Dual-Degree Medical Scientist Training Program for Veterinarians
Project Number1T32GM136628-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderVANDEWOUDE, SUE Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationCOLORADO STATE UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
This new Medical Scientist Training Program application from Colorado State University requests funds to
support a DVM-PhD dual-degree program with a 15-year history of translational clinician-scientist training. The
program currently recruits two students per year from a pool of approximately 40 applicants and has had a 100%
retention rate. Nineteen trainees have graduated; 79% are employed in a variety of academic, agency, and
nonprofit research positions. Five students have received NIH F30 dual-degree training awards since the first
year DVM-PhD students were eligible applicants in 2015. Over the last seven years, 5 of 13 recruits (38%) have
been from under-represented minority backgrounds and approximately 75% of all trainees are women. Trainee
research projects span diverse fields across the College of Veterinary Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, which
has supported exemplary pre- and post-doctoral veterinary research training programs for more than four
decades, and has provided nearly $2.4M in direct support for this program since 2004. Forty participating mentor
faculty (21 male, 19 female), represent a variety of career stages and expertise, and hold 172 active research
awards totaling over $22M (average $568K/mentor). These mentors have trained, or are training, 112
predoctoral and 145 postdoctoral trainees. Pre-doctoral trainees have published 403 total publications during
the last 10 years and 90% of those completing training have continued in research careers. MSTP students
supported by this application participate in a rigorous program of biomedical research training (3-4 years)
integrated with DVM didactic and clinical training (4 years). Students participate in ‘Translational Medicine’, a
dual-degree specific course that delivers expert instruction in communication, leadership, grant and manuscript
writing, team/interdisciplinary science, and importantly, encourages a sense of community and purpose for
trainees. New to this application is instruction in data reproducibility and management, mentorship training
provided by participating mentors in the CSU Center for Inclusive Mentorship, enhanced career development
training during final DVM clinical years, and robust program evaluation and outcomes assessments provided by
a senior evaluator from the CSU STEM center. An External Advisory Committee with experience in MSTP
programs has been assembled to provide expert guidance in directing programmatic success and growth. Over
the five-year award period we request funds to support a total of 22 trainee years to be distributed in years one
and two of DVM training. This funding will leverage institutional funds to expand the program by enrolling 4
additional trainees by the end of the award period, thereby maximizing the impact this MSTP T32 in fulfilling the
national need for translational biomedical scientists.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
This application requests funds to support DVM-PhD dual-degree training in translational
biomedical research. Well-trained veterinary scientists bring unique knowledge about
comparative biology that significantly contributes to the clinician scientist workforce and aids
studies of human health and disease.
No Sub Projects information available for 1T32GM136628-01
Publications
Publications are associated with projects, but cannot be identified with any particular year of the project or fiscal year of funding. This is due to the continuous and cumulative nature of knowledge generation across the life of a project and the sometimes long and variable publishing timeline. Similarly, for multi-component projects, publications are associated with the parent core project and not with individual sub-projects.
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Patents
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Outcomes
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Clinical Studies
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History
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