What is Human Participant Research?
OHRP/FDA Registration of the Wayne State University Institutional Review Boards
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ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS TO SELECT COMMITTEES |
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ALL FULL BOARD SUBMISSIONS |
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M1 (Medical IRB) (Effective 1/8/10) FULL BOARD PROTOCOLS FULL BOARD TABLED RESPONSES (new) FULL BOARD CONTINUATIONS (new) |
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ALL FULL BOARD SUBMISSIONS |
Wayne State University (WSU) operates its human participant research programs under a Federal Wide Assurance (FWA) with the Department of Health and Human Services. The FWA is on file with the Office for Human Research Protection, and carries an identification number of: FWA 00002460. The most current expiration date for this FWA can be found by clicking on the Federal Wide Assurance link above.
In accordance with this FWA, the Human Investigation Committee (HIC) is the primary Institutional Review Board (IRB) for WSU and its affiliated heath care institutions (Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute, Children’s Hospital of Michigan, Detroit Receiving Hospital/University Health Center, Sinai-Grace Hospital, Harper University Hospital, Huron Valley/Sinai Hospital, Hutzel Women's Hospital, Rehabilitation Institute of Michigan, John D. Dingell Veterans Administration Medical Center, and the Michigan Orthopedic Surgery Hospital).
Events
Calendar of Events
- Full List
- Professional and Academic Development Seminar: Grant Proposal Review at the NIH and NSF
- March 26 2010 at 1:00 PMThe Office of the Vice President for Research, Office of the Provost and the School of Medicine invite the campus community to attend the Professional and Academic Development (PAD) Seminar: Grant Proposal Review at the NIH and NSF on March 26th from 1 to 2:30 p.m. in the Welcome Center Auditorium. This PAD seminar will provide information on how NIH and NSF proposals are reviewed. Attendees will see a “mock review session” on an actual NIH grant proposal. The PI who wrote the proposal will discuss how the grant was revised in response to the actual reviewers’ comments. Attendees will hear from PIs who have successfully developed NSF proposals, and how they might have revised initial submissions that were not as successful. Examples of topics include: The NSF review process and rating system How to improve or re-conceptualize your unfunded NSF submission When should you talk to your NSF program officer What makes a proposal 'excellent' What it means for your proposal to have 'broad impact' Registration: Attendees are requested to register for this seminar. Once you have registered, Jo Ann Yucha will contact you in regards to viewing the proposal in advance of the seminar. Proposals will not be available the day of the seminar. Moderator: Christine Chow, Professor of Chemistry Panelists: Peter Hoffmann, Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy John Klein, Professor of Mathematics Guangzhao Mao, Professor of Chemical Engineering Mary Kay Pflum, Associate Professor of Chemistry Avraham Raz, Paul Zuckerman Professor of Oncology, Pathology and Radiation Oncology Melissa Runge-Morris, Acting Director, Institute for Environmental Health Sciences
- Nobel Laureate Sir John Walker to speak on molecular machine that produces the “energy currency of life”
- April 20 2010 at 1:00 PMDiscussing the molecular machine that synthesizes the energy necessary to sustain life, 1997 Nobel Chemistry Laureate Prof. Sir John E. Walker will be the featured speaker for Wayne State University’s 2010 Ahmed H. Zewail Gold Medal Award and Lecture. The event will take place April 20, 2010, in the Danto Engineering Development Center (EDC) Auditorium, located at 5050 Anthony Wayne Drive, from 1 to 3:30 p.m. A poster session for science and engineering will kick off the event in the EDC lobby and activity center areas at 1 p.m., followed by an introduction and presentation of the Zewail Medal at 2 p.m. in the EDC auditorium, and concluding with Walker’s lecture from 2:30 to 3:30. The event is free and open to the public. Registration is requested Walker received his Nobel Award, along with American chemist Paul D. Boyer, for elucidating the mechanism that produces adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, the molecule which is the energy currency for most metabolic processes in living organisms. His talk, “The mosaic structure of ATP synthase,” will discuss the state of the research on the the structure and mechanics of the highly complex molecular machine known as ATP synthase, which is instrumental to the synthesis of ATP. In order to provide energy to sustain life, the human body produces a quantity of ATP by this mechanism every day that is approximately equal to its body weight. Walker received a B.A. in chemistry from St. Catherine’s College, Oxford, in 1964. He began studying peptide antibiotics with Edward Abraham at the Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, Oxford in 1965 and received his Ph.D. in 1969. He worked abroad from 1969 to 1971 at the School of Pharmacy at the University of Wisconsin, and from 1971 to 1974 in France, was supported by fellowships from North Atlantic Treaty Organization and European Molecular Biology Organization, first at the French National Centre for Scientific Research at Gif-sur-Yvette, and then at the Institut Pasteur. In 1974 he joined the Protein and Nucleic Acid Chemistry Division at the Medical Research Council (MRC). In the late 1970s, he began the work that would lead to his discoveries on ATP synthase. Walker is currently the director of the MRC’s Mitochondrial Biology Unit in Cambridge, and a fellow of Sidney Sussex College. Walker and Boyer share the 1997 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Danish chemist Jens C. Skou.
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