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Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
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C
Workshop Agenda

IOM COMMITTEE ON ALTERNATIVE FUNDING STRATEGIES FOR DOD’S PEER REVIEWED MEDICAL RESEARCH PROGRAMS

April 26-27, 2004

Lecture Room, The National Academies

21st and C Streets, NW

Washington, D.C.

OPEN SESSION

Monday, April 26

9-10:30 AM

Greetings and opening statements about the charge to the committee by:

 

Joseph Pagano, M.D., Committee Chair (9:00)

 

 

  • Patricia Modrow, Ph.D., CDMRP Ovarian Cancer Research Program (9:15)

 

 

  • Leo Giambarresi, Ph.D., CDMRP Prostate Cancer Research Program Manager

 

 

  • Richard Kenyon, Ph.D., CDMRP Breast Cancer Research Program Manager

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×

10:30 AM12:15 PM

PANEL 1: STAKEHOLDERS (Robert Cook-Deegan, Moderator)

 

 

  • Fran Visco, President, National Breast Cancer Coalition

 

 

  • Rick Atkins, M.D., President and CEO, National Prostate Cancer Coalition

 

 

  • Ann Kolker, Executive Director, Ovarian Cancer National Alliance

 

 

  • Michael Coburn, President and CEO, Tuberous Sclerosis Alliance

 

 

  • Brenda Duffy, President, Neurofibromatosis, Inc.

1:15-3:00

PANEL 2: EXAMPLES OF PUBLIC PRIVATE RESEARCH FUNDING (Eric Campbell, Moderator)

 

 

  • Amy McGuire, Executive Director, Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

 

 

  • Robert Goldstein, M.D., Ph.D., Chief Scientific Officer, Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation

 

 

  • Gayle E. Lester, Ph.D., Program Director, Osteoarthritis Initiative Public-Private Initiative, NIAMS

 

 

  • Carole A. Heilman, Ph.D., Director, Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, NIAID

 

 

  • Robert O’Keefe, Vice President, Health Effects Institute

3:00-3:15

Break

3:15-5:00

PANEL 3: PERSPECTIVES OF NONFEDERAL RESEARCH FUNDERS (Samuel Broder, Moderator)

 

 

  • Alan Kinniburgh, Ph.D., Vice President, Medical & Scientific, Leukemia and Lymphoma Society

 

 

  • Robert C. Wells, J.D., Vice President for Government Relations and Public Policy, Affymetrix, Inc.

 

 

  • Ray Takigiku, Ph.D., Director of Core Technologies, Procter & Gamble Pharmaceuticals

 

 

  • Donald C. Harrison, M.D., Senior Vice President and Provost for Health Affairs Emeritus, University of Cincinnati

5:00-5:30

Open microphone for public statements

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×

Tuesday, April 27

8:30 AM

Maria Freire, Ph.D., CEO, Global Alliance for TB Drug Development, on lessons learned from the TB Alliance experience about public-private partnerships in biomedical research (Dr. Freire was previously head of NIH’s Office of Technology Transfer) (introduced by MaryAnn Guerra)

9:15-10:00

Queta Bond, Ph.D., President, Burroughs-Wellcome Fund, on the roles of philanthropy and the federal government in biomedical research (introduced by Joseph Pagano)

10:00-10:15

Break

10:15 AM12:00 PM

PANEL 4: PERSPECTIVES OF ACADEMIC RESEARCHERS AND RESEARCH ADMINISTRATORS (Thomas Caskey, Moderator)

 

 

  • Mina J. Bissell, Ph.D., Distinguished Scientist/Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

 

 

  • Chung Lee, Ph.D., Professor of Urology, Cell and Molecular Biology and Director, Prostate Cancer Program, Robert H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center, Northwestern University

 

 

  • Susan Ehringhaus, J.D., Associate General Counsel, Regulatory Affairs, Division of Biomedical & Health Sciences Research, Association of American Medical Colleges (former Vice Chancellor and General Counsel, UNC at Chapel Hill)

 

 

  • Hank Gardner, Dr.P.H., Associate Vice President for Research and Professor, Environmental & Radiological Health Sciences, Colorado State University

1:00-2:45

PANEL 5: STATE PERSPECTIVES ON PUBLIC-PRIVATE RESEARCH COLLABORATION (Frank Samuel, Jr., Moderator)

 

 

  • Dan Berglund, President and CEO, State Science and Technology Institute

 

 

  • Frank E. Samuel, Jr., Science Advisor to the Governor of Ohio

 

 

  • Marion H. E. Kavanaugh-Lynch, M.D., M.P.H., Director, California Breast Cancer Research Program

 

 

  • Phillip A. Singerman, Ph.D., Executive Director, Maryland Technology Development Corporation

 

 

  • Leslie M. Alexandre, Dr.P.H., President and Chief Executive Officer, North Carolina Biotechnology Center

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×

2:45-3:15

Robert D. Wells, Ph.D., President, Federation of American Societies of Experimental Biology, and Director, Center for Genome Research, Institute of Biosciences and Technology, Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, on the role of public-private partnerships in biomedical research (introduced by Musa Mayer)

3:15-3:30

Break

3:30-4:15

J. Leighton Read, M.D., General Partner, Alloy Ventures, Palo Alto, CA, on the roles of public funding and venture capital in biomedical research and biotechnology (introduced by Thomas Caskey)

4:15-4:45

Andrew A. Toole, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, Department of Agriculture, Food and Resource Economics, Cook College, Rutgers University, on the economics of collaborative public-private research funding (introduced by Maryann Feldman)

4:45-5:00

Wrap-up

5:00

Adjourn

Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×
Page 137
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×
Page 138
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×
Page 139
Suggested Citation:"Appendix C: Workshop Agenda." Institute of Medicine. 2004. Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD's Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11089.
×
Page 140
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Since 1992 the Department of Defense (DOD), through the U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command, has received congressionally earmarked appropriations for programs of biomedical research on prostate, breast, and ovarian cancer; neurofibromatosis; tuberous sclerosis; and other health problems. Appropriations for these Congressionally Directed Medical Research Programs are used to support peer reviewed extramural research project, training, and infrastructure grants.

Congress has become concerned about funding increases for these programs given current demands on the military budget. At the request of Congress, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) examined possibilities of augmenting program funding from alternative sources. The resulting IOM book, Strategies to Leverage Research Funding: Guiding DOD’s Peer Reviewed Medical Research Programs, focuses on nonfederal and private sector contributions that could extend the appropriated funds without biasing the peer review project selection process.

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