
 The Medical Information Sciences Building in Indianapolis will provide space for five IU programs.
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The goal of establishing Indiana as a national leader in life
sciences research and industry will take a significant step
Sept. 1 when ground is broken for the IU Medical Information
Sciences Building (MISB) in Indianapolis.
IU President Adam Herbert, IUPUI Chancellor Charles Bantz,
Indianapolis Mayor Bart Peterson and Dr. D. Craig Brater,
dean of the IU School of Medicine (IUSM), will lead the groundbreaking
ceremonies, located near the Canal Walk at 10th Street. The
property, formerly the site of the Indianapolis Police Department
mounted police horse barn, was made available by the City
of Indianapolis to IU in exchange for the current Herron School
of Art property at East 16th and Pennsylvania streets.
The 167,000-square-foot facility will provide space for
five IU programs: the Division of Children’s Health Services
Research, the Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics,
the Division of Biostatistics, the Center for Bioethics and
the Regenstrief Institute, Inc., whose researchers are IU
faculty members.
In addition to those programs, Eli Lilly and Co. and Clarian
Health Partners will have offices for scientists who work
with IU faculty and researchers.
The MISB cost is $42 million, $15 million of which was authorized
by the Indiana General Assembly in 2003.
The corridor is being developed by the city, IU, Clarian,
Lilly and other industries associated with BioCrossroads,
an initiative created through public-private collaborations
in Indiana. BioCrossroads seeks to attract and create jobs,
companies and entrepreneurial opportunities to make Indiana
a center of innovation in the business of enhancing health.
The vision was spawned nearly four years ago when the Lilly
Endowment, Inc., awarded $105 million to IU to launch the
Indiana Genomics Initiative (INGEN). In 2003, the Lilly Endowment
awarded another $50 million to IU to further advance INGEN
and its related biomedical research.
When completed in 2006, the building also will include restaurants
and other shops to serve the occupants of the building and
the general public. Here is a look at the occupants of the
Medical Information Sciences Building:
IU Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics
The Center for Computational Biology and Bioinformatics
was established by IUSM in 2003 with support from the Indiana
Genomics Initiative. The center is home to scientists who
use software to analyze biological information – the experiments
run on computers rather than in traditional laboratories.
It has a special emphasis on the problems of identifying the
functions and structures of various protein entities. Scientists
at the center will collaborate with other investigators to
merge bioinformatics techniques with traditional biomedical
research, said A. Keith Dunker, center director and professor
of biochemistry and molecular biology at IUSM. The center
has established the Indiana Bioinformatics Interest Group
with the purpose of integrating Indiana's intellectual capital
with its economic capital. With participants from Eli Lilly
& Co., Molecular Kinetics, Dow Agrosciences, IUPUI, Purdue
and IU, the group's members represent a broad spectrum of
fields, including biochemistry and molecular biology, computer
science, engineering, which will expand as the group increases
in size and scope.
http://www.compbio.iupui.edu
IU Division of Biostatistics
This division was formed in the late 1980s by IUSM as the
role of biostatistics became elemental to medical research
and education. The division provides leadership in the statistical
design, analysis and data management of clinical, laboratory
and epidemiologic studies for the schools of medicine, nursing
and dentistry.
In addition to teaching courses in biostatistics, faculty
members are developing new statistical methods in genomics,
pharmacokinetics, item response theory and the analysis of
long-term studies on dementia and sexual behaviors. They also
direct projects or cores in cancer, osteoporosis, lithotripsy,
and sexually transmitted diseases. Barry Katz, Ph.D., professor
of medicine, is director of the division.
http://www.biostat.iupui.edu
IU Center for Bioethics
The IU Center for Bioethics was established on the IUPUI
campus in July 2001 with a broad mandate to conduct interdisciplinary
research, engage in education and provide service to the IU
community. The center’s five core and more than 25 affiliate
faculty represent the multidisciplinary involvement from many
IU schools and programs in Indianapolis and Bloomington. It
is supported by IUSM and by the Indiana Genomics Initiative.
Its research focuses on topics ranging from genetic testing
and stem cell research to privacy, health care philanthropy
and international research. The center is directed by Eric
Meslin, professor of medicine and of medical and molecular
genetics, and assistant dean for bioethics at IUSM, and professor
of philosophy in the IUPUI School of Liberal Arts. He is the
former executive director of the U.S. National Bioethics Advisory
Commission.
http://www.bioethics.iu.edu
Indiana Children’s Health Services Research
The Indiana Children’s Health Services Research is a section
of the IUSM Department of Pediatrics and a partner of Health
Services Research at Regenstrief Institute, Inc. It was established
in 2001 with support from the pediatrics department and the
Riley Children’s Foundation. Its mission is to improve the
health and health care of children by developing and applying
best scientific evidence and methods in health services research
and informatics. The center’s areas of focus include community
pediatrics, research and service concentrating on vulnerable
children, the use of information technology to improve knowledge
of children’s health care and quality of health services and
dissemination of research through health policy research,
clinical policy analysis and advocacy for children. Dr. Stephen
Downs, associate professor of pediatrics, is director of the
center.
http://www.iupui.edu/~chsrp
The Regenstrief Institute, Inc.
The Regenstrief Institute is an internationally recognized
informatics and health-care research organization dedicated
to enhance the quality and cost effectiveness of health care.
Philanthropist Sam Regenstrief established the institute in
1969 on the IU Medical Center campus in Indianapolis. The
institute is closely affiliated with IUSM and Wishard Health
Services.
Regenstrief’s research scientists, members of the IU faculty,
are a highly respected cadre of informatics specialists and health
services researchers working within one of the largest and
most comprehensive medical informatics laboratories in the
world. The president and chief executive officer of the institute
is Dr. Thomas Inui, who is the Sam Regenstrief Professor of
health services research, associate dean for health-care research
and professor of medicine. The director of the institute is
Dr. Clement McDonald, IU Distinguished Professor, Regenstrief
Professor of medical informatics and professor of medicine
and of public and environmental affairs.
http://www.regenstrief.org
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