Introduction
The Doris Duke Foundation offers a unique opportunity
to support medical students for one year as they learn how to perform
clinical research. The General Clinical Research Center at
the University of North Carolina (UNC) is one of 10 centers nationally
offering this program. Doris Duke fellows will spend a year at UNC
performing a clinical research project with a faculty mentor and will
undergo additional training in clinical research.
A
unique feature of the UNC program is that each student will be expected
to formulate a specific research project with his/her mentor, write
up the protocol including the statistical sections, and follow the
protocol through the IRB and GCRC approval processes. The student
will then take primary responsibility for initiating and conducting
the study.
Students
participating in the fellowship will receive a $27,000 stipend,
health insurance for the year, plus supplementary funds of $5,000
for research-related expenses, including training and travel.
Interested
medical students should review the listing of potential mentors
and contact any of interest to get more information on specific
projects that may be available. This mentor list is not all inclusive,
and there may be other faculty at UNC willing to mentor students.
Please feel free to contact the Program co-Director, Susan
Pusek to explore other options. It is also possible to visit
UNC to meet directly with potential mentors.
Overview
The University of North Carolina Medical School at Chapel Hill (UNC)
has traditionally encouraged research by medical students, and offers
a variety of programs to facilitate their participation. However,
most students currently select research experiences in basic science
laboratories. Most "clinical research" experiences have involved epidemiologic,
population-based studies rather than direct contact with human subjects.
In fact, very few students have selected an experience in patient-oriented
research, which is defined here as "the investigator and research
subject in the same room at the same time." This deficiency exists
in spite of a relative wealth of senior mentors, a first-rate General
Clinical Research Center, and an excellent track record of career
development in patient-oriented research at the fellow and junior
faculty level. The Doris Duke Clinical Research Fellowship Program
for Medical Students provides for the first time a formal mechanism,
and dedicated resources, for a year-long experience in patient-oriented
research. The program's exclusive focus on patient-oriented research
addresses the most pressing training deficiency, one that exists not
just at UNC, but at a national level as well.
The
Institution
Founded in 1792, the University of North Carolina represents the
oldest public university in the United States. UNC leads the South
in the amount of extramural support for its research programs, with
more than $305 million in research grants and contracts from a wide
variety of federal and non-federal funds. Health Affairs and School
of Medicine. UNC is one of only four public universities whose Health
Affairs component has all five professional schools including medicine,
pharmacy, public health, dentistry, and nursing. All the Health
Affairs schools are within a five- minute walk of each other allowing
for research and training collaborations. There are over 300 full-time
faculty members in the clinical departments.
The
Verne S. Caviness General Clinical Research Center.
UNC's Verne S. Caviness General Clinical Research Center (GCRC)
is one of the very first facilities of its kind, having received
its initial funding from the NIH in 1960. This Center represents
one of only a handful of GCRCs that have received continuous support
from the NIH since the very inception of the GCRC Program. At present,
the UNC GCRC is a modern, 13,500 square foot inpatient-outpatient
facility occupying the entire third floor of the Bed Tower section
of UNC Hospital in the very heart of the Medical Center complex.
Resources available for GCRC researchers include biostatistical
and epidemiologic consultations, data management and analysis services,
a research nutrition service, an investigational drug service, and
the Office of Training and Career Development. Dr. Paul B. Watkins,
MD assumed the Directorship of the UNC GCRC on August 1, 1999.
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