Clinical and Translational Research Experience
The purpose of the Clinical and Translational Research Experience, coordinated by Rupali Avasare, MD, is to provide a mentored continuity experience with clinical research. It will include direct patient contact with study participants, as well as clinical study staff. Students will consent patients, develop a deeper understanding of clinical trials, limitations, regulatory agencies and more. Students will develop an understanding of the institutional review board (IRB) process, and clinical research design and implementation.
The clinical and translational research experience takes place in the final years of the MD program after the student has completed core clinical rotations. This course fulfills the Continuity Clerkship requirement for the MD program and is scheduled through CASA. It is 8 weeks long and must be done as one continuous block with one mentor.
Contact Rupali Avasare, MD, after the rotation dates have been secured to set up mentorship and other components of this course.
Contact CASA
Contact Dr. Avasare
Starting academic year 2019-2020, an international Clinical & Translational Research Experience has been available for 1-2 students each year. One to two students may go to Bangkok, Thailand in partnership with the OHSU Global SE Asia program for hands-on human subjects research and clinical training at their Bangkok Dusit Medical Services hospital.
How and when do I schedule a rotation?
This rotation is scheduled in the final MD Years through the MD Registrar. It may be scheduled at any time, but most be taken only after the 7 core clinical rotations have been completed. This course must be registered for at least 60 days before the start date so there is enough time to arrange for a mentor; usually students do it during their final year. Each student should notify the MD/PhD program coordinator when they plan on taking this course, and then again when they have it scheduled.
What are the learning objectives/competencies assessed?
Competencies that your mentor might be able to evaluate you on include:
- Patient Care and Procedures—1, 2, 3, 4,
- Medical Knowledge—1, 4,
- Practice Based Learning and Improvement—3, 5, 7
- Interpersonal and communication skills—1, 3, 5, 6, 7,
- Professionalism and Development—1, 2, 3, 4, 9, 10,
- System-based practice –3, 4, 5,
What is the schedule for the rotation?
The rotation has two important parts: the mentored experience and the supplemental experiences.
The mentored experience should include direct research patient contact, working with study staff, attending lab meetings and clinics, and more.
The supplemental CTRE experiences are intended to enhance the mentored experience. Except for attending an IRB meeting, these experiences are not mandatory as long as the student is getting sufficient exposure through their mentored experience.
How do I find a mentor?
The mentor has to be an experienced investigator who is conducting actively enrolling clinical trials. A mentoring team may be substituted if there is no single mentor who qualifies in a field the student is interested in. The student will need to identify 1-2 specific areas of interest (a topic, disease, specialty) and/or 2-3 researchers. These choices should be shared with Dr. Avasare who will need to approve of mentorship choices.