An NIH intramural percubator as a model of academic-industry partnerships: From the beginning of life through the valley of death

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Abstract

In 2009 the NIH publicly announced five strategic goals for the institutes that included the critical need to translate research discoveries into public benefit at an accelerated pace, with a commitment to find novel ways to engage academic investigators in the process. The emphasis on moving scientific advancements from the laboratory to the clinic is an opportune time to discuss how the NIH intramural program in Bethesda, the largest biomedical research center in the world, can participate in this endeavor. Proposed here for consideration is a percolatorincubator program, a 'percubator' designed to enable NIH intramural investigators to develop new medical interventions as quickly and efficiently as possible © 2011 Emmert-Buck; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Emmert-Buck, M. R. (2011, May 8). An NIH intramural percubator as a model of academic-industry partnerships: From the beginning of life through the valley of death. Journal of Translational Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-9-54

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