Latest News

New NIH consortium aims to coordinate pediatric research programs


 

The Trans-National Institutes of Health Pediatric Research Consortium is a new organization formed by NIH to coordinate its pediatric research programs across its institutes and centers.

Almost all of the 27 institutes and centers of the NIH fund at least some kind of child health research, totaling more than $4 billion in the 2017 fiscal year, according to an NIH statement. “The new consortium aims to harmonize these activities, explore gaps and opportunities in the overall pediatric research portfolio, and set priorities.”

Research funded by NIH “has resulted in tremendous advances against diseases and conditions that affect child health and well-being, including asthma, cancer, autism, obesity, and intellectual and developmental disabilities,” explained Diana W. Bianchi, MD, in the statement. Dr. Bianchi is director of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, the lead NIH institute for the consortium.

The new consortium, which will be led by the NICHD director, will meet several times a year.

Recommended Reading

ACS: Screen for colon cancer at 45
MDedge Pediatrics
TAILORx: Most women with intermediate risk ER+ breast cancer can safely skip chemo
MDedge Pediatrics
Hip pain predicts arthritis mortality beyond comorbidities
MDedge Pediatrics
Prostate cancer risk before age 55 higher for black men
MDedge Pediatrics
Statin effect in prostate cancer may be caused by reduced inflammation
MDedge Pediatrics
Smoking tied to localized prostate cancer recurrence, metastasis, death
MDedge Pediatrics
Suicide rate jumps 30%
MDedge Pediatrics
New cell-free DNA assays hold promise for lung cancer screening
MDedge Pediatrics
Allergies linked to autism spectrum disorder in children
MDedge Pediatrics
Study finds widespread use of medications with depression as side effect
MDedge Pediatrics