CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
April 24, 2008FSU ENTERS RESEARCH PARTNERSHIP
WITH MAYO CLINIC
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Two leaders in medicine, Florida State
University and Mayo Clinic, today signed an agreement to work as
research partners in the quest to improve health care outcomes for
Floridians and all Americans.
“Florida State University and the Mayo Clinic are accepting the
challenge and the responsibility of improving the quality of life
for Florida’s citizens,’’ said FSU President T.K. Wetherell. “In the
spirit of cooperation and collaboration, we can work together to
accomplish results that we expect will have a significant impact on
health care well beyond our state.’’
The agreement calls for interaction and collaboration between
researchers at FSU and Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., the
establishment of joint research programs and the exchange of
scientific and educational literature and research. The agreement
opens up unique opportunities to turn basic science into new cures
for a variety of diseases, from cancer to Alzheimer’s.
“Mayo Clinic’s history is one of teamwork and integration that
bridges the gap between basic science and the bedside,’’ said George
B. Bartley, M.D., chief executive officer of the Florida clinic.
“This new collaboration links our researchers with FSU’s talented
physicians, scientists and students to bring new discoveries to
Florida’s patients.”
One research project of mutual interest may be the Clinical Research
Network being developed at FSU’s College of Medicine, which offers
potential involvement of more than 1,200 faculty physicians whose
1.5 million patients represent a broad spectrum of health and
illness, gender, age and demographics. The network fits in well with
the recent emphasis at the National Institutes of Health on clinical
translational research, which involves taking research from the
laboratory to the bedside.
Mayo researchers gain access to FSU’s acclaimed National High
Magnetic Field Laboratory, where they will have the opportunity to
study proteins that play key roles in disease in new ways -- through
the lens of a magnetic field more than a million times stronger than
the Earth’s magnetic field.
By partnering with Mayo, FSU researchers will gain insight from a
health-care organization with more than 35 years of continuous
funding from the NIH and a Clinical Research Unit considered one of
the nation’s premier sites for conducting inpatient and outpatient
studies and clinical trials.
Mayo Clinic is the first and largest integrated, not-for-profit
group medical practice in the world. Of nearly 50,000 employees,
more than 6,000 are actively involved in medical research,
translating discoveries from the laboratory into improved patient
care.
FSU’s College of Medicine, the nation’s newest fully accredited
medical school, offers a Ph.D. in biomedical sciences in addition to
the M.D. Research projects underway at the college are being funded
by the NIH, the National Science Foundation, the American Cancer
Society and the National Institutes of Mental Health, among others.
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