The Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Program (IDCRP)
National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases
Investigators
Abstract
AIDS: Abstract: The Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Program (IDCRP) is a collaboration between NIAID (Division of Clinical Research) and the US military (Uniformed Services University) through an Inter-Agency Agreement. The objective of this IAA is to leverage the complementary resources of the US military and NIAID to design, conduct, analyze, and publish research on infectious diseases of military relevance through an effective research network that rapidly responds to evolving infectious disease threats. A current area of focus is the natural and treated history of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) among military active duty and beneficiaries, vis-Ã -vis the U.S. Military HIV Natural History Study and sub-studies. BIOD: Abstract: The Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Program (IDCRP) is a collaboration between NIAID (Division of Clinical Research) and the US military (Uniformed Services University) through an Inter-Agency Agreement. The objective of this IAA is to leverage the complementary resources of the US military and NIAID to design, conduct, analyze, and publish research on infectious diseases of military relevance through an effective research network that rapidly responds to evolving infectious disease threats. Current areas of focus include research areas of acute respiratory disease, travel/deployment related infections and skin/wound infections. These include diseases due to multi-drug resistant pathogens, the natural history and measurement of outcomes in influenza-like illness and COVID-19, evaluation of interventions in the prevention and treatment of skin infections including those due to methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, outcomes and natural history of trauma-related infections in the military, clinical trials evaluating interventions to treat and prevent travelers diarrhea, and studies related to the prevention and treatment of travel-related antimicrobial resistant infectious diseases in the military.
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