Fri, Sep 5, 2025

12:30 PM – 2 PM EDT (GMT-4)

Add to Calendar

Private Location (register to display)

View Map
0
Registered

Registration

Options Sales Start Sales End Availability Price
Option RSVP for In-Person

Sales Start May 22, 2025 at 1 AM Sales End Sep 5, 2025 at 12:30 PM Availability 100
Spots Left
Price FREE
Option RSVP for Zoom

Sales Start May 22, 2025 at 1 AM Sales End Sep 5, 2025 at 12:30 PM Availability Unlimited Price FREE

This event is open to specific members only. You need to Sign In

Details

Collaborate & connect with outward-focused CWRU allies at the new MidTown Collaboration Center. Be a part of our unified efforts to collectively incite positive change in our neighborhoods and our university. Join us for lunch (a pre-order link for self-purchase meals will be available in August, or you are welcome to pack your own!), updates, resources, and news of exciting things ahead. This month's featured presentation is the Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative (CTSC), and we'll share ways you can integrate your outreach and engagement activities in Collaboratory on your unit's website as well as the FIS for university faculty! This in-person meeting has limited space, so please register to attend ASAP. We will have a waiting list, and there will always be a virtual option and recording. We hope to see you there! Please also let us know if this invitation has arrived to you in error, or if you wish to invite someone to join you or attend in your stead. All questions may be directed to Kate Klonowski, Director of Local Government & Community Relations at kak121@case.edu, (216) 368-1723, or (216) 534-3498 (text ok).

Speakers

Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative ( CTSC )'s profile photo

Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative (CTSC)

The Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative (CTSC) of Northern Ohio, a collaborative among Case Western Reserve University and its affiliated hospital systems, the Cleveland Clinic, MetroHealth, University Hospitals, VA Northeast Ohio Healthcare System, Northeast Ohio Medical University, and the University of Toledo aspires to be a catalyst for high quality clinical and translational science and transformative research to positively impact the health of those in Northern Ohio and beyond.

Translational science focuses on the scientific and operational principles underlying each step of the translation process—understanding these processes, identifying effective approaches, and removing barriers speeds the adoption of best practices into community settings and helps bring more treatments to more people more quickly. For nearly 15 years, the CTSC, supported principally by NIH funding, has enhanced the quantity and quality of clinical and translational science among our partners by facilitating novel research paradigms, technologies, and training. Our CTSC has developed a new generation of researchers, enhanced collaborations among investigators, streamlined discovery by building partnerships among industry and community and organizational partners, and facilitated many successful entrepreneurial startups.

In the 2023-2030 grant cycle, our CTSC is focusing particularly on including the community in the process of clinical and translational research. We will work to improve broad participation in clinical trials so that the results will be broadly applicable and can be widely accepted in the communities we serve and develop new strategies for implementation. We will train a robust workforce at all levels (including community liaisons) who represent the community as well as academia. We are determined that everyone in Cleveland—and beyond—should benefit from advances in CTS in our programs and discoveries. In order to achieve this goal and improve health in all our communities, we are restructuring our CTSC activities for the upcoming funding cycle, redirecting our focus and goals around our community around the theme: “Catalyzing Linkages for Equity in Health,” or “CLE Health”.

The CTSC of Northern Ohio has created a solid foundation to ensure rigorous and innovative training of the clinical and translational workforce, to accelerate the translation of discoveries to patients, to improve the health of Northern Ohioans, and to provide scalable models for others throughout the nation. To realize its vision, the CTSC of Northern Ohio proposes to engage all C/T science stakeholders, the workforce, patients and community members to collaborate locally, regionally, and nationally, to




  1. understand the fundamental barriers to optimal recruitment in clinical trials,

  2. facilitate and expedite innovation in multi-center clinical and translational research by fully integrating community and stakeholder partners and ensuring that this research represents the experiences of all and results in health improvements for all,

  3. disseminate and implement novel and responsive research programs across clinical and community settings to advance access to health interventions that aim to promote health equity, and

  4. create and disseminate high-impact educational and training programs for translational research professionals of all disciplines and levels, both in clinical and community settings. As described below, individual modules within CLE Health will work to catalyze scientific discovery to increase health equity and improve health outcomes in our communities.



Commitment to collaboration and innovation in translational science remain top priorities as the CTSC implements its aims and builds the new iteration of the Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative of Northern Ohio. 



The Clinical and Translational Science Collaborative of Northern Ohio is funded by the National Institutes of Health, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Clinical and Translational Science Award (CTSA) Program which supports a national network of over 60 medical research institutions — called hubs ― that work together to improve the translational research process to get more treatments to more patients more quickly. The hubs collaborate locally and regionally to catalyze innovation in training, research tools and processes.  The CTSA Program is designed to develop innovative solutions that will improve the efficiency, quality and impact of the process for turning observations in the laboratory, clinic and community into interventions that improve the health of individuals and the public.


Sponsors

Sponsor's Logo

Hosted By

Office of Government & Community Relations | Website | View More Events

Contact the organizers