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Today family medicine is still trying to play catchup. But the goal is not necessarily to catch up with our partners at the academic health center. Rather, the research agenda is to create a primary care system that will meet the needs of the US population. The NIH Roadmap articulates the need to get scientific results closer to those who will need them, the patients. This "translation" as it is called today, is not a new concept; 10 years ago AHRQ (then known as the Agency for Health Care Policy and Research) had "dissemination" as a major priority after earlier work had shown that it takes far too long for the results of cutting-edge research to become general practice.
There are 3 main themes in the Roadmap.13 The first, called New Pathways to Discovery, involves primarily a basic science agenda. The other 2 themes, Research Teams of the Future and Reengineering the Clinical Research Enterprise, offer opportunities for family medicine researchers. Included are clinical research training programs, an understanding of the value of interdisciplinary research, and a recognition of the need to have somebody on the ground who actually sees patients for a living (the end note of translation). This is where practice-based research networks become necessary to the National Institutes of Health (NIH) mission as laboratories for understanding the results of innovation.
It is imperative that family medicine continue to advocate for research in the NIH. We have had some degree of success with more investigators receiving funding and increased funding of larger grants, including grants from specific Roadmap initiatives. This funding would not have been possible without a growth in the number of researchers, most of whom are faculty in academic units trained to do competitive research. Our discipline must continue to create a nurturing research culture to enhance the potential for those who represent our research vanguard.4 A part of this culture is the promotion of collaboration with other disciplines. We could benefit from increasing the number of family medicine representatives who serve on NIH study sections. We must also increase our influence on how requests for applications (RFAs) are worded to make sure that NIH understands how primary care contributes to true translation and the overall research of the nation. The barriers to family medicine on the road to the Roadmap can be overcome.
REFERENCES
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S. C. Lucan, R. L. Phillips Jr, and A. W. Bazemore Off the Roadmap? Family Medicine's Grant Funding and Committee Representation at NIH Ann. Fam. Med, November 1, 2008; 6(6): 534 - 542. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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B. Ewigman CTSAS AND FAMILY MEDICINE RESEARCH - TIME TO GET CONNECTED Ann. Fam. Med, March 1, 2008; 6(2): 181 - 182. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. S. Johnson, A. Davis, and The CTSA Strike Force Academic Family Medicine's Response to CTSA Ann. Fam. Med, May 1, 2007; 5(3): 275 - 277. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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