BU Clinical HIV/AIDS Research Training Program (BU-CHART
Boston Medical Center, Boston MA
Investigators
Linked publications, trials & patents
Abstract
The Boston University Clinical HIV/AIDS Research Training (BU-CHART) program prepares outstanding post-doctoral M.D and Ph.D. trainees for careers as scientific leaders in HIV/AIDS research.. BU-CHART focuses its training plan on four high-priority HIV research fields that address the substantial challenges that remain to ending the HIV epidemic: 1) substance use and HIV infection - a syndemic of substance use disorders and HIV infection fuels HIV outbreaks. 2) Tuberculosis co-infection - Tuberculosis is a leading causes of death among HIV-infected people; 3) HIV transmission and establishment of latency - HIV incidence remains stubbornly elevated, and early establishment of HIV latency remains a frustrating puzzle that limits progress to finding HIV cure; 4) HIV treatment and the accelerated aging process - we still seek safe and effective interventions to reduce the inappropriate immune activation that accompanies HIV infection and leads to end-organ disease. The training facilities include state-of-the-art research space at Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health and Boston Medical Center, the largest Safety-net hospital in New England. BU-CHART synergizes with existing training programs on campus, including the BU Clinical and Translational Science Institute (CTSI), the Providence-Boston Center for AIDS Research, and other T32- and R25-funded training programs on the BUMC campus. We pair our outstanding trainees with BU-CHART faculty mentors who are established investigators with NIH-funded research projects and experience mentoring. We provide a thoughtfully constructed training plan in scientific reasoning and experimental design, professional development, and the ethical conduct of human research. The result is a track record of training success. Since its inception, BU-CHART trained 37 MD and PhD post-doctoral fellows, of whom 29 (78%) remain in academic positions focused on HIV research. Among the 5 trainees who completed the program in the current grant cycle, all 5 remain engaged with research and science, 4 focused on HIV infection, and 1 is preparing a NIAID K23 award.
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