New Orleans LA - ؾhas received a $16.8 million grant renewal from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) as part of the national Building Infrastructure Leading to Diversity (BUILD) initiative. The second phase of the grant,Project PathwaysII, will allow Xavier to focus on the most effective aspects of the already thriving biomedical program that this historically Black university offers its students, work to institutionalize these initiatives, and disseminate these best practices across the country.
“We are proud that the NIH has named us, once again, as one of the institutions that it believes can uniquely contribute to increasing diversity in biomedical fields,” says Dr. Reynold Verret, president of Xavier University. “Xavier is already a national leader in producing African-American graduates who go on to earn terminal degrees, however, with this grant, we plan not only to increase the number of our graduates who enter and complete graduate studies in biomedical sciences but to also identify and map initiatives which can be disseminated to other institutions of higher education in order to increase the number of African-American biomedical scientists nationally.”
TheProject PathwaysII award is one of only ten across the country forming the Diversity Program Consortium BUILD Initiative, an approximately$200 million NIHinvestment that seeks to continue to develop new approaches to engage student researchers, especially those from underrepresented backgrounds, and prepare them to thrive in the biomedical workforce. Xavier and fellow awardees will continue to train, mentor and encourage students from underrepresented groups to enter into and stay in biomedical research careers.
“The BUILD funding from the NIH has provided us with a great opportunity. This grant has provided resources to implement initiatives, which are assisting us in doing what we do best, preparing Xavier students for successfully entering and completing graduate and professional programs,” states Dr. Maryam Foroozesh, Xavier’s BUILD Program lead principal investigator.
Xavier’s BUILD Initiative is expected to include seven integrated components: