Three Kansas City Health Sciences Schools Partner in Musculoskeletal Disease Research Consortium
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 26, 2015 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences (KCU), the University of Missouri – Kansas City (UMKC) and the University of Kansas (KU) Medical Center proudly announce a research consortium among the three Kansas City-area institutions. The consortium brings together scientists and resources focused on the research of musculoskeletal disorders and diseases.
This unique consortium is the first initiative of its kind in Kansas City and provides opportunities to combine the individual strengths and resources of the three health sciences schools to advance translational research. Sometimes referred to as "bench to bedside," translational research harnesses knowledge from the study of basic sciences to produce new drugs, devices and treatment options for patients. The goal of this partnership is to build medical research teams that will focus on specific diseases of muscle and bone, thereby accelerating the process of turning discoveries into clinical treatments while also improving research education opportunities for health sciences students.
The consortium will be overseen by an executive committee comprised of Lynda Bonewald, PhD, vice chancellor for translational and clinical research at UMKC; Jeffrey Joyce, PhD, vice president for research at KCU; and Richard Barohn, MD, vice chancellor for research at the KU Medical Center. Dr. Bonewald will serve as the founding director of the consortium, with directorship duties rotating between each of the institutions.
"The consortium builds upon the individual strengths of each institution in basic and clinical research to truly improve the health of the communities we serve," said Dr. Joyce. "It leverages the investments and resources of each institution to maximize the impact on translational research in musculoskeletal diseases."
"We have the unprecedented opportunity to tackle diseases of the bone and muscle through the newly formed Kansas City Consortium," said Dr. Bonewald. "The goal of this consortium is to build powerful research teams of basic to clinical investigators from our three institutions to discover new treatments and cures. These research teams will give our students opportunities to work alongside these researchers to understand and optimally treat musculoskeletal disease."
"The KU Medical Center is pleased to partner with UMKC and KCU to collaborate on musculoskeletal research," said Dr. Barohn. "We are confident that our faculty and researchers, who are dedicated to finding cures for these debilitating diseases, can make even greater strides by working together."
This is the first formal agreement for joint research between the three universities' health sciences schools, but the region can look forward to more collaborative efforts. At a recent panel featuring the deans of these three schools of medicine, they each indicated their strong desire to foster collaboration.
"In my experience, I find the level of cooperation between medical schools in other states doesn't come close to the sense of what we are doing at KCU, UMKC and KU," said Bruce Dubin, DO, JD, executive vice president for academic affairs, provost and dean of the KCU College of Osteopathic Medicine. "This is a collaboration that doesn't exist anywhere and serves as a role model for the rest of the country."
Contact: Lisa Cambridge
Director of Public Relations
(816) 654-7038
(913) 602-8652 (cell)
[email protected]
SOURCE Kansas City University of Medicine and Biosciences (KCUMB)
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