MetroHealth and CWRU Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation Ranks #1 in U.S. for National Institutes of Health Funding

Hitesh
thehealthco.info
The Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R) at MetroHealth System and Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) ranked first nationally in National Institutes of Health (NIH) funding among medical school PM&R departments in America. The Blue Ridge Institute for Medical Research has released its 2022 rankings based on NIH data.MetroHealth and Case Western Reserve’s PM&R division is located within the MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute, which strives for rehabilitation, social participation, and quality of life for people with severe neurological and physical impairments. bone as well as functional limitations. Last year, the U.S. News and World Report ranked the Institute #1 in Ohio and #24 nationally out of nearly 1,000 eligible rehabilitation hospitals. The institute recently moved into a new state-of-the-art clinical, research, and educational space on the campus of MetroHealth’s Old Brooklyn Medical Center.The Institute received $35 million in new funding in 2022 and currently has $83 million in external research funding (total value of active grants over the funding period, direct and indirect). next). These grants are needed to ensure the continuation of groundbreaking research that is an essential part of advancing patient care.

“The mission of the Department of PM&R at MetroHealth and Case Western Reserve University always has been to improve the daily lives of people with severe neurological and musculoskeletal impairments, train the next generation of clinicians and scientists and actively engage the discovery and innovation process to push the field of rehabilitation forward,”

“The fact that our researchers have received more funding in this area than those at any other institution in the nation is proof that NIH and other sponsors recognize the value of their extraordinary work in achieving that mission.”

John Chae, MD, VP, Research and Sponsored Programs and Chair of PM&R at MetroHealth and Professor of PM&R and Biomedical Engineering at CWRU.

The MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute is led by two members of the National Academy: Dr. Chae of MetroHealth from the National Academy of Medicine; and P. Hunter Peckham, PhD, Professor Emeritus at CWRU, National Academy of Engineering.The institute is recognized worldwide for the development and clinical implementation of sophisticated electrical stimulation systems that revitalize paralyzed muscles; restore the functions of the extremities, trunk, respiratory tract, intestines and bladder; and facilitate neurological recovery after stroke, brain injury, and spinal cord injury (SCI). More recent initiatives include interventions to treat chronic pain and heart and lung dysfunction in people without neurological disorders.

“The Institute has had major growth over the past decade, with investments in new faculty and new space that has enabled us to establish our leadership role in clinical rehabilitation and rehabilitation research,”

“Our research focus is on paralytic disorders, such as spinal cord injury and stroke, and enabling individuals with these disorders to regain function and independence. MetroHealth provides an optimal environment for translating our discoveries into the clinic, ultimately enabling the growth of the medical device industry in Northeastern Ohio.”

P. Hunter Peckham, PhD, Distinguished University Professor Emeritus at CWRU, of the National Academy of Engineering.

Research programs in the Institute are conducted by groups of biomedical, electrical and mechanical engineers, neurologists, neurosurgeons, nurses, occupational therapists, orthopedic surgeons, physiotherapists and social science specialists.

“Our community should be extremely proud of the world-class research taking place at MetroHealth and Case Western Reserve University,”

“As an academic medical center, MetroHealth is committed to lifting up research that will shape the future of medicine and improve people’s lives.”

MetroHealth President and CEO Airica Steed, Ed.D, RN, MBA, FACHE.

Below are five key research grants received in 2022:
  • $12.5 million from NIH awarded to Kevin Kilgore, PhD, a staff scientist in the MetroHealth Center for Rehabilitation Research (MCRR) and the Departments of Orthopedics and Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (PM&R), for a three-year project to create the first open-source modular network of active implantable devices for use in pre-clinical and early feasibility human research and to provide ongoing support for this technology through a vibrant, sustainable community of users. Dr. Kilgore is Professor of Orthopedics and PM&R at the CWRU School of Medicine. Dr. Kilgore is the contact Principal Investigator (PI) on the project. Brian Smith, BSc (Hons), Department of Biomedical Engineering (BME) at CWRU, and Cindy Chestek, PhD, Department of BME at the University of Michigan, are Multi-PIs.
  • $9.5 million from NIH awarded to Anthony DiMarco, MD, Staff Scientist in MCRR and the Department of PM&R, for a five-year project to develop a system to restore effective cough in spinal cord injury patients. Dr. DiMarco is Professor of PM&R at CWRU.
  • $3.1 million from NIH awarded to Nathan Makowski, PhD, Staff Scientist MCRR and the Department of PM&R, for a five-year project to develop a system to restore the ability to walk after a stroke. Dr. Makowski is Assistant Professor of PM&R at CWRU.
  • $3.1 million from the DoD to Kim Anderson, PhD, and Robert Hoey, PhD, Staff Scientists in MCRR and the Department of PM&R, for a four-year research program to study a technique to restore bowel function in patients with spinal cord injuries. Dr. Anderson is Professor of PM&R and Dr. Hoey is Assistant Professor of PM&R at CWRU.
  • $200,000 from Craig Neilsen Foundation to Blake Perkins, DPT, ATP, clinical and research physical therapist at the MetroHealth Rehabilitation Institute, MCRR, and the Department of PM&R, for a two-year research program to study clinical and community-collaborative assistive technology provision in spinal cord injury.
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