The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has grown from a one-room
bacteriology
laboratory in 1887 into a multibillion-dollar medical research
enterprise. While the NIH has remained true to its original
mission—pursuing scientific knowledge to improve people's
health—almost everything else about it has changed.Today, NIH comprises 27 Institutes and Centers that sponsor
medical research in areas ranging from cancer to diabetes and
from genomics to alternative medicine.With the dramatic increases in scientific knowledge as well as the
significant changes in diagnosis, treatment, prevention,
translation, and delivery of care, researchers must continue to
meet the challenges of tomorrow by adopting new strategies today.The NIH is pioneering a vision that will determine what the
agency should be and should do in this new “biomedical century.”
We are focusing our research energies in three specific areas:
exploiting new pathways of discovery; encouraging the formation
of interdisciplinary teams of the future; and reengineering the
clinical research enterprise.In the first area, we know that scientific research is
cost-effective because it saves lives and money in both the short
and the long run. Witness our successes in working with AIDS,
coronary heart disease, and cancer. We also know that health care
costs are continuing to spiral upward, partly due to the aging
population which is placing more and more demands on the system.To keep up with the projected increases in costs, the research
enterprise must not only accelerate the pace of discovery, but
also apply its research results in a timely manner. I believe
this is one of the greatest challenges we face in this biomedical
century.In the second area, discoveries in human biology are occurring at
unprecedented speed, presenting opportunities in medicine that we
could only dream about just a few years ago. But these
opportunities require a shift in how medical research is
conducted and funded.While investigator-initiated projects are the mainstay of
NIH-supported research, increasingly these projects involve
larger multidisciplinary teams of scientists. These teams might
include specialists in disciplines outside biology, such as
computer science, imaging, chemistry, mathematics, and
informatics. Such multidisciplinary science teams are the wave of
the future.I believe that we need to break down the walls that exist between
scientific disciplines, inside and outside NIH. We need to foster
the growth of interdisciplinary teams in order to maximize the
enormous potential of research to improve our lives.For its part, NIH is working to meet this challenge by filling
leadership positions at its Institutes and Centers with
outstanding scientists who have experience with this new paradigm.In the third area, we need to reengineer the national clinical
research enterprise in order to most effectively translate our
discoveries into clinical reality. The list of initiatives to
undertake is long, but necessary. It includes supporting
multidisciplinary clinical research training career paths,
introducing innovations in trial design, stimulating
translational research, building clinical resources like tissue
banks, developing large clinical research networks, and reducing
regulatory hurdles. We must also explore a standard clinical
research informatics strategy, which will permit the formation of
Nation-wide “communities” of clinical researchers made up of
academic researchers, qualified community physicians, and patient
groups.Alongside our dedicated efforts to pioneer a new vision for NIH
is the continuing need to attract the best and brightest
researchers. We in the scientific community realize the need to
cultivate and nurture minority talent if scientific research is
to remain a viable enterprise. Currently, we are experiencing
difficulty in retaining researchers from the minority
communities, especially through the doctoral levels.We must identify and attract students with potential early on and
not let them “fall through the cracks” of academia. We need to
consider novel approaches to encourage minority students to
remain in mainstream science. Providing students with
knowledgeable and supportive mentors and role models could serve
as an enticement.NIH has been a leader in supporting minority students throughout
their education, with numerous programs and policies in place to
increase the number of minorities in research careers. As
we take on the challenge of conducting scientific research in the
21st century by pursuing the NIH vision, it is absolutely
critical that we find ways to recruit and retain more women and
minorities in scientific careers.
Authors: Paul A Harris; Robert Taylor; Robert Thielke; Jonathon Payne; Nathaniel Gonzalez; Jose G Conde Journal: J Biomed Inform Date: 2008-09-30 Impact factor: 6.317
Authors: Diana L Price; Sunny K Chow; Natalie A B Maclean; Hiroyuki Hakozaki; Steve Peltier; Maryann E Martone; Mark H Ellisman Journal: Neuroinformatics Date: 2006