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Penn Awarded $1 Million from Howard Hughes Medical
Institute
to Establish Clinical Imaging Training Program
(Philadelphia, PA) - The University of Pennsylvania
School of Medicine received $1 million from the Howard Hughes
Medical Institute (HHMI) to establish an integrated graduate training
program in clinical imaging and information sciences. HHMI is partnering
with the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Biomedical
Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) in this effort.
Penn’s grant was one of 10 awarded by the HHMI-NIBIB Interfaces
Program to set up interdisciplinary graduate education programs. The three-year,
$1 million grants will be used to develop innovative programs designed
to produce a cadre of scientists with the knowledge and skills to conduct
research at the interface of biomedical, clinical, physical, engineering,
and computational sciences. The 10 recipients of the HHMI awards were
chosen from 132 applicants.
The Penn Department of Radiology is providing additional funds to hire
two new faculty members to support the program. By the end of the three-year
development period, 10 new PhD students, designated “HHMI Trainees,”
will be enrolled in the program, notes Program Director Peter
F. Davies, PhD, Director of Penn’s Institute for Medicine
and Engineering (IME).
The imaging sciences are well established at Penn, within multiple schools
and academic departments, but no formal integration of efforts in graduate
training existed prior to this program award. Through this grant, Penn
will recruit graduates in Engineering, Physics, Chemistry, Applied Mathematics,
and Computer Science who want to learn clinical skills, and those in Biological
Sciences with strong quantitative skills.
“We’re extremely excited about this opportunity,” says
Nick Bryan, MD, PhD, Chair of the Radiology Department.
“The ability for this initiative to cross schools is critical for
the type of research and education that this program will stimulate.”
IME is coordinating the new program, working closely with the Department
of Radiology, and coordinating with the Departments of Bioengineering,
Chemistry, Physics, Mathematics, and the basic science departments in
the School of Medicine. “We’ve purposely cast our net wide
because we want to bring basic scientists-physicists, applied mathematicians,
biophysicists, and fundamental biomedical researchers-together to address
imaging research in a clinical context,” says Davies. “The
innovation is that trainees will get a PhD in clinical imaging and informational
sciences, which will be a thorough grounding in the fundamental science
of imaging, but be closely integrated with clinical medicine.”
The PhD program is unique in that students will complete many of the classes
in the School of Medicine curriculum. The program is set to recruit five
students at the end of the second year of the grant to start in the fall
of 2007 and an additional five at the end of the third year of the grant
in 2008. The grant begins January 1, 2006.
“The main focus of these HHMI grants is to facilitate new interdisciplinary
programs in cutting edge areas for which there are currently no coordinated
training opportunities,” says Jim Gee, PhD, Associate
Professor of Radiologic Science, and a co-principal investigator of the
program along with Andrew Maidment, PhD, Assistant Professor
of Radiology. “Imaging science has traditionally been developed
in a variety of disciplines and has allowed important advances to be made
in many fields, including medicine. Further progress, however, demands
programs that treat biomedical imaging science as a discipline in its
own right in the same way that computer science has emerged as a primary
discipline in the applied sciences. Our students will graduate as medical
scientists, but their primary focus will be developing and using imaging
as their primary tool. It is critical that the students come away with
the clinical and basic medical perspective needed to develop new methods
for detecting, diagnosing, and treating disease.”
HHMI and NIBIB will work together to ensure sustaining support beyond
the start-up funds for the new programs. Following a second competition
to ensure that the HHMI-funded recipients achieved their original goals,
the NIBIB will support the second phase of this program through five-year
training grants. The overall program is aimed at sustaining interdisciplinary
graduate education.
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PENN Medicine is a $2.7 billion enterprise dedicated
to the related missions of medical education, biomedical research, and
high-quality patient care. PENN Medicine consists of the University of
Pennsylvania School of Medicine (founded in 1765 as the nation's first
medical school) and the University of Pennsylvania Health System.
Penn’s School of Medicine is ranked #2 in the nation for receipt
of NIH research funds; and ranked #4 in the nation in U.S. News &
World Report’s most recent ranking of top research-oriented medical
schools. Supporting 1,400 fulltime faculty and 700 students, the School
of Medicine is recognized worldwide for its superior education and training
of the next generation of physician-scientists and leaders of academic
medicine.
The University of Pennsylvania Health System comprises: its flagship hospital,
the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, consistently rated one
of the nation’s “Honor Roll” hospitals by U.S. News
& World Report; Pennsylvania Hospital, the nation's first hospital;
Penn Presbyterian Medical Center; a faculty practice plan; a primary-care
provider network; two multispecialty satellite facilities; and home health
care and hospice.
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