Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF CONNECTICUT SCH OF MED/DNT
Description
Abstract Text
Postdoctoral Training Program in Alcohol Studies
This renewal application is for five years of continued support of the Postdoctoral Training Program in Alcohol
Studies at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine (UConn Health). The program was established in
1980 and evolves with this renewal with transitions and additions among training faculty and new resources to
meet the needs of the next generation of scientists committed to understanding and reducing harms from
alcohol use and related consequences. To accomplish this, this program takes a collaborative,
interdisciplinary, and cross-campus (UConn Health, University of Connecticut (UConn-Storrs)) approach with
faculty representing numerous departments including psychiatry, computer science and engineering,
behavioral sciences and community health, medicine, and public health sciences. Our program continues to be
focused on alcohol. It also recognizes that alcohol use, intervention and treatment often occur in the context of
other substance use and comorbidities, and program faculty have substantial expertise in these areas.
Moreover, there is new attention to training opportunities in: mentoring, social determinants of health and
health disparities; data science; mobile technologies; and social media research. Further, while training faculty
have considerable experience in mentoring, supplemental training in best practices in mentoring and
contemporary issues is planned, for faculty and trainees. Throughout, an Executive Advisory Committee
composed of internal and external members will contribute to program oversight and evaluation. This program
provides three postdoctoral fellows with individualized and multimodal training for typically two and up to three
years. Fellows will select from four Core Research Areas in clinical and translational research: (1) Intervention,
Treatment and Recovery; (2) Etiology, Risk Factors and Comorbidities, (3) Health Services, Implementation
Science, and Translational research, and (4) Gut Microbiome, Liver Disease and Immunology. Our Addiction
Science and Principles of Clinical and Translational Research curriculums are examples of formal coursework.
Faculty collaborators and opportunities at external institutions will be available to extend training further.
Fellows will be assigned a primary and possibly a secondary mentor, based on similar research interests
across the core and elective areas. The primary mentor will provide instruction in methods, design, analysis,
and ethics of alcohol research within the trainee's core research area(s) and lead the trainee’s progress on
achieving program and personal professional milestones. Secondary mentors will do the same for their
research area. Expectations for trainees will be to: 1) produce at least two first authored publications per year
of training, 2) initiate and complete an independent or collaborative research project, 3) present research at
RSA and other scientific conferences, and 4) prepare a grant application by the end of the training period.
Given our successes in these objectively measured standards with recent trainees, this program is well-poised
to train the next generation of alcohol researchers.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative: Alcohol misuse is a significant public health concern. This training grant draws from
multiple disciplines to prepare postdoctoral fellows to investigate biological, behavioral, psychological, and
social mechanisms that underlie alcohol misuse and its treatment. It sets clear and objective standards to
assist fellows in successfully achieving a career in alcohol research, encourages professional development
and networking opportunities, and emphasizes health disparities and social determinants of health, data
science, social media research, and mobile technologies.
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
CFDA Code
273
DUNS Number
022254226
UEI
H6D6JMXJXDE6
Project Start Date
01-July-1980
Project End Date
31-March-2029
Budget Start Date
01-April-2024
Budget End Date
31-March-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$268,993
Direct Costs
$334,590
Indirect Costs
$24,607
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
$268,993
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 2T32AA007290-41
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.
No Publications available for 2T32AA007290-41
Patents
No Patents information available for 2T32AA007290-41
Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 2T32AA007290-41
Clinical Studies
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News and More
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History
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Similar Projects
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