FSU College of Medicine 2018 annual report 2018 Annual Report - FSU College of Medicine | Page 43

2 0 1 8 A N N U A L R E P O R T 41 HITTING MILESTONES IN RESEARCH FUNDING FSU researchers brought in more than million in funding during the fiscal year, a million increase over the prior fiscal year and the second-highest amount in a single year. The College of Medicine contributed one of the largest funding increases of any FSU college, receiving more than . million in new grants almost twice as much as the college produced two years ago. The research program has begun to carve out areas of strength and expertise as key hires are made to propel growth. Mental and behavioral health and recent hires in translational science are key factors in the ascent. I was brought in to really engage us in translational research and to integrate with our partners at FSU in doing that, said Jeffrey Joyce, senior associate dean for research and graduate programs. Translational research is about changing health outcomes, and we have to find our niches where we can effectively do that. Mental health and behavioral health is an area where we really have an opportunity. Joyce notes that the college s funding pattern is a sign of maturation as investigators attract larger awards. Our increasing dollar amounts indicate that we re getting larger grants, not necessarily more grants, which is an important milestone, said Joyce. The university has seen significant growth in National Institutes of Health NIH awards, including a percent increase in funding during the fiscal year - . million of that from the College of Medicine. We have enough NIH funding that we will no longer be able to get the Area R NIH grants, said Joyce. Those only go to colleges of health sciences in areas in which their IMPROVING BEHAVIORAL HEALTH CARE funding is less than million for five of the last seven years. Once you go over that, it means you no longer need to be in that level, you ve moved up. We re at a point now where we have to have formal programs and training to engage early career investigators to use those as a platform for their ability to move into bigger grants, he said. Our new milestones on the horizon are developing multi-investigator grants, which are substantially larger and cover costs that are important for the long-term facilitation of our research programs. While defining areas where the college will gain national prominence, growth in translational research will produce new diagnostics, treatments, therapies and interventions to positively impact health outcomes. Our research really supports our educational mission and it also demonstrates our ability to be leaders on this campus, and that s what I think a College of Medicine should be able to do, Joyce said. COLLEGE OF MEDICINE 2018 GROWTH IN RESEARCH FUNDING Awards Amount in millions . . . ACTIVE RESEARCH DOLLARS Amount in millions . . . The Department of Behavioral Sciences and Social Medicine already is elevating Florida State s reputation for behavioral health research, which addresses all aspects of mental health and wellness. As director of the FSU Center for Behavioral Health Integration, Heather Flynn is working to build programs and develop training to better address behavioral health concerns in primary care and other health-care settings. Primary care must do a better job of integrating the treatment of behavioral health issues, said Flynn, professor and vice chair for research in the department. Behavioral health issues include depression, anxiety, diabetes management, weight loss, smoking cessation, substance abuse and more. We re no longer going to have this artificial separation where you get your behavioral health treated in one place and your primary medical treatment at another it just doesn t work. Integrating behavioral health into multiple points of care is the only way to optimally address these issues. In , the center secured . million in annual funding for projects focused on obstetrics and pediatric settings, and social service sectors such as child welfare. The Florida departments of Health DOH , Education, and Children and Families have significant investment in the center s research. Most recently, the DOH partnered with Flynn on a . million grant from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration to address behavioral health in maternal health care. The grant will help develop a sustainable screening and treatment model for mental health and substance abuse in pregnant and postpartum women.