Healthier Lives Through Behavioral and Social Sciences Research
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NIH’s Role in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)
NIH is well positioned to fund the best science in pursuit of improving the length and the quality of the lives of our citizens, while at the same time stimulating the economy.


March 06, 2009
OBSSR Hosts Conference on Dissemination, Implementation

As a way to improve public health in a battered world, understanding poverty counts as much as knowing how proteins fold.


March 06, 2009
Research Funders Collaborate To Reduce Childhood Obesity

A new National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR) was launched Feb. 19 to accelerate progress on reversing the epidemic of overweight and obesity among U.S. youth.


Calendar

May 26, 2009, ­ 3:00 PM to 4:00 PM
Building a Bridge: Transitional Programs from the Criminal Justice to the Community Setting for HIV+ Drug Users


May 3-8, 2009
Institute on Systems Science and Health


May 22-25, 2009
Gene-Environment Interplay in Stress and Health at the Association for Psychological Science 21st Annual Convention, San Francisco, CA


July 12-24, 2009
OBSSR/NIH Summer Training Institute on Randomized Clinical Trials Involving Behavioral Interventions


August 2-7, 2009
2009 NIH Summer Institute on Community-Based Participatory Research Targeting the Medically Underserved

Application Deadline: May 15, 2009


August 9, 2009
Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR): When Academic/Research Institutions Meet the Real World

  More Events >>

Home > News and Events


BSSR in the News

NIH’s Role in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA)

NIH is well positioned to fund the best science in pursuit of improving the length and the quality of the lives of our citizens, while at the same time stimulating the economy. NIH conducts and supports outstanding biomedical and behavioral research, through more than 3,000 institutions across the country-- institutions that have a direct impact upon the local economies in their towns, cities, and states. Continued…
OBSSR Challenge Topics  

Sex, Drugs and Viral Load: Integrating HIV/AIDS Prevention and Treatment
April 3, 2009 NIH Record

A major challenge in the ongoing battle against HIV/AIDS is preventing those who are already infected from transmitting the virus to others. With advances in treatments for HIV infection and other opportunistic illnesses, more people are living longer and healthier lives with HIV. The downside of this otherwise good news is that the time period for an individual’s ability to infect others is growing and too many HIV-positive individuals erroneously believe that their infectivity diminishes as their viral load decreases during effective therapy. As many as 35 percent of HIV-positive individuals report engaging in high-risk sexual behaviors. Continued…  

Special Issue on Light and Intermittent Smokers
March 21, 2009

OBSSR, NCI, NIDA, the American Legacy Foundation in collaboration with Nicotine and Tobacco Research are pleased to announce the release of the Special Issue on Light and Intermittent Smokers, published in Vol 11, Number 2, February, 2009.

This special issue stems from a meeting hosted by Legacy and NIH during the fall of 2005. A small group of researchers were convened to discuss the state of knowledge on light and intermittent smokers and to outline areas for future research. Research priorities were published in an executive summary. The papers published in this special issue address some of the research questions highlighted in the executive summary and prompt additional action for the field. The 2008 PHS guidelines also call for more research on light smokers.

The mission of the NIH Tobacco and Nicotine Research Interest Group is to increase collaboration, coordination and communication of tobacco- and nicotine-related research across NIH Institutes and Centers and with other DHHS agencies. Continued…  

National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR)
March 06, 2009

A new National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR) was launched on February 19, 2009 to accelerate progress on reversing the epidemic of overweight and obesity among U.S. youth. The initiative brings together three of the nation’s leading research funders – the Centers for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) – to address the problem of childhood obesity in America. OBSSR is a founding member of NCCOR and provides both financial and program support.

The mission of the National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR) is to improve the efficiency, effectiveness and application of childhood obesity research and to halt—and reverse—the current childhood obesity trend through enhanced coordination and collaboration.

NCCOR accelerates progress to reduce childhood obesity in the United States by:
  • maximizing outcomes from research
  • building the capacity for research and surveillance
  • creating and supporting the mechanisms and infrastructure needed for research translation and dissemination
  • supporting evaluations
For more information about NCCOR, including webinars and funding opportunities, please visit http://www.nccor.org

OBSSR Hosts Conference on Dissemination, Implementation
March 06, 2009 NIH Record

As a way to improve public health in a battered world, understanding poverty counts as much as knowing how proteins fold. That’s why translational research doesn’t stop at new drugs and vaccines. It includes delivering interventions to those who need them most.

“Global health is suffering from a huge implementation bottleneck…and we’re not doing so well in implementation in the United States,” said Harvard Medical School’s Dr. Jim Yong Kim, plenary speaker at OBSSR’s 2nd annual conference on the Science of Dissemination and Implementation: Building Research Capacity to Bridge the Gap from Science to Service. Continued…

Research Funders Collaborate To Reduce Childhood Obesity
March 06, 2009 NIH Record

A new National Collaborative on Childhood Obesity Research (NCCOR) was launched Feb. 19 to accelerate progress on reversing the epidemic of overweight and obesity among U.S. youth. The initiative brings together the expertise and resources of NIH, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF).

Current NCCOR members at NIH include the Division of Nutrition Research Coordination, NCI, NHLBI, NICHD, NIDDK and the Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research.

NCCOR aims to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of research on childhood obesity. It will evaluate new and existing prevention approaches, rapidly assess promising policy changes and speed the application of interventions that work. Continued…

What men can learn from women: Tough-guy attitude leads to gender health disparity
December 29, 2008 by Stephen Smith, The Boston Globe (Boston.com)

They are icons of American masculinity. The athlete, banged and bruised, who plays through pain. The soldier, wounded and bedraggled, who battles on, spurning entreaties to seek help. The male driver, lost and confused, who refuses to ask for directions. Continued…

Retreat Refreshes Behavioral, Social Sciences
December 12, 2008 NIH Record

Dr. Christine Bachrach, acting director of the Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research, wanted just one thing out of the first-ever day-long retreat for NIH’s widely dispersed community of behavioral and social scientists, held Nov. 12 at Natcher Bldg. “We have a gold mine of behavioral and social science research talent at NIH, but we are scattered and very busy. We need strong connecting networks to find out who has what kind of expertise, and what the opportunities are,” she said. “I hope the retreat empowers and connects the field. I hope attendees find collaborations and conversations they need to do their jobs effectively. This is a time of great opportunity and challenge. Behavior is a critical issue in diseases that drive up health care costs and kill people.” Continued…

CBT4CBT New Hope for Treatment of Addiction
December 12, 2008 NIH Record

Drug addiction is notoriously tough to treat, but now research is showing a fresh way to tackle the problem. It’s called computer-based training for cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT4CBT), an innovative program developed by Yale University School of Medicine’s Dr. Kathleen Carroll and her colleagues. She recently visited NIH to discuss her research with a full house at Executive Plaza’s Neuroscience Bldg. Her talk was part of OBSSR’s Behavioral and Social Sciences Research Lecture Series.

“When I began [my research, funded by NIDA],” Carroll said, “it wasn’t clear which therapies were effective or how they worked.

We had to get very serious if it was going to be taken seriously in some of the same ways as pharmacotherapy.”

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) is a kind of “talk therapy” that focuses on patterns of thinking, the beliefs that underlie them and how they influence behavior and emotions. It tends to be goal-directed rather than open-ended. Continued…

OBSSR Retreat: Behavioral and Social Scientists Map Course in the Era of the Genome
November-December 2008 The NIH Catalyst

The mantra “bench to bedside” conjures up many images, but perhaps not one of a bedside scene with a father reading Curious George to his child at nighttime. On the NIH campus, where the focus traditionally has been on biomedical research, this concept may come across as an eye-opener: Translational research may not require lab coats and microscopes, catheters and IV clamps. Continued…

OBSSR's Mabry Wins with Systems Analysis Team
October 3, 2008 NIH Record

The CDC-NIH System Dynamics Collaborative for Disease Control and Prevention recently received the inaugural Applied Systems Thinking Prize awarded by the Applied Systems Thinking Institute (ASysT). The nine-member winning team includes Dr. Patricia Mabry of NIH’s Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research. Continued…


3rd Annual Matilda White Riley Lecture Looking for Causes in all the Wrong Places
June 19, 2008 NIH Videocast

Upstream Social Determinants of Downstream Health Disparities
John McKinlay, Ph.D., New England Research Institutes
Building 1, Wilson Hall Continued…

Health Disparity Paper Spurs Debate
January 25, 2008 NIH Record

When JAMA published an article in May 2006 reporting that Americans in late middle age are “sicker” than their English counterparts, there was a swift, intense reaction. “How could this be?” wrote a columnist in the Washington Post. “The British diet is terrible.” And, “Forget vitamin D: The English rarely see the sun in a dank climate where the national dress is a raincoat.” But according to Dr. James Smith, a study coauthor and senior economist with the RAND Corp. who shared this quote in a recent presentation here, the findings are true. In fact, even as critics have posed potential issues with the report, further study has only made the case for the article stronger, Smith believes. Continued…


OBSSR Holds First Dissemination Conference
January 11, 2008 NIH Record

The Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research recently hosted a conference on Building the Science of Dissemination and Implementation in the Service of Public Health. Held in partnership with NIMH, NCI, NIDA, NIAAA and NICHD, the 2-day conference gathered Continued…an 500 people attending in person and hundreds Continued…ewing the simultaneous webcast. Continued…

Cancer patients find strength in numbers
January, 7 2008 By Marilyn Elias, USA TODAY

There's wide agreement that good mental health and relationships can lengthen a person's life by motivating more healthful behavior, says David Abrams, who heads the Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research at the National Institutes of Health. Continued…

Benner Named OBSSR Communications Specialist
October 5, 2007 NIH Record

Ann Benner has been named communications specialist for the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research. In this newly created position, she will be responsible for developing a strategic plan to best communicate the cutting-edge research and discoveries in the behavioral and social sciences. Continued…


Meissner Joins OBSSR as Senior Advisor
October 5, 2007 NIH Record

Dr. Helen Meissner has been named senior advisor in the NIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research. She will be responsible for social, public health and population science-based initiatives. Continued…