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AIIHPC Structured Research Network APA Cycle 2 2019 Applied Partnership Awards Applying Research into Policy & Practice Postdoctoral Fellowships ARPP 2020 Cancer Prevention Fellowship Programme Cancer Prevention Fellowship Programme Reintegration Grant Capacity Building for Evidence Synthesis Clinical Research Facilities/Centres 2021 Cochrane Training Fellowships Collaborative Doctoral Awards Conference and Event Sponsorship Scheme COVID-19 2020 CSF 2020 DIFA - 2018 DIFA 2017 DIFA 2018 DIFA 2020 DIFA-2018 Doctoral Training Programme in Precision Medicine in Cancer Emerging Clinician Scientist Awards 2020 Emerging Investigator Awards Emerging Investigator Awards 2022 ERA-NET Cofund for Neuroscience Research (NEURON) ERA-NET Cofund for Personalised Medicine Framework for Safe Nurse Staffing and Skill Mix Fulbright-HRB Health Impact Awards Health Research Awards HRB Clinical Research Facilities HRB Collaboration in Ireland for Clinical Effectiveness Reviews HRB Postdoctoral Fellowships: ARPP 2023 HRB Postdoctoral Fellowships: CSF 2023 HRB Trials Methodology Research Network HRCI 2020 HRCI-HRB Joint Funding Scheme ICORG Statistics and Data Management Interdisciplinary Capacity Enhancement Awards Investigator Led Projects IPPOSI 2020 Irish Clinical Oncology Research Group Irish Platform for Patients Organisations Science and Industry Support Award Joint Programming Initiative Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life Joint Programming Initiative in Neurodegenerative Diseases Joint Programming Initiative on Antimicrobial Resistance Knowledge Exchange and Dissemination Scheme Knowledge Translation Awards Medical Research Charities Group Support Award MRCG-HRB Joint Funding Scheme National Children's Hospital Foundation Scheme National Clinical Trials Coordination Programme National integrated PhD programme for Medical Practitioners National Intellectual Disability Supplement to TILDA Patrick Quinn Awards for Parkinson's Research PPI Ignite Awards Project Development Grants Rare Diseases Research and Innovation Catalyst Awards (RDCat) 2023 RCQPS COVID-19 Research Collaborative for Quality and Patient Safety Research Collaborative in Quality and Patient Safety Research Training Fellowships for Healthcare Professionals RL FA 2020 RL PA 2020 Secondary Data Analysis Projects SFI-HRB-Wellcome Research Partnership Structured PhD Programme in Population Health and Health Services Research The Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing Ulysses Research Visits US-Ireland R&D Partnership Awards WHO-SOLI-2020
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Host Institution
Atlantic Technological University DCU Department of Agriculture, Food and Marine Dublin City University Dublin Dental University Hospital Dublin Institute of Technology Economic and Social Research Institute Family Carers Ireland Fondazione Telethon Fraunhofer ITMP Health Information and Quality Authority Health Research Charities Ireland HSE - St. Luke's Hospital (Rathgar) Institute of Technology Sligo IPPOSI Irish Blood Transfusion Service, National Blood Centre Irish Clinical Oncology Research Group Ltd Irish Platform for Patients Organisations Science and Industry Irish Platform for Patients' Organisations, Science and Industry Ltd Irish Platform for Patients’ Organisations, Science and Industry Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Limerick Institute of Technology Maynooth University Medical Research Charities Group Ltd National University of Ireland Galway National University of Ireland, Galway Our Lady's Hospice Queen’s University Belfast RCSI Royal College of Physicians of Ireland Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland TCD Teagasc Technological University Dublin The Alzheimer Society of Ireland The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Trinity College Dublin UCD University College Cork University College Dublin University Hospitals Leuven & KU Leuven University of Auckland University of California San Francisco University of Cambridge University of Galway University of Limerick University of Oxford UPMC Whitfield
Funding Awarded
53 awards
All-Island – US National Cancer Institute Joint Doctoral Training Programme in Precision - Cancer Medicine
Proposal: A unique Doctoral Training Programme (DTP) in Precision Cancer Medicine (PCM), involving tripartite collaboration between research-intensive institutions with a major focus on cancer in Northern Ireland (NI) and Republic of Ireland (RoI), in partnership with the US National Cancer Institute...
An investigation of the long-term impact of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy on maternal health, and exploration of optimal models of follow-up care for affected women in Ireland.
Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP) affect 18 million women annually. It is increasingly recognised that HDP are associated with increased risk of maternal cardiovascular and renal disease. Less is known about the risk of other chronic diseases, particularly those which emerge in older age, such as dementia, retinal vascular...
DEFINED: DEtermining Falls burden to INform carE Delivery
Background
Falls in later life are the most frequent reason for older people to present to acute care, and significantly increase the likelihood of adverse health outcomes. Many falls are potentially preventable however, with comprehensive falls care reducing the rate of further falls by 20%....
Improving public health through better implementation of alcohol policy: A multi-method study examining and addressing the factors influencing successful implementation
Background: Alcohol consumption places an enormous burden on society, causing over 200 disease and injury conditions globally. In Ireland, at least four deaths every day are caused by alcohol, which is key a target area of the Healthy Ireland Framework. The
Rare Disease Research Catalyst Consortium
Rare diseases each affect less than 5 in 10000 people, with about 300,000 Irish people estimated to be living with rare disease. Under the Cross Border Directive for access to healthcare, the European Union established 24 European Reference Networks (ERNs) for rare disease to enable equity of access to healthcare across...
RESTRICT - REducing intentional overdose: a mixed methods STudy of means RestrICTion interventions
Suicide and self-harm are serious public health problems, impacting significantly on individuals, families, communities, and health systems. Intentional drug overdose is the most common form of hospital-presenting self-harm and is a frequent method of suicide. Means restriction is an evidence informed measure to prevent suicide and...
Cerebral Palsy – The Adolescent Growth Evaluation Study (CP-AGE)
Background: Cerebral Palsy (CP) is the most common cause of long-term childhood disability. In Ireland, ~110 children with CP are born annually with approximately 70% being able to walk with or without aids. Some children with CP will experience a decline in walking related function through adolescence...
Artificial Intelligence approach to improving blood pressure treatment
Hypertension is the leading cause of premature death worldwide, but the prevalence of hypertension control remains low. Physician capacity (number of physician clinic visits available for hypertension care) is a critical rate-limiting, determinant of hypertension control resulting in a major care-gap in hypertension management in all...
Expecting the unexpected: can viral metagenomics enhance optimised standard diagnostic pathways for detection of imported pathogens?
Background
Current testing practices for imported fever syndromes in Ireland are heterogenous and suboptimal, prolonging clinical care and limiting data capture for early warning surveillance systems. Identifying and diagnosing aetiological pathogens for imported fever syndromes with a standardised...
Personal formularies in general practice to support safe, effective and cost-effective prescribing.
The use of personal formularies of safe, effective medicines that a prescriber is readily familiar with may enhance the quality of prescribing. Additionally, there is evidence that audit and feedback can lead to improvements in prescribing. The Drug Utilisation 90% (DU90%), (the number of medicines making up 90% of a doctor’s...
The HipCog Study: evaluating the impact of cognitive impairment on outcomes for older adults with hip fracture
Background: Over 3800 older people in Ireland experience hip fracture annually. These serious events have a one-year mortality rate of 20%. Since 2012, the Irish Hip Fracture Database (IHFD) has driven national clinical improvement and reduced variability of care across hospitals. While hospital-level care variation has decreased, it...
Targeting immunometabolism to protect children from Tuberculosis infection
Introduction
Tuberculosis is the top global infectious killer in the last decade. The neonatal period is the most susceptible time to TB infection, with increased risk of active and disseminated disease. TB treatments require months of multiple drugs and resistance to first line agents is increasing...
Identifying social determinants and mapping organisational and personal networks to enhance community support for people living with multimorbidity
Socially and economically deprived populations experience greater risk and earlier onset of multimorbidity. Healthcare services are one part of complex networks supporting people with chronic conditions. but knowledge of people’s social networks has not been used to inform and tailor chronic disease policy and programmes. Intersectoral...
Optimising the dissemination of health research in Ireland
Scientific publications have grown exponentially in recent years, contributing to an ‘infodemic’ widely seen during the Covid-19 pandemic. Public communication of scientific research can occur through individual researchers directly connecting with the public via social media or outreach events, however, many researchers struggle...
Revisiting suicide prevention in later life: human-centred approaches in an ageing Ireland
Globally, suicide is more prevalent in older adults when compared to any other age group. This is partly due to the fact that self-harm is more lethal among older adults, and this cohort has complex health conditions which influence recovery. Over the last six years, I have conducted research examining self-harm and suicidality in...
UCD’s 2nd Annual One Health Conference: Tackling Major Public Health Threats in a Post-Covid-19 World.
One health is a philosophy that acknowledges the interconnectedness of human, animal and environmental health. It recognises that to solve major challenges locally or globally, individuals or even groups of experts in one discipline can not solve them alone. It is recognized by the Irish Government, the European Union, the World Health...
Conference Event: Evidence-based approaches for innovation in patient centred care models in Ireland
The conference will focus on evidence-based approaches for embedding innovation into new models of care that are patient-centred in Ireland. Patient-centred models of care mean the patients and their carers are involved in the process planning, implementation and audit of how their illness is managed. These types of models give...
Priorities for future research on tapering psychiatric medicines: A collaborative workshop involving people with lived experience, family members, and healthcare professionals
A growing number of people with experience of mental health problems want to reduce and stop their use of psychiatric medicines, such as antidepressants and anti-anxiety tablets. There are many reasons for this ranging from side-effects to people feeling that the medicine is no longer needed. Tapering is the recommended process for...
Digital Surgery- Building a National Ecosystem
Digital surgery represents a significant step into the 21st century for surgical practice by combining technological advances in smart instruments, computer vision, artificial intelligence and cloud computing together with surgical expertise to improve patient outcomes and deliver enhanced healthcare value and outcomes. Despite still...
Measuring Outcomes of Social Prescribing
Social Prescribing (SP) is a non-medical community-based service that links people with health-promoting activities and support services in their local community. SP is usually delivered by link workers who meet with individuals to identify their activity and/or support needs. Following this, the link worker either provides information...
Creating Connections : A Dravet Syndrome Ireland - FutureNeuro Alliance
This event is being hosted on June 10th 2023, by Dravet Syndrome Ireland and the SFI FutureNeuro Research Centre for chronic and rare neurological diseases, with the support of Dublin Sports Partnership, Sports Inclusion Disability Officer (SIDO). The purpose of the event is to bring families and caregivers affected by...
Partnerships in Practice: Family Carers Ireland’s Annual Research Conference 2023
This half day event is a knowledge-exchange seminar that facilitates the exchange of learning amongst stakeholders with an interest in the caring sector. In particular, through a focus on research that Family Carers Ireland (FCI) has supported, the event demonstrates the value of partnership in practice. It will be hosted by FCI with...
Connecting Molecular Networks of Cancer to Other Diseases
In 2019, the Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI) at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) and University College Dublin (UCD) signed a 5-year agreement to i) reinforce the links between scientists in San Francisco and Ireland and ii) broaden their collaborative ability to strengthen scientific research and innovation....
European Radiation Protection Week (ERPW) 2023
European Radiation Protection Week (ERPW) is an annual, multidisciplinary, event which brings together experts and addresses current and emerging topics related to radiation protection. Under the Consortium of European Radiation Research Platforms (MEENAS Group), ERPW aims to: promote the integration and the efficiency of European...
Digital Mental Health: A shared vision for research, policy and practice
This event will bring together leading researchers, policy makers, mental health professionals, and experts-by-experience, to create a shared vision of digital mental health in Ireland. The number of digital mental health solutions is increasing, as the need for accessible mental health services becomes more urgent. It is important in...
The Science of Dementia for the Non-Scientist - An exploration of dementia and the brain
The focus of this event is to present the science of dementia to non-scientists, in order to build the understanding of the basic science of dementia. The event will be hosted by Dementia Research Network Ireland (DRNI) together with the Alzheimer Society of Ireland (ASI).
Dementia is an umbrella term for diseases of the brain...
Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine-From Research to Practice
Increased opportunity for sporting involvement in the population is a welcome development and will lead to a multitude of long term health benefits across the country. In tandem with greater participation in sport however, is an increased potential for injury.
The area of orthopedic and sports medicine is rapidly advancing, yet...
Building Connections workshop series
Building Connections workshop series
Dates: Workshops series in Autumn 2023 and a main event, An Meitheal, 21 October 2023
Venues: Venues at 3 community organisations (Dublin & Galway), An Meitheal at community venue,...Inaugral conference in Adult Safeguarding
Adult safeguarding in Ireland has been an increasing public health issue since undercover filming (Leas Cross, 2005; Aras Attracta, 2014) exposed poor care practices in residential care settings. Similar to other countries, abuse of adults in any setting continues to be recognised as a human rights issue and has both immediate and long...
8th Annual Public & Patient Involvement Summer School
Enhancing Public, Patient and Carer involvement (PPI) in health research was identified as a priority area within the HRB's Strategy 2016-2020 and reiterated in the Strategy 2021-2025. This includes a defined commitment to develop and promote PPI within the HRB and HRB-supported projects and programmes, as well as within the community...
Equity For People Living With A Rare Disease: An International Rare Disease Research Symposium
Rare disease’ (RD), refers to a collection of conditions whose signs and symptoms are heterogeneous but are grouped together due to individual low incidence rates. While individually rare, RDs are collective in society and are a significant global public health and policy priority. 80% of RDs are genetic and present at birth, affecting...
Staphylococcus Great Britain and Ireland 2023
This biannual event, which has been running for over 20 years, brings together the research community in Ireland, Northern Ireland and the UK working on all aspects of Staphylococcal Diseases. Staphylococci, including MRSA, are leading causes of bacterial infection in both hospitals and the community. New antibiotic development has not...
iPASTAR Conference - Achieving better outcomes from integrated pathways of care for acute stroke and rehabilitation
What is iPASTAR?
iPASTAR (Improving Pathways for Acute STroke And Rehabilitation) is a Structured Doctoral Training Programme funded by the HRB with four PhD scholars. The focus is to develop better care pathways from acute hospital care to rehabilitation in the community and living well after...
A functional genomics pipeline for genetic discovery in diabetic kidney disease
Diabetes is responsible for a large proportion of chronic kidney disease (CKD), end-stage kidney disease (ESKD), blindness, amputation, heart disease and stroke. Tight glycemic control in type 1 diabetes (T1D) or type 2 diabetes (T2D) can delay or arrest the progression of microvascular complications. How hyperglycemia...
Cystic Fibrosis Liver Disease (CFLD); predicting and prescribing in the era of CFTR modulators
Life expectancy for people with Cystic Fibrosis (PWCF) has improved dramatically over the last 2 decades. This improved survival has not been observed in those with CF liver disease (CFLD). In the Irish Longitudinal Study of CFLD (ILSCFLD), we found that those with CFLD had a mortality rate difference of 6.6 versus those with no liver...
Developing an innovative patient-centred xenograft model of multiple myeloma and its use in testing novel antagonists of JAM-A signalling
Multiple myeloma (MM) is an incurable cancer in which uncontrolled plasma cell proliferation disrupts the bone marrow environment and impairs immune function. With poor 5-year patient survival (<50%), better clinical models and pipelines for targeted therapies are urgently required. This proposal will focus on both. Firstly, an MSc...
Development of mRNA Vaccines for Children with High-Risk Neuroblastoma
Neuroblastoma is one of the most aggressive childhood cancers contributing to 15% of cancer related childhood deaths. At diagnosis half of the patients have a metastatic tumour and recurrence is very common. Despite advances in available therapies, children with drug-resistant and relapsed neuroblastoma have a dismal outlook with...
A pain and wound management approach for RDEB patients via a functionalized collagen-based hydrogel dressing with controlled release of painkillers
Patients with Epidermolysis Bullosa (EB) have a broad spectrum of need for pain and wound treatment, varying with the type of EB, the severity within that type, and the particular physical, emotional, and psychological milieu of each individual. EB research has advanced considerably in the past decade and wound and pain management have...
Ex vivo autologous stem cell gene therapy for Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency
Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency (MSD) is an inherited lysosomal storage disorder (LSD) that predominately involves the brain, bones, and skin. The disease is due to mutations in SUMF1, a gene that provides the instructions for making an important enzyme called formylglycine generating enzyme (FGE). The FGE enzyme activates all the...
Surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, but now what? Exploring the rehabilitation needs of people with brain tumours in Ireland
In Ireland, about 480 people are diagnosed with primary brain tumours every year. Many more people develop secondary brain tumours arising from other cancers. Brain tumours can shorten life span and cause many problems including muscle weakness, speech difficulties, loss of mobility and independence, difficulties thinking and...
Retinal Dystrophy in Ciliopathies (RDCilia): modelling patient mutations to decipher disease mechanisms, interpret Variants of Uncertain Significance, and uncover therapeutics
Retinal dystrophies (RD) are inherited disorders characterised by degeneration of light sensing retinal cells (photoreceptors). Affecting approximately 2 million people worldwide, RD causes chronic and gradual sight loss. A major research issue is that RD is rarely investigated in the context of the gene mutations found in patients....
Long non-coding RNAs: regulators of epileptogenesis and potential targets for therapy
Temporal lobe epilepsy is the most common type of epilepsy in adults, with seizures being the major symptom although individuals with this disease may also have anxiety, depression and/or memory disturbances as a result of their condition. Temporal lobe epilepsy is very difficult to treat and about 30% of individuals with this type of...
Predicting and monitoring outcomes in Autoimmune Encephalitis (POTA)
Epilepsy is a disorder of the brain in which people have repeated seizures.
Autoimmune encephalitis (AE) is a rare cause of epilepsy. It is an inflammatory disease of the brain. This means that the body’s own immune system attacks healthy brain tissue, just like it would if it were infected by a virus or a bacteria, by...
Combining HDAC6 inhibitors with KRAS inhibitors for the treatment of Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC)
In Europe lung cancer is the second most common cancer in men and the third most common cancer in women. Globally, lung cancer contributes to more cancer deaths than any other type of cancer. While we have witnessed some improvements for lung cancer patients, the outcomes and treatment options for the majority remains poor. One...
Pathways to Improving Transition to Adult Services & Enhancing Self-Management in Adolescents with Cystic Fibrosis: A New Era of Treatments
The teenage years are a time of change. Being an adolescent with Cystic Fibrosis (CF) can bring additional challenges due to complex and demanding treatments. A key task for teenagers with CF is to learn the skills to manage their health, as they prepare to transition into adult-based care. In Ireland, many adolescents transition to...
Evaluation of a novel drug combination treatment for nephropathic cystinosis in a new cystinotic rat model.
Cystinosis is a rare disease that results in the build-up of cystine in all cells of the body. Cystine is a protein building block and normally the excess is moved out of cells. In cystinosis the transporter for cystine does not work and cystine builds up inside the cells and forms crystals which cause damage to all organs and...
Investigating the potential of CTNS-mRNA loaded nanoparticles as a new therapeutic strategy for nephropathic cystinosis.
Cystinosis is a rare disease that results in the build-up of cystine in all cells of the body. Cystine is a building block of proteins and normally the excess is moved out of cells. In cystinosis, the transporter for cystine is deficient and cystine builds up inside cells. It forms crystals which cause damage and eventually...
Participation in physical activity: what really matters to adolescents with physical disability?
Being physically active is hugely important for health. It improves physical and mental wellbeing and reduces the risk of health problems in adulthood. Young people with physical disability, especially adolescents, do less physical activity than their peers. We want to learn more about how we can support adolescents with physical...
Sustaining activity with arthritis (SAWA) following an Arthritis Ireland Be active with arthritis (BAWA) exercise programme
Best practice guidelines across the world always recommend those living with arthritis to be physically active. Research shows that being active can help people living with arthritis to do the things that they want to do for longer, reduce pain, improve quality of life and protect against getting other health conditions such as heart...
Counting the cost: The contribution of older carers in Ireland and impact of caring on mental health and wellbeing of carers
Family caring plays an essential role in Ireland’s health system, but it does place social, financial, physical, and emotional demands on carers. Caring by older people has been shown to have benefits for health and longevity when providing lower numbers of hours of care. Less is known about why some carers seem to manage better than...
Patient-led development of a “Patient Reported Outcomes” instrument to improve health-related quality of life in patients with Glomerular Disease – PRO-GD
Glomerular diseases (GDs) are rare kidney diseases that damage kidney filters (glomeruli) and can result in kidney failure, hospitalisation, and death. Glomerular diseases also affect health-related quality of life (HRQOL), including reduced ability to participate in normal life, fear or anxiety about the future, low mood, or eroded...
An investigation into the prevalence and experience of psychopathology and mental disorders among children and adolescents with cerebral palsy
Cerebral palsy (CP) is the most common cause of physical disability in childhood. Most people with CP live well into adulthood. Although CP primarily affects a person’s ability to sit or move, many people with CP report experiencing mental health problems. Children and adolescents with CP who experience mental health problems are more...
Advanced, automated compound screening for the identification of therapeutic agents in Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency.
Multiple Sulfatase Deficiency (MSD) is an extremely rare, fatal, yet untreatable condition. It is caused by the inherited deficiency of an enzyme (called FGE) that activates a whole family of 17 other cellular enzymes named sulfatases. Sulfatases are indispensable for the degradation of a subset of intracellular molecules. Thus,...