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Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Translational and Transformative Research and Contract
Management
April 20, 2011Gerberding Hall 142, University of Washington
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Speakers
Beth Hacker, Research NavigatorITHS, School of Medicine
Lynne Chronister, Asst Vice Provost of Research & Director of Sponsored Programs, OSP
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Translational Research and the Institute of Translational Health Sciences (ITHS)
Beth Hacker, Ph.D.ITHS Research Navigator
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
What is Translational Research?
Lab Clinic Community
• Uses knowledge from basic sciences to produce drugs, devices and treatment options for patients
• Dissemination and implementation of new treatments to target populations
• Multidisciplinary in nature
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Examples of Translational Research Projects Funded by the ITHS
• Using electronic communications to improve hypertension in the community (health care team, community, bioinformatics)
• Developing policy to overcome barriers for tissue biorepository sharing (scientists, clinicians, bioinformatics, ethics)
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
The ITHS is part of a nationwide consortiumof Clinical Translational Science Award sites
funded by the NIH
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
The ITHS is a working partnership between Regional Institutions and other CTSAs
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
ITHS Services
• Study Design and Data Management-Biomedical statistics (study design, randomization)-REDCap (Research Electronic Data Capture): free web-based tool for data entry, tracking and export-Electronic Medical Records data extraction
• Regulatory and Bioethics-Research Coordinator Core: trained research support staff-Data Monitoring Committee for multicenter trials-Bioethical issues in research: vulnerable populations
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
• Pre-Clinical Research Development Core-Development of a device that delivers therapeutics to the brain via upper nasal cavity-Ultrasound device to improve kidney stone imaging and expulsion
• Community Outreach and Research Translation-Health information sharing using Center for Native Digital Storytelling-Created a research network of WWAMI community practices-ResearchToolkit.org: help guide multisite collaborations
ITHS Services
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
ITHS Helps You Find Resourceswww.iths.org/resources
• Look up over 150 Research Core Facilities and Services throughout the WWAMI region
• Includes clinical, behavioral, population assessment, genomics, cell culture, fabrication and much more!
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Education and TrainingLifelong Learning Programs
www.iths.org/training/online
• Clinical Research Education Series-monthly -April: ”Statistical Issues in the Design and Conduct of Clinical Trials”
• Career Development Series-monthly -March: ”Tips to Get an Early Investigator Award”
• ITHS Bootcamp-Fall 2012 -Intensive lecture series addressing all aspects of translational research
• Comparative Effectiveness Research (CER)-2012 date not set -Discussion of methods, implementation and dissemination
**Most seminars are webcast and archived on ITHS website**
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Education and Training www.iths.org/education
Structured Learning Programs
• TL1 Predoctoral Training -Summer 2013 applications due March 2013 (12 slots) -Yearlong applications due Winter 2012 (12 slots)
• KL2 Postdoctoral Program -Training for up to 5 years -Applications for 2013 class due Oct 2012
• Tuition Support Fellows Program -MS/MPH Epidemiology or Health Services -Applications due Oct 2012(5 slots)
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Pilot Fundingwww.iths.org/funding
30% of completed ITHS pilot projects went on to receive follow up funding
• Small Pilot Project Grants-twice yearly
• Ignition Awards-preclinical
• ITHS Visiting Scholars Program Awards-WWAMI region
• Community/Practice/Tribe-based Research Activity Funding
• Multiple one time funding opportunities available throughout the year
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
How we can help you
• ITHS Navigator ([email protected]) -Point you to resources and answer questions -Contact person for Letter of Support
• Membership benefits (www.iths.org/membership) -Membership is free and open to anyone -Eligible for ITHS funding -Reduced rates for ITHS sponsored resources
• Letter of Support -5 day lead time
• Think Ahead and Start Early!
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
ResearchMatchA free, NIH sponsored online recruitment database of volunteers interested in learning more about research studies (not just clinical trials)
Researchers with UW approved IRB can request recruitment access
Researchmatch.org
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Dr. Beth HackerITHS Research Navigator
www.iths.org
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Contract Supported Research: How is it Different from Grant and Gift
Support?
Michael A. Corn, J.D.Associate Director
Office of Sponsored Programs
Faculty Brown Bag SeriesFriday, April 20, 2012
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Primary Distinction• Contract-supported research has the most
stringent performance requirements • Gift-support research has the least stringent
performance requirements• Grants are somewhere between contracts
and giftsNote: “Grant” terminology can be misleading and
inconsistent. Sometimes, a non-federal grant is really a gift and sometimes it is really a grant.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
What is a (Charitable) Gift?• A gift is a voluntary transfer of something of value
from a donor to a donee without consideration. • No quid pro quo – all benefits from a charitable gift
accrue to the general public, not to the donor.• Gifts may be either restricted or unrestricted (most
gifts are restricted and must be used for the purpose specified by the donor).
• Restrictions that provide special benefits to the donor can invalidate a charitable gift.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
GrantsGrants are assistance. There is generally some flexibility in scope of work with spending and outcomes unknown. Other than reports, a deliverable is typically not required for grant-supported research, only effort. Federal grants are guided by OMB Circulars A-110 and A-21.Grants are not benefits or entitlements. A federal grant is an award of financial assistance from a federal agency to carry out a public purpose and is authorized by a law of the United States.Grant awards are still documented through a contract or other writing with the sponsor, but they are not contract-supported research.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
What is a Contract?• A contract is a legally enforceable agreement
between two parties setting forth the parties’ rights and obligations.
• A contract requires the assent of legally competent parties.
• A contract must be supported by consideration to be enforceable – each party generally ends up with both benefits and burdens.
• A contract does not always need to be in writing, but most are.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
More about Contracts
• Federal prime contracts (contracts between the US Government and its contractors) are subject to federal law, including Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR’s).
• FAR’s are typically referenced by numbers.• Industry contracts that are federal flow through
are also governed by FAR’s. Other industry contracts are governed by other state laws and codes such as the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC).
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Federal Flow Through• A contract may be in the form of a
secondary award from a prime awardee under an original federal contract.
• Project funds are treated as federal funds – there will be additional special federal terms and conditions.
• Many of the original federal contract terms and FAR’s will apply to the subawardee/subcontractor (they will “flow-down”) .
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
When the Contract First Arrives…
If you must achieve milestones in order to get paid, are the schedule and other performance requirements reasonable?
Are there deliverables or guarantees?Is it cost reimbursable or fixed price?What about unexpended funds at project
end?Can you meet the reporting requirements?
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Academic Contract Issues…Freedom to publish?Sponsor review (not approval) and
publication delay rights?Confidentiality requirements?Intellectual property rights?Personnel restrictions?Limitations on working with third parties?Is it research or service/testing work?
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Financial Issues…Spending restrictions and re-budgeting
authority?Is there flexibility in the work plan? Who pays
if there are unusual problems?Ownership of purchased equipment?Travel reimbursement?Indirect cost/overhead rates?Salary limits?Cost-sharing?
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
The Most Important Thing to Remember (Business Risk 101)!!!
• Contract-supported research typically requires providing deliverables in addition to reporting results.
• A failure to deliver exactly what is agreed may mean the sponsor does not have to pay!
• The risk of non-payment is a local burden (PI and department), not a central administration responsibility.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Who Signs?
• The duly-authorized representatives of both parties sign the agreement – the sponsor and UW.
• Only OSP has the authority to sign for the UW.
• Principal Investigator may sign as having “read and reviewed”.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Some Important Reminders…
• The research contract is between UW and the sponsor.
• The UW has an employment contract with the researcher.
• The official UW signatory must be a person authorized by the UW Regents.
• If refunding or non-payment occurs…. the pain flows down!
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Call of the Wild
UW enters into an agreement with a government agency at the request of a faculty member. She is not able to provide the agreed upon training programs because of lack of cooperation with the unit to be trained. No one is informed by the PI, so the UW continues to auto-invoice and the sponsor auto-pays. A whistleblower informs the state auditor and the information ends up on the news. UW (and the PI) is required to repay the funds.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Roles & ResponsibilitiesRole/Responsibility PI Dept OSP
Make contact with sponsor to discuss possible research funding/possible projects
X
Review conflict of interest (COI/SFI) X
Negotiate Non-Disclosure Agreement (if applicable) X
Negotiate budget/work with CRBB (if required) X X
Communicate with sponsor on contract issues X
Negotiate and sign contracts X
Understand the obligations for the agreement X X X
Obtain human subjects approval from IRB X X
Create a project calendar X X
Submit reports & deliverables X X
Monitor expenses and payments X X
Monitor Subcontracts X X
Submit invention statements to C4C X X
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
Best Practices
• Review contract terms carefully with both OSP and department administrators before the project begins.
• Keep in mind this is a contract, not a grant or gift.• Make note of special conditions.• Submit reports and provide deliverables exactly as
committed in the contract.• Follow agreed upon timelines and methodology.• Work with OSP to obtain in writing any changes in
scope, timelines or reporting.
Brown Bag Series on ResearchFaculty
More Best Practices• Do not charge expenses to a cost-reimbursement contract
unless they are part of the budget and are directly related to the work.
• If the sponsor has title to equipment, do not use UW funds to purchase it and do not use outside of project.
• Be sure to clearly understand the terms of any material transfer agreement (MTA).
• Closely monitor subawards. The OSP website has guidance and forms and information on two classes on subaward monitoring.
• Do not rely on verbal agreements or enter into side agreements with sponsor.