NHGRI Launches Social And Behavioral Research Branch
U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
National Human Genome Research Institute
http://www.genome.gov
CONTACT: Geoff Spencer
(301) 402-0911
spencerg@mail.nih.gov
Division of Intramural Research Attracts Duke Researcher to Spearhead
Trans-NIH Center on Social and Behavioral Research
BETHESDA, MARYLAND — The
National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) announced today
the formation of a new branch— the Social and Behavioral
Research Branch (SBRB)— within its Division of Intramural Research
(DIR). The new branch will develop cutting edge approaches to translating
the discoveries from the recently completed Human Genome Project
into interventions for health promotion and disease prevention, and
for counseling patients and families dealing with the impact of devastating
genetic disorders. The SBRB also will investigate the complex social,
ethical, and public policy impact of genomic research.
Eric D. Green,
M.D., Ph.D., NHGRI's scientific director and director of the Division
of Intramural Research, said the launch of this new
branch is part of the natural evolution of the division.
"
We have long recognized the importance of social and behavioral
research as it pertains to advances in genetics and genomics," said
Dr. Green. "Now that we are about to embark on translating
the information from the Human Genome Project into research on
better ways to prevent
and manage human illnesses, the time is appropriate for this important
area to have its own dedicated branch."
To head the new DIR
branch, NHGRI recruited a prominent behavioral epidemiologist from
Duke University, Colleen McBride, PhDAs director
of the Cancer Prevention, Detection and Control Research Program
at Duke, Dr. McBride's work focused on developing and evaluating
population-based interventions directed at smoking cessation and
identifying "teachable moments" for changing behaviors
that put people at increased risk for developing disease. Dr. McBride
joined the Duke program in 1995 and began serving as the director
in 1997.
Dr. McBride, who received her doctorate in behavioral epidemiology
from the University of Minnesota in 1990, also has interests in
health behavior change interventions in community and health care
settings
and in using risk communications to motivate behavioral change.
She said she is excited about the challenges and opportunities
presented
by advances in human genomic discoveries. Starting this new research
branch within NHGRI, she said, has involved extensive planning
and discussion with experts from around the country.
"
This is an exciting time for social and behavioral researchers who
in the coming years will be responsible for translating discoveries
from genome research into medical care and public health interventions," said
Dr. McBride.
"
The research landscape is wide open and research programs like
SBRB will have unprecedented opportunities to do truly innovative
research.
I and my colleagues around the country give kudos to NHGRI for
its forward thinking in acknowledging the centrality of social
and behavioral
science."
According to Dr. McBride, the SBRB's research portfolio
will encompass four conceptual domains:
- Testing communications
strategies aimed at relaying an individual's risk for developing
a genetic condition.
- Developing and evaluating interventions aimed
at reducing genetically susceptible individuals' risk of acquiring
a disease.
- Translating genomic discoveries to clinical practice.
- Understanding
the social, ethical, and policy implications of genomic research.
There
will be a number of research groups within the SBRB. They include
a behavioral genetics unit; a health communications
unit;
a genetic
counseling service unit; a health promotion research
section that includes a unit for disseminating counseling research
methods; a community genetics research unit; and an
ethics
and social
policy
unit that includes research ethics. In addition, there
will be several
cross-cutting themes addressed by researchers in the
new branch, including the implications of genomic discoveries and
research
for health disparities, the ethical and legal implications,
and strategies
for information dissemination to medical and other
communities.
In
addition to heading the new NHGRI branch, Dr. McBride also will
spearhead the development of a trans- institute
Social & Behavioral
Science Center (SBSC) within the National Institutes
of Health (NIH). The SBSC will be designed to hasten
the progress
of behavioral and
social science research among participating NIH intramural
research programs. A cadre of social and behavioral scientists
from various
NIH institutes and disciplines - including experimental
and clinical psychologists, sociologists, geneticists,
public health experts,
ethicists, decision scientists, community health professionals,
informaticists, and health communications specialists—
will be housed together in
the new center. Although many NIH institutes sponsor
social and behavioral research through their external,
or extramural,
grants- making divisions,
the SBSC will bring a new focus to this type of research
among the intramural research community.
The trans-NIH
SBRC will house the complete staff of NHGRI's new SBRB
as well as investigators and staff from the
National Institute
of
Mental Health (NIMH) and the Office of Behavioral and
Social Sciences Research (OBSSR). And because the SBSC
is designed
to be truly
collaborative, faculty and staff from the participating
institutes will be intermixed,
with offices configured to maximize cross- institute
interactions.
"
Many perspectives will be needed to translate human genome discoveries
into interventions that can address public health problems such as
obesity," said Dr. McBride.
"
Having a group of social and behavioral scientists that cross the
institutes of NIH in shared space is a new way of doing business
that - in my mind - will enable the kinds of ongoing conversations
and collaborations that are needed to encourage health research innovation."
NHGRI
Director, Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., agreed that the creation
of the SBSC, which is slated to open in January 2005, will
provide a unique resource for NIH intramural investigators.
"This new center will offer the best of all worlds to NIH intramural
research programs," explained Dr. Collins. "It will enable
sophisticated and rigorous cognitive and behavioral measurement techniques,
innovative intervention development and testing, and state-of-the-art
training in research methodologies. These kinds of infrastructure
elements do not currently exist at any of the NIH institutes, including
NHGRI."
The SBSC will achieve several important objectives for
all of NIH's intramural research programs. First, it will enable
NIH to rapidly
respond to evolving research priorities because their proximity
can facilitate collaborations among groups of social and behavioral
researchers
with multidisciplinary perspectives. Second, it will create economies
of scale by providing access to a shared infrastructure, including
sophisticated cognitive and behavioral assessment technologies,
statistical expertise, visiting scholars and trainees, and common
library and
meeting space. Third, it gives an identity and high visibility
to social and behavioral research within the NIH intramural research
program. And finally, it allows for interdisciplinary and cross-institute
training and career development for intramural scientists who want
to gain or sharpen their expertise in social and behavioral research.
According
to Dr. Green, this trans-NIH initiative is indicative of the growing
need for multidisciplinary approaches to address complex
problems. "This is yet another example where trans-institute
initiatives can play an extremely important role in bringing together
people from different institutes who are facing research questions," said
Dr. Green. "By co-locating these individuals under one roof,
it will allow them to share resources and approaches and ideas for
developing innovative ways to address these complex issues. In addition,
we are delighted to have recruited such a highly regarded behavioral
and social scientist as Dr. McBride to head up our branch and provide
critical leadership within the SBSC."
NHGRI is one of the 27
institutes and centers at NIH, an agency of the Department of Health
and Human Services.
Additional information about NHGRI can be found
at its Web site, http://www.genome.gov
To access information about
NHGRI's new SBRB, go to http://www.genome.gov/11508936
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