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Published in: Translational Behavioral Medicine 3/2015

01-09-2015 | Commentary

News from the NIH: potential contributions of the behavioral and social sciences to the precision medicine initiative

Authors: William T. Riley, PhD, Wendy J. Nilsen, Ph.D., Teri A. Manolio, M.D., Ph.D., Daniel R. Masys, M.D., Michael Lauer, M.D.

Published in: Translational Behavioral Medicine | Issue 3/2015

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Excerpt

At this year’s State of the Union address, the President announced a new $215 million Precision Medicine Initiative in the 2016 budget that will pioneer a new model of patient-empowered research that promises to accelerate biomedical discoveries and provide clinicians with new tools, knowledge, and therapies to select which treatments will work best for which patients [1, 2]. Concurrently, Directors of the National Institutes of Health and the National Cancer Institute, Drs. Francis Collins and Harold Varmus, respectively, published an article in the New England Journal of Medicine that describes two main components of this initiative, a near-term focus on cancer therapy and a longer-term effort to generate knowledge applicable to a wide range of health and disease [3]. This longer-term initiative seeks to generate a cohort of one million or more Americans to “enable better assessment of disease risk, understanding of disease mechanisms, and the prediction of optimal therapy for many more diseases, with the goal of expanding the benefits of precision medicine into myriad aspects of health and healthcare” [3]. …
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Metadata
Title
News from the NIH: potential contributions of the behavioral and social sciences to the precision medicine initiative
Authors
William T. Riley, PhD
Wendy J. Nilsen, Ph.D.
Teri A. Manolio, M.D., Ph.D.
Daniel R. Masys, M.D.
Michael Lauer, M.D.
Publication date
01-09-2015
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Translational Behavioral Medicine / Issue 3/2015
Print ISSN: 1869-6716
Electronic ISSN: 1613-9860
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13142-015-0320-5

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