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Research Infrastructure Core Facilities at Research Centers in Minority Institutions: Part I-Research Resources Management, Operation, and Best Practices.

Paul B TchounwouMohamad MalouhiElizabeth O OfiliEmma Fernandez-RepolletDaniel F SarpongRichard YanagiharaRenato J AguileraCecilia AyónXiaoxin ChenAsok DasmahapatraSong GaoCimona V HintonRobert HoltVladimir L KolesnichenkoMichael D PowellFatima A MerchantKinfe K ReddaAbiel Roche-LimaCecilia M ShikumaJacqueline J StevensJose A TorresRobert T TrotterJames WachiraPaul C WangKristen J WellsJason WhiteYanyuan Wu
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2022)
Funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Research Centers in Minority Institutions (RCMI) Program fosters the development and implementation of innovative research aimed at improving minority health and reducing or eliminating health disparities. Currently, there are 21 RCMI Specialized (U54) Centers that share the same framework, comprising four required core components, namely the Administrative, Research Infrastructure, Investigator Development, and Community Engagement Cores. The Research Infrastructure Core (RIC) is fundamentally important for biomedical and health disparities research as a critical function domain. This paper aims to assess the research resources and services provided and evaluate the best practices in research resources management and networking across the RCMI Consortium. We conducted a REDCap-based survey and collected responses from 57 RIC Directors and Co-Directors from 98 core leaders. Our findings indicated that the RIC facilities across the 21 RCMI Centers provide access to major research equipment and are managed by experienced faculty and staff who provide expert consultative and technical services. However, several impediments to RIC facilities operation and management have been identified, and these are currently being addressed through implementation of cost-effective strategies and best practices of laboratory management and operation.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • public health
  • quality improvement
  • health information
  • social media
  • health promotion
  • affordable care act
  • palliative care
  • risk assessment
  • climate change
  • medical students