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Banking on Medical Futures
To mark Duke Medicine's 75th Anniversary
Science Symposium in September, the Duke Health System established
a $280 million academic fund to support research and education
programs at Duke's medical and nursing schools over the next decade.
"Duke is one of the nation's leaders in basic biomedical research
and in developing innovative ways of treating cancer, heart disease,
and many other medical problems," said Victor J. Dzau, Duke's
chancellor for health affairs and president and CEO of the health
system, in announcing the fund.
Dzau says the money will be used to fund initiatives in three areas:
- Discovery science, a term used to describe research projects
aimed at understanding biological processes at the molecular
level, with the anticipation that some of these discoveries
will lead to better understanding of how diseases occur;
- Translational science, which applies new discoveries and
technologies to the search for new methods of diagnosis and
treatment;
- Health-disparities research, aimed at addressing factors
such as race and poverty that contribute to diseases such as
diabetes, obesity, and HIV.
The medical school will create new scholarships to expand its Medical
Scientist Training Program, designed to train students for careers
as physician-scientists. The school will also support investigator-initiated
research projects that will allow scientists to explore new and
sometimes unconventional avenues of research.
"Researchers often are reluctant to take on projects that
are outside of the mainstream because they are afraid that they
won't be able to get grant funding," says R. Sanders Williams,
dean of the medical school. "This new funding will help us
to foster an environment at Duke where researchers can follow their
instincts and take risks.
"History has taught us that breakthroughs are often found
off the beaten path."
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