu/syncall/communityhome/?communityId=6088 en-us Sun, 28 Apr 2024 01:40:24 -0700 SyncAll RSS 1.0 6088:20231 <![CDATA[Researcher's Alert main page and archived stories available]]> Sherie Donahue All Researcher's Alert stories from 2012 until present are now housed in a myLLU community in order to create an archive of easily searchable stories for the investigators. The main Researcher's Alert page, which contains the most recent stories, is located at http://myllu.llu.edu/newsletter-researchersalert/. The left side bar of that page contains a search box at the top which will allow investigators to easily search all Researcher's Alert stories. The stories are also arranged by topics and publication dates.

Questions or comments about the Researcher's Alerts? Please send an email to researchaffairs@llu.edu.

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Mon, 19 Jan 2015 11:54:01 -0800
6088:21294 <![CDATA[Straight Talk about Application and Biosketch Requirements (excerpt from NIH communication)]]> Sheri Cummins Below is an excerpt from an NIH communication written by Sherie Cummins, Communications & Outreach, NIH Office of Extramural Research. This article contains a summary of the important changes to the biosketches which go into effect May 25, 2015, along with links to important policies, guides and resources.

 

Straight Talk About Application Requirements

I manage a small support team called Grants Info responsible for responding to grant-related email and phone inquiries. Team members spend the better part of their day helping folks navigate through our many grant resources and matching ‘people who have questions’ with ‘people who have answers’. One of the most popular inquiries we receive is “What exactly do you mean by ‘required’?” This question can, of course, apply to any policy or guidance we put out. Most recently, it has been asked in the context of the new biosketch.

NIH expects applicants and grantees to follow all documented policies and instructions. When completing your grant application you must follow announcement clarification and policy notices posted in the NIH Guide, follow instructions in the Funding Opportunity Announcement and follow the guidance in the application guide and supplemental instructions.  I know (better than most) that is easier said than done. The NIH puts out A LOT of grant information keeping my team very busy. J

So, when we say NIH “requires use of the new [biosketch] format for applications submitted for due dates on or after May 25, 2015” (NOT-OD-15-032), we mean…

All biosketches included in applications submitted for due dates on/after May 25, 2015 must be formatted per the instructions in the application guide (and repeated in online resources), including:

  • Completing each section (A - Personal Statement; B – Positions and Honors; C – Contributions to Science; D – Research Support or Scholastic Performance)
  • Including no more than 5 contributions to science with no more than 4 citations per contribution
  • Ensuring that if you include the optional link to a full list of your published work in a site like My Bibliography that the URL is public, accessible without providing any login or personal information, and doesn’t link to websites that may violate page limit rules
  • Refraining from including information, such as preliminary data, that belongs elsewhere in the application
  • Following NIH guidance on font type, font size, paper size, and margins (See section 2.6 of application guide)
  • Using PDF format for your biosketch attachments
  • Limiting the length to 5 pages or less

The new biosketch policy is “required’ –officially compulsory, or otherwise considered essential; indispensable. Failure to follow the policy means NIH may withdraw your application from consideration (NOT-OD-15-095). The majority of the requirements listed above (all except the 5-page limit) would not be flagged until your application has already moved forward to NIH. If you don’t follow the instructions and our staff manually identifies a biosketch in your application as being non-compliant, then you won’t have the opportunity to correct it before the due date. In that context, is it really worth not following the instructions?

 

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Mon, 20 Apr 2015 09:35:39 -0700
6088:21063 <![CDATA[NIH releases the updated 'NIH Grants Policy Statement']]> Sherie Donahue NIH has released its new Grants Policy Statement for 2015. This important document is organized into three sections: Part I: NIH Grants -- General Information, Part II: Terms and Conditions of NIH Grant Awards, and Part III: Points of Contact. The revised guide can be found at

http://grants.nih.gov/grants/policy/nihgps/nihgps.pdf.

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Wed, 01 Apr 2015 10:39:22 -0700
6088:21293 <![CDATA[New IRB Roster]]> Anu Diekmann The IRB Roster was updated this month to reflect new membership.  The latest version can be downloaded from the IRB Toolkit for Investigators, under the “IRB Help Center” section on the upper right.  We would also like to acknowledge Dr. Dusty Rigsby’s leadership as IRB Chair for the past 12 years and welcome Dr. Travis Losey, Assistant Professor and Director of Clinical Research, Department of Neurology, as our new IRB Chair, effective May 1.  

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Mon, 20 Apr 2015 08:55:29 -0700
6088:21283 <![CDATA[HOW WOULD an EXTRA HAND help push your research project forward?]]> JR Krausz HOW WOULD an EXTRA HAND help push your research project forward?

Did you know that well-qualified volunteers with a passion for research are looking for placements right now?

You probably have ancillary tasks that need to get done to keep your research on-track.  A volunteer can do some of those for free, and be enthusiastic about it even if the tasks are very basic, just for the opportunities to be in a research environment, make contacts, and to contribute to projects of value.

At this moment,  we have a foreign medical graduate with experience in internal medicine and emergency room seeking volunteer work with research.  Having completed his USMLE exams and now preparing for USMLE step 3, this gentleman will be applying for residency next year.  He has his green card, and has been through the vetting process through our Loma Linda Volunteer Services, so is officially ready-to-go.  You have to lose to see if he can help you.

Contact information: 

Anas Kassouha
anaskassouha@yahoo.com
(909) 561-8046

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Fri, 17 Apr 2015 10:23:31 -0700
6088:21249 <![CDATA[NIH Funding Opportunities]]> Cindy Dickson
  • Jointly Sponsored Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award Institutional Predoctoral Training Program in the Neurosciences (T32)
    (PAR-15-178)
    Application Receipt/Submission Date(s): June 10, 2015; May 25, 2016; May 25, 2017, by 5:00 PM local time of applicant organization.
  • Interdisciplinary Training in Bioinformatics and Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolic Disease (T32)
    (PAR-15-182)
    National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
    Application Receipt/Submission Date(s): November 17, 2015 and November 17, 2016, by 5:00 PM local time of applicant organization.
  • Pilot and Feasibility Clinical Trials in Diabetes, and Endocrine and Metabolic Diseases (R21)
    (PA-15-176)
    National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
    Application Receipt/Submission Date(s): Multiple dates, see announcement.
  • (PAR-15-170)
    Diet and Physical Activity Assessment Methodology (R01)
    Department of Health and Human Services
    National Institutes of Health ; Application Receipt/Submission Date(s):see announcement
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    Mon, 13 Apr 2015 11:36:14 -0700
    6088:21048 <![CDATA[The Wall Street Journal article 'Patients Want Docs to Disclose Ties to Pharma Before They Enroll in Trials' ]]> Sherie Donahue The Wall Street Journal recently published an article titled 'Patients Want Docs to Disclose Ties to Pharma Before They Enroll in Trials.' The full article can be found at http://blogs.wsj.com/pharmalot/2015/03/09/patients-want-docs-to-disclose-ties-to-pharma-before-they-enroll-in-trials/.

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    Tue, 31 Mar 2015 14:07:19 -0700