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Advancing Science for Global Health
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Fogarty awards $22M through new HIV research training program

September / October 2013 | Volume 12, Issue 5

Woman researcher in white lab coat and gloves works in lab
Photo by David Rochkind/Fogarty

Fogarty's HIV Research Training Program supports
research to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic, while
building expertise in a particular scientific or critical
research infrastructure area.

A new NIH program supporting HIV-related research training will provide $22 million over five years for activities in 15 low- and middle-income countries. Fogarty's HIV Research Training Program is issuing 22 awards, which are intended to strengthen the ability of the grantee institutions to combat the HIV/AIDS epidemic, while building expertise in a particular scientific or critical research infrastructure area. Successful applicants proposed a broad range of focus topics including nutrition, mental health, co-infections and various aspects of implementation science, among others.

"These awards, which comprise the first round of funding for this new program, will help scientists and clinicians in developing countries to build much-needed research infrastructure," said Fogarty Director Dr. Roger I. Glass. "The resulting advances will benefit all, providing trainees the opportunity to collaborate with NIH researchers on U.S. government-funded HIV/AIDS initiatives."

Weill Cornell Medical College's award will help train a multidisciplinary group of investigators to conduct HPV vaccine trials and study cervical cancer at the Haitian Group for the Study of Kaposi's Sarcoma and Opportunistic Infections in Port au Prince. A grant to University of Washington will support training at Kenya's largest teaching hospital in implementation science and health metrics, with the goal of improving health care infrastructure. Developing a social and behavioral sciences platform focused on HIV/AIDS care at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre in Tanzania will be the purpose of Duke University Medical Center's funding. Dartmouth Medical School will also establish a new project in Tanzania, providing training designed to improve the prevention and treatment of HIV-TB coinfections through clinical and operational research. A new initiative examining the role of nutrition and metabolic health in HIV will be established in Namibia by Tufts University.

Additional awards (see full list below) will focus on a wide range of HIV research and treatment issues, including mental health, male circumcision, drug resistance, research methodology, mother-to-child transmission, noncommunicable diseases and management and analysis of datasets. Five institutions are receiving planning awards, much smaller grants that will eventually facilitate new training in Kenya, Peru, Rwanda, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

The new program, which focuses on increasing capacity at the institutional level, consolidates two long-standing Fogarty programs, the AIDS International Training and Research Program (AITRP) and the International Implementation, Clinical, Operational and Health Services Research Training Award for AIDS TB (IICOHRTA-AIDS/TB) program.

The awards are partly supported by NIH funding partners, the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

Full Awards - Fogarty HIV Research Training Program

Infrastructure Training Program Grant - Fogarty HIV Research Training Program

Planning Grants - Fogarty HIV Research Training Program

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