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USF beats out Harvard, Emory and University of Florida for prestigious grant


Dogma

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Jun 4, 2014, 2:55pm EDT Updated: Jun 5, 2014, 2:22pm EDT
USF beats out Harvard, Emory and University of Florida for prestigious grant
 

Marin Guta

 

Editorial Intern- Tampa Bay Business Journal
 

When Dr. Carol Bryant, director of University of South Florida’s College of Public Health Prevention Research Center, saw the center’s scoring in the competition for a $750,000 federal fund, she let out a sigh of relief.

Based on the scoring, the college’s center had a good chance of being one of the lucky 26 prevention research centers to receive the highly competitive fund from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The center was selected and will receive $750,000 for the first year of a five-year funding period, which will total $4.35 million over five years . The fund goes to help research centers work within the community to translate research findings into effective public health practices.

 

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More:

http://www.bizjournals.com/tampabay/news/2014/06/04/usf-beats-out-harvard-emory-and-university-of.html?ana=twt

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Good job.

 

Dogma, are you CyberBull on the AAC Talk site? I saw that he also posted this article there around the same time you did.

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Go Bulls!

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Good job.

 

Dogma, are you CyberBull on the AAC Talk site? I saw that he also posted this article there around the same time you did.

 

Haha...no.

Funny timing between the posts I guess.

 

I pretty much stopped going to that site once the old BEast dissolved and the AAC was formed.

The Old BEast forum had more of a "us against the world" mentality where most people got along and were unified for conference respect.

 

Now it's become a trolling and pissing contest... especially by posters of the new members.

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Good job.

 

Dogma, are you CyberBull on the AAC Talk site? I saw that he also posted this article there around the same time you did.

 

Haha...no.

Funny timing between the posts I guess.

 

I pretty much stopped going to that site once the old BEast dissolved and the AAC was formed.

The Old BEast forum had more of a "us against the world" mentality where most people got along and were unified for conference respect.

 

Now it's become a trolling and pissing contest... especially by posters of the new members.

 

 

I don't post there, but I stop by every now and then to read a few USF related threads.  

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Jun 4, 2014, 2:55pm EDT Updated: Jun 5, 2014, 2:22pm EDT
USF beats out Harvard, Emory and University of Florida for prestigious grant
 

Marin Guta

 

Editorial Intern- Tampa Bay Business Journal

 

When Dr. Carol Bryant, director of University of South Florida’s College of Public Health Prevention Research Center, saw the center’s scoring in the competition for a $750,000 federal fund, she let out a sigh of relief.

Based on the scoring, the college’s center had a good chance of being one of the lucky 26 prevention research centers to receive the highly competitive fund from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The center was selected and will receive $750,000 for the first year of a five-year funding period, which will total $4.35 million over five years . The fund goes to help research centers work within the community to translate research findings into effective public health practices.

 

---

More:

http://www.bizjournals.com/tampabay/news/2014/06/04/usf-beats-out-harvard-emory-and-university-of.html?ana=twt

 

 

 

Mixed emotions here.

 

Congrats to USF for receiving a new grant.

 

We really do need to be reducing our federal spending. ASAP.

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i wish we would have comparable results in sports

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i wish we would have comparable results in sports

:facepalm:

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Who are the other 26?

The article is not really clear about how the funding is allocated.

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Who are the other 26?

The article is not really clear about how the funding is allocated.

Press Release

For Immediate Release: Thursday, May 30, 2014

Contact: CDC Media Relations

(404) 639-3286

CDC awards $19.5 million to Prevention Research Centers nationwide

Awardees to conduct innovative public health prevention research to reduce health disparities

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has awarded $19.5 million to 26 academic institutions in 25 states to study how people and their communities can avoid or counter the risks for chronic illnesses, such as heart disease, obesity, and cancer. The funds will support the development and evaluation of practical public health prevention interventions. The awards are for the first year of a five-year funding period.

“Prevention Research Centers have reached up to 31 million people in 103 partner communities, some of which are the most underserved in the country,†said Ursula E. Bauer, Ph.D., M.P.H., director of CDC’s National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion. “By involving communities in conducting and disseminating research, this network of centers ensures that effective and innovative health strategies can be readily shared and applied where most needed.â€

Prevention Research Centers (PRCs) are committed to conducting prevention research and are leaders in translating research results into public health policies and practices that drive major sustainable community changes that can prevent and control chronic diseases and improve overall health.

“Preventing chronic disease is critical to improving our nation’s well-being and avoiding excessive health care costs,†said Wayne Giles, M.D., M.S., director of CDC’s Division of Population Health. “Our investment in the prevention research centers moves us closer to ensuring all Americans share the richness of good health.â€

The 26 PRCs that will design, test, and disseminate innovative and effective applied public health prevention research strategies are:

University of Alabama at Birmingham

University of Arizona

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

University of California, San Francisco

Case Western Reserve University

Dartmouth College

University of Illinois at Chicago

University of Iowa

Johns Hopkins University

University of Kentucky

University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester

Morehouse School of Medicine

University of Minnesota

University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center

New York University School of Medicine

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Oregon Health & Science University

University of Pennsylvania

University of Pittsburgh

University of Rochester

University of South Carolina at Columbia

University of South Florida

Tulane University

University of Washington

West Virginia University

Yale University

“The PRC Network is well-suited to work with public health and community partners to enhance the integration of public health and primary care,†said Mehran S. Massoudi, Ph.D., M.P.H. (CAPT, USPHS) director of the PRC Program at CDC.

For more information on the Prevention Research Centers and a map and complete listing of their locations, please visit CDC’s Web site at http://www.cdc.gov/prc.

http://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2014/p0530-research-centers.html

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