IBJNews

IU, Purdue land prestigious research grant

J.K. Wall
May 29, 2008
Keywords
Back to TopCommentsE-mailPrint
Indiana and Purdue universities will create a new medical research program after receiving a $25 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, the universities announced today.

IU and Purdue will launch the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute to turn scientific and medical discoveries more quickly into better care for patients and into new commercialized medical products.

The money will be given over five years to the IU School of Medicine in Indianapolis. The medical school will combine those funds with $56 million appropriated by IU and Purdue, the state and Eli Lilly and Co. to fund the research program.

The Clinical and Translational Science Award is one of 38 such grants given by the NIH since 2006. The grants are coveted by medical research centers because they are seen as marking out the nation's top-tier medical schools. Other recipients this year include Harvard, Ohio State and Stanford universities.

"It's not just the money; it's what the award says," said David Johnson, CEO of BioCrossroads Inc., a group that promotes life sciences development in central Indiana. "What it does is to cement the medical school on the map among the schools of the 21st century."

BioCrossroads and the Indiana Economic Development Corp. will be partners in the initiative. So, too, will Clarian Health, Cook Group, Roche Diagnostics and WellPoint Inc.

Dr. Anantha Shekhar, a psychiatrist who is IU's assistant vice president for life sciences, will direct the institute.

Its deputy directors are Connie Weaver, head of Purdue's foods and nutrition program, and Bennett Bertenthal, dean of the IU College of Arts and Sciences in Bloomington.

Purdue will contribute not only research, but also will use its network of extension offices in Indiana's 92 counties to try to disseminate the institute's findings to health care providers and to solicit their input for research projects.

The funding marks a new strategy for the NIH, which is shrinking the amount of money it gives to basic medical research in order to spend more on efforts to apply research breakthroughs in clinics and companies.

"The consortium (of schools) serves as the bridge in this process that allows researchers to perfect and refine existing treatment through interdisciplinary teams that extend to the clinic and community," NIH Director Dr. Elias A. Zerhouni said in a statement.

The Indiana institute will create a Web-based home called CTSI HUB that will include a database of researchers and their work, research programs, and available experts. The goal is to help all the participants in the statewide initiative to communicate more effectively.

IU President Michael A. McRobbie said the initiative ultimately will make IU and Purdue researchers more competitive for winning other grant money.

"The institute harnesses all of Indiana's major life sciences research centers into a commonly focused enterprise that will give Indiana's research scientists many new advantages in finding ways to do their work more effectively and efficiently," McRobbie said in a statement.'

The NIH announced a total of 14 grants today for a combined $533 million. The size of IU's grant is below the average grant size of $38 million.


ADVERTISEMENT

Post a comment to this story

captcha
Please enter the text you see above:
Not sure? Give me another.

Sponsored by

IBJ on Facebook & Twitter

facebook - twitter
IBJ Healthcare IBJ The Score IBJ News IBJ
                        Property Lines IBJ
                        Newstalk IBJ Dining IBJ Lists IBJ Arts
ADVERTISEMENT
Subscribe to IBJ
  1. Schools already cut the majority of the fat several years ago when the property tax system was capped. There is nothing left to cut. If Indiana continues to treat schools and teachers like a red-headed stepchild, they will see busing cut, athletics became pay for the wealthy programs, arts and music disappear, class sizes above 35 in many places (I had 18 in my elementary classes in the 80's)and less help for your children. Do you value education to Colts domed stadiums and tax breaks for corporations?

  2. still true today and it obviously didn't get any better or TOney wouldn't have closed shop sold his crapwagon thrown in the towel and moved to Florida

  3. I loved the book Sarah Plain and tall growing up. I enjoyed reading stories about settlers moving west.

  4. You do realize Bruce Barnes died 5 years ago. I am guessing this is not a recent quote. I am not sure where you dusted it off from, but it does not even show up in a Google search. Wow, the haters are getting desperate.

    So are you now searching for a Floyd Davis quote about how Eddie Rickenbacker cost him a race win?

  5. The new CEO has inherited a mess not of her doing. The former CEO and finally-fired VP's misuse (for their own personal gain) of funds that were dedicated to educating Indiana children are at the very least an embarrassment to the dedicated staff who have continued to push on, and most likely a criminal act. If you were a donor or sponsor in the last decade to these guys, an audit is definitely in order. Hang in there, Jennifer Burk!

ADVERTISEMENT