Next Week in SHARP – November 1st to 7th

Upcoming Presentations

November 4th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Grand Rounds presented by Clark Larsen, PhD

November 11th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Courtney Collins, MD

November 18th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Grand Rounds presented by Timothy Huerta, PhD, MS


SHARP Grand Rounds presented by Clark Spencer Larsen, PhD

“Çatalhöyük: The Bioarchaeology of Community Health in an Early Farming Community in Transition”

From Dr. Larsen:

“I am a biological anthropologist primarily interested in the history of the human condition, viewed from the perspective of health, quality of life, adaptation, and lifestyle during the last 10,000 years of human evolution. Central to this work is a collaborative investigation on native societies on St. Catherines Island, Georgia, tracking adaptive trends. I co-direct the bioarchaeology research at Çatalhöyük (Turkey), a large Neolithic settlement. This enormous site is providing the opportunity to test hypotheses about the impact of urbanization, population agglomeration, and increased commitment to agriculture on health and quality of life. The project is a part of an international archaeological research program directed by Ian Hodder (Stanford University).

I am also involved in the Global History of Health Project. Results of the study of 18,000 skeletons from across Europe reveals significant changes in health and lifestyle, with results presented in The Backbone of Europe: Health, Diet, Work and Violence over Two Millennia (Richard H. Steckel, Clark Spencer Larsen, Charlotte A. Roberts, and Joerg Baten, editors, Cambridge University Press, 2019). I am the author of Our Origins: Discovering Biological Anthropology, now in its fifth edition (W.W. Norton).

This presentation will give you an entirely new perspective on health.”

Please join us on November 4th from 4:00-5:00pm for Dr. Larsen’s presentation.

Profile – Clark Larsen

Catalhoyuk – PNAS Publication

Join Microsoft Teams Meeting


Upcoming Event

You are invited to join us for The Greenwall Foundation’s William C. Stubing Memorial Lecture on Monday, November 16, at 6:30 pm EDT.

Keith Wailoo, PhD, Henry Putnam University Professor of History and Public Affairs at Princeton University, will discuss Whose Pain Matters? Reflections on Race, Social Justice, and COVID-19’s Revealed Inequalities.

We are excited to partner with the NYU School of Global Public Health and its Center for Bioethics to bring this year’s Lecture to a national audience as a live webinar and moderated Q&A session. Reserve your spot early here; registration is free.

We hope to see you there.

From Scott Strassels, PharmD, PhD: Colleagues, this may be of interest. Registration is free. Dr. Wailoo is a fascinating writer on pain and other topics. His work includes Pain: A Political History, Dying in the City of the Blues: Sickle Cell Anemia and the Politics of Race and Health, and How Cancer Crossed the Color Line.


Grant Submissions- Process Flow

Be advised that both the COM and CCC Grants Management Office is more strictly enforcing grant submission timelines.

For COM investigators, your intention to submit a new proposal must be sent through the REDCap portal (link: https://redcap.osumc.edu/redcap/surveys/?s=TYPT3ALFMN), but if fewer than 6 weeks remain before the deadline they may not be able to accommodate your application and will deny the submission. 

CCC applications should continue to be routed to the CCC Grants Office, by emailing an inquiry to Li.Zheng@osumc.edu


Are you contemplating working with a unpaid volunteer student?

SHARP can help you work out the logistics.  We can arrange for virtual access for OSU affiliates at no cost, and virtual access for non-OSU affiliates for a fee (to set up a virtual machine for them to remote to).

For more information, contact Judy M. Opalek, PhD (judy.opalek@osumc.edu)


SHARP Staff – Return to Campus

We are in the midst of our Return to Campus plan and you may be seeing us in the office more often. We need to adhere to the social distancing requirements in our shared space, and we will be working on modified schedules until a full return is feasible. All SHARP staff continue to be reachable by phone, email, and text, whether in the office or working remotely. We appreciate your patience during this time.

Please note that the SHARP staff are working 100% remotely at this time and are still fully available for virtual meetings and discussion.  We have nearly every normal tool at our disposal during this time and are only limited by face-to-face interactions and campus-based physical resources. If you have any questions or concerns—reach out!

 

Next Week in SHARP – October 25th to 31st

Upcoming Presentations

October 28th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Jordan Cloyd, MD

November 4th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Grand Rounds presented by Clark Larsen, PhD

November 11th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Courtney Collins, MD

November 18th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Grand Rounds presented by Timothy Huerta, PhD, MS


SHARP Grand Rounds presented by Clark Spencer Larsen, PhD

“Çatalhöyük: The Bioarchaeology of Community Health in an Early Farming Community in Transition”

From Dr. Larsen:

“I am a biological anthropologist primarily interested in the history of the human condition, viewed from the perspective of health, quality of life, adaptation, and lifestyle during the last 10,000 years of human evolution. Central to this work is a collaborative investigation on native societies on St. Catherines Island, Georgia, tracking adaptive trends. I co-direct the bioarchaeology research at Çatalhöyük (Turkey), a large Neolithic settlement. This enormous site is providing the opportunity to test hypotheses about the impact of urbanization, population agglomeration, and increased commitment to agriculture on health and quality of life. The project is a part of an international archaeological research program directed by Ian Hodder (Stanford University).

I am also involved in the Global History of Health Project. Results of the study of 18,000 skeletons from across Europe reveals significant changes in health and lifestyle, with results presented in The Backbone of Europe: Health, Diet, Work and Violence over Two Millennia (Richard H. Steckel, Clark Spencer Larsen, Charlotte A. Roberts, and Joerg Baten, editors, Cambridge University Press, 2019). I am the author of Our Origins: Discovering Biological Anthropology, now in its fifth edition (W.W. Norton).

This presentation will give you an entirely new perspective on health.”

Please join us on November 4th from 4:00-5:00pm for Dr. Larsen’s presentation.

Profile – Clark Larsen

Catalhoyuk – PNAS Publication

Join Microsoft Teams Meeting


Register for the Systematic Review Workshop

Join experts from the Fuld National Institute for Evidence-based Practice as we navigate systematic review methodologies and critical appraisal skills. Earn continuing education credit during this live, online workshop Wednesday, Oct. 28 and Friday, Oct. 30. This multi-disciplinary course is suitable for individuals working in the health and social science areas who are considering or planning to conduct a systematic review of intervention studies. No experience in conducting systematic reviews is required. The course will examine the key components of systematic reviews using Cochrane and other methodologies.

Learn more and register


Grant Submissions- Process Flow

Be advised that both the COM and CCC Grants Management Office is more strictly enforcing grant submission timelines.

For COM investigators, your intention to submit a new proposal must be sent through the REDCap portal (link: https://redcap.osumc.edu/redcap/surveys/?s=TYPT3ALFMN), but if fewer than 6 weeks remain before the deadline they may not be able to accommodate your application and will deny the submission. 

CCC applications should continue to be routed to the CCC Grants Office, by emailing an inquiry to Li.Zheng@osumc.edu


Are you contemplating working with a unpaid volunteer student?

SHARP can help you work out the logistics.  We can arrange for virtual access for OSU affiliates at no cost, and virtual access for non-OSU affiliates for a fee (to set up a virtual machine for them to remote to).

For more information, contact Judy M. Opalek, PhD (judy.opalek@osumc.edu)


SHARP Staff – Return to Campus

We are in the midst of our Return to Campus plan and you may be seeing us in the office more often. We need to adhere to the social distancing requirements in our shared space, and we will be working on modified schedules until a full return is feasible. All SHARP staff continue to be reachable by phone, email, and text, whether in the office or working remotely. We appreciate your patience during this time.

Please note that the SHARP staff are working 100% remotely at this time and are still fully available for virtual meetings and discussion.  We have nearly every normal tool at our disposal during this time and are only limited by face-to-face interactions and campus-based physical resources. If you have any questions or concerns—reach out!

 

Next Week in SHARP – October 18th to 24th

Upcoming Presentations

October 21st – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Courtney Collins, MD

October 28th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Jordan Cloyd, MD

November 4th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Grand Rounds presented by Clark Larsen, PhD


Register for the Systematic Review Workshop

Join experts from the Fuld National Institute for Evidence-based Practice as we navigate systematic review methodologies and critical appraisal skills. Earn continuing education credit during this live, online workshop Wednesday, Oct. 28 and Friday, Oct. 30. This multi-disciplinary course is suitable for individuals working in the health and social science areas who are considering or planning to conduct a systematic review of intervention studies. No experience in conducting systematic reviews is required. The course will examine the key components of systematic reviews using Cochrane and other methodologies.

Learn more and register


Health Services Research on Minority Health and Health Disparities (R01 – Clinical Trial Optional)

Research Objectives

The overarching purpose of this FOA is to promote research to generate new knowledge to improve health care access, delivery, utilization and quality, and health outcomes of racial and ethnic minority populations and other groups affected by health disparities. Research encouraged under this FOA includes the examination of population-specific clinical presentation and/or manifestation of diseases and their complications within the context of health care settings; services within health care systems and non-clinical settings linked to health care systems (e.g. personal residences, school-based health centers, the workplace, and criminal justice settings); etiologies and reduction of health care disparities; structure and organization of health care systems and coordination of health care; impact of healthcare and non-healthcare policies on health care and health disparities; and system-wide interventions or multi-level interventions. Projects may address health services pertaining to health promotion, screening for disease or risk factors, prevention at any level, diagnosis and the treatment of particular health conditions (including chronic diseases, mental and substance abuse disorders, and infectious diseases such the 2019 Novel Coronavirus), specific segments of populations affected by health disparities (e.g. pregnant women, children, persons with disabilities, older adults), or more general indicators (e.g., access to primary care services or specialty care) that may not be condition-specific. Projects may include observational/descriptive, or interventional studies (including randomized clinical trials, pragmatic trials and others) and may involve primary data collection and/or secondary analysis of existing datasets. Projects should involve the use of relevant health system-level data in some way. Projects should include a focus on one or more NIH-designated US populations affected by health disparities, which include Blacks/African Americans, Hispanics/Latinos, American Indians/Alaska Natives, Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, underserved rural populations, and sexual and gender minorities. Projects that include populations that identify across more than one health disparity group are encouraged.

For more information, see: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-20-310.html


Grant Submissions- Process Flow

Be advised that both the COM and CCC Grants Management Office is more strictly enforcing grant submission timelines.

For COM investigators, your intention to submit a new proposal must be sent through the REDCap portal (link: https://redcap.osumc.edu/redcap/surveys/?s=TYPT3ALFMN), but if fewer than 6 weeks remain before the deadline they may not be able to accommodate your application and will deny the submission. 

CCC applications should continue to be routed to the CCC Grants Office, by emailing an inquiry to Li.Zheng@osumc.edu


Are you contemplating working with a unpaid volunteer student?

SHARP can help you work out the logistics.  We can arrange for virtual access for OSU affiliates at no cost, and virtual access for non-OSU affiliates for a fee (to set up a virtual machine for them to remote to).

For more information, contact Judy M. Opalek, PhD (judy.opalek@osumc.edu)


SHARP Staff – Return to Campus

We are in the midst of our Return to Campus plan and you may be seeing us in the office more often. We need to adhere to the social distancing requirements in our shared space, and we will be working on modified schedules until a full return is feasible. All SHARP staff continue to be reachable by phone, email, and text, whether in the office or working remotely. We appreciate your patience during this time.

Please note that the SHARP staff are working 100% remotely at this time and are still fully available for virtual meetings and discussion.  We have nearly every normal tool at our disposal during this time and are only limited by face-to-face interactions and campus-based physical resources. If you have any questions or concerns—reach out!

 

Next Week in SHARP – October 11th to 17th

Upcoming Presentations

October 14th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Didactic Session presented by Clara Lee, MD

October 21st – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Courtney Collins, MD

October 28th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Jordan Cloyd, MD

November 4th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Grand Rounds presented by Clark Larsen, PhD


Health Services Research on Minority Health and Health Disparities (R01 – Clinical Trial Optional)

Research Objectives

The overarching purpose of this FOA is to promote research to generate new knowledge to improve health care access, delivery, utilization and quality, and health outcomes of racial and ethnic minority populations and other groups affected by health disparities. Research encouraged under this FOA includes the examination of population-specific clinical presentation and/or manifestation of diseases and their complications within the context of health care settings; services within health care systems and non-clinical settings linked to health care systems (e.g. personal residences, school-based health centers, the workplace, and criminal justice settings); etiologies and reduction of health care disparities; structure and organization of health care systems and coordination of health care; impact of healthcare and non-healthcare policies on health care and health disparities; and system-wide interventions or multi-level interventions. Projects may address health services pertaining to health promotion, screening for disease or risk factors, prevention at any level, diagnosis and the treatment of particular health conditions (including chronic diseases, mental and substance abuse disorders, and infectious diseases such the 2019 Novel Coronavirus), specific segments of populations affected by health disparities (e.g. pregnant women, children, persons with disabilities, older adults), or more general indicators (e.g., access to primary care services or specialty care) that may not be condition-specific. Projects may include observational/descriptive, or interventional studies (including randomized clinical trials, pragmatic trials and others) and may involve primary data collection and/or secondary analysis of existing datasets. Projects should involve the use of relevant health system-level data in some way. Projects should include a focus on one or more NIH-designated US populations affected by health disparities, which include Blacks/African Americans, Hispanics/Latinos, American Indians/Alaska Natives, Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, underserved rural populations, and sexual and gender minorities. Projects that include populations that identify across more than one health disparity group are encouraged.

For more information, see: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-20-310.html


Grant Submissions- Process Flow

Be advised that both the COM and CCC Grants Management Office is more strictly enforcing grant submission timelines.

For COM investigators, your intention to submit a new proposal must be sent through the REDCap portal (link: https://redcap.osumc.edu/redcap/surveys/?s=TYPT3ALFMN), but if fewer than 6 weeks remain before the deadline they may not be able to accommodate your application and will deny the submission. 

CCC applications should continue to be routed to the CCC Grants Office, by emailing an inquiry to Li.Zheng@osumc.edu


Are you contemplating working with a unpaid volunteer student?

SHARP can help you work out the logistics.  We can arrange for virtual access for OSU affiliates at no cost, and virtual access for non-OSU affiliates for a fee (to set up a virtual machine for them to remote to).

For more information, contact Judy M. Opalek, PhD (judy.opalek@osumc.edu)


SHARP Staff – Return to Campus

We are in the midst of our Return to Campus plan and you may be seeing us in the office more often. We need to adhere to the social distancing requirements in our shared space, and we will be working on modified schedules until a full return is feasible. All SHARP staff continue to be reachable by phone, email, and text, whether in the office or working remotely. We appreciate your patience during this time.

Please note that the SHARP staff are working 100% remotely at this time and are still fully available for virtual meetings and discussion.  We have nearly every normal tool at our disposal during this time and are only limited by face-to-face interactions and campus-based physical resources. If you have any questions or concerns—reach out!

 

Next Week in SHARP – October 4th to October 10th

Upcoming Presentations

October 14th – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Didactic Session presented by Clara Lee, MD

October 21st – 4:00pm to 5:00pm – Works in Progress presented by Courtney Collins, MD


Health Services Research on Minority Health and Health Disparities (R01 – Clinical Trial Optional)

Research Objectives

The overarching purpose of this FOA is to promote research to generate new knowledge to improve health care access, delivery, utilization and quality, and health outcomes of racial and ethnic minority populations and other groups affected by health disparities. Research encouraged under this FOA includes the examination of population-specific clinical presentation and/or manifestation of diseases and their complications within the context of health care settings; services within health care systems and non-clinical settings linked to health care systems (e.g. personal residences, school-based health centers, the workplace, and criminal justice settings); etiologies and reduction of health care disparities; structure and organization of health care systems and coordination of health care; impact of healthcare and non-healthcare policies on health care and health disparities; and system-wide interventions or multi-level interventions. Projects may address health services pertaining to health promotion, screening for disease or risk factors, prevention at any level, diagnosis and the treatment of particular health conditions (including chronic diseases, mental and substance abuse disorders, and infectious diseases such the 2019 Novel Coronavirus), specific segments of populations affected by health disparities (e.g. pregnant women, children, persons with disabilities, older adults), or more general indicators (e.g., access to primary care services or specialty care) that may not be condition-specific. Projects may include observational/descriptive, or interventional studies (including randomized clinical trials, pragmatic trials and others) and may involve primary data collection and/or secondary analysis of existing datasets. Projects should involve the use of relevant health system-level data in some way. Projects should include a focus on one or more NIH-designated US populations affected by health disparities, which include Blacks/African Americans, Hispanics/Latinos, American Indians/Alaska Natives, Asian Americans, Native Hawaiians and other Pacific Islanders, socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, underserved rural populations, and sexual and gender minorities. Projects that include populations that identify across more than one health disparity group are encouraged.

For more information, see: https://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-20-310.html


 

 

 

The CCTS will sponsor the NIH Department of Bioethics course “Ethical and Regulatory Aspects of Clinical Research” beginning September 23, 2020. The course is a seven-week series of webinars of critical ethical issues involved in conducting human subject research.

Participation in this program will fulfill NIH requirements for training in the Responsible Conduct of Research, and learners who complete at least three sessions will receive a Certificate of Completion.

Webinars will be live-streamed every Wednesday from 8:30 to – 11:30 am (EST).

Dates/Times: 8:30 AM – 11:30 AM
Sept 23, Sept 30, Oct 7, Oct 14, Oct 21, Oct 21, Oct 28, and Nov 4

Register

More Info


Grant Submissions- Process Flow

Be advised that both the COM and CCC Grants Management Office is more strictly enforcing grant submission timelines.

For COM investigators, your intention to submit a new proposal must be sent through the REDCap portal (link: https://redcap.osumc.edu/redcap/surveys/?s=TYPT3ALFMN), but if fewer than 6 weeks remain before the deadline they may not be able to accommodate your application and will deny the submission. 

CCC applications should continue to be routed to the CCC Grants Office, by emailing an inquiry to Li.Zheng@osumc.edu


 

Upcoming Events

 

 

 

Free Registration for the Fall 2020 NIH Virtual Seminar on Program Funding and Grants Administration!

No plane tickets, hotel costs, or food budgets to worry about! In fact, no registration fees either! The NIH is bringing the Fall 2020 NIH Virtual Seminar on Program Funding and Grants Administration direct to your computer…free of charge, Tuesday, October 27 – Friday, October 30!

This event is designed to demystify the NIH grant application and review process! Register today at https://nihvirtualseminar2020.vfairs.com/ and be sure to check out all the networking opportunities taking place during the seminar. For instance, the Meet the Experts page highlights all of the NIH Institutes and Centers, offices and special programs offering booths filled with resources to fill your “swag bag” and times to chat with grants management, policy, review, and program officials throughout the seminar.

If you’re new to working with the NIH grants process as an investigator or administrator, join us as we connect and collaborate! Here’s what to expect:

  • Four days of sessions with live and simu-live sessions, as well as an on-demand video library
  • Three tracks designed around grants policies and programs, including case studies and Q&As
  • Live chat opportunities with NIH & HHS experts on the grants process and policies
  • Downloadable resources to reuse and/or share with others at your institution
  • Free registration! Yes, you read it right.

Are you excited yet? Keep tabs on the latest registration and agenda updates on the seminar site. We hope to “see” you there!

 


Are you contemplating working with a unpaid volunteer student?

SHARP can help you work out the logistics.  We can arrange for virtual access for OSU affiliates at no cost, and virtual access for non-OSU affiliates for a fee (to set up a virtual machine for them to remote to).

For more information, contact Judy M. Opalek, PhD (judy.opalek@osumc.edu)


SHARP Staff – Return to Campus

We are in the midst of our Return to Campus plan and you may be seeing us in the office more often. We need to adhere to the social distancing requirements in our shared space, and we will be working on modified schedules until a full return is feasible. All SHARP staff continue to be reachable by phone, email, and text, whether in the office or working remotely. We appreciate your patience during this time.

Please note that the SHARP staff are working 100% remotely at this time and are still fully available for virtual meetings and discussion.  We have nearly every normal tool at our disposal during this time and are only limited by face-to-face interactions and campus-based physical resources. If you have any questions or concerns—reach out!

 

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