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NIH Jun 1, 2020 | R00
UNDERSTANDING IMPLICATIONS OF GENETIC ATTRIBUTIONS FOR ADDICTION
Institution: COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
FOA Number: PA-16-193
Abstract
This Pathway to Independence Award (K99/R00) will prepare the candidate to become an interdisciplinary ELSI researcher conducting high-impact, independently funded research exploring the impact of genetic and other biological explanations for addictions and other psychiatric disorders on attitudes and beliefs about health and identity. The research will examine how genetic attributions for addiction relate to beliefs about individual agency and treatment effectiveness among people with addictive disorders and clinicians who treat them. Results will inform future studies relevant to clinical practice as well as public education campaigns and policy.
FUNDING AGENCY:
Funder:
NIHInstitute:
NATIONAL HUMAN GENOME RESEARCH INSTITUTEFunding Type:
R00Project Number:
R00HG010084Start Date:
Jun 1, 2020End Date:
Apr 30, 2023PROJECT TERMS:
Addiction, Adopted, Adult, Affect, alcohol use disorder, Attention, Attitude, Award, base, Behavior, Behavioral, Belief, Bioethics, Biological, Biology, body-mind, career, career development, Chronic Disease, Clinical, clinical practice, Conceptions, Consequentialism, cost, deviant, Disease, DNA, Educational Activities, effective therapy, Effectiveness, essentialism, ethical legal social implication, Ethics, etiology, Expectancy, expectation, Free Will, Funding, Future, Gambling, General Population, Genes, Genetic, Genome, genome sciences, Goals, Health, improved, Individual, Institutes, Interdisciplinary Study, Interview, Lead, Light, Location, Measures, Medical, member, Mental disorders, Mental Health, Mind, New York, Outcome, Pathway interactions, Patients, Perception, Persons, Plant Roots, Play, Policies, policy implication, Population, prognostic, Psychiatry, psychologic, Psychotherapy, public education, public policy, Qualitative Methods, Research, Research Activity, Research Personnel, Research Training, Role, Scholarship, Selection for Treatments, Self Efficacy, social, social implication, Social Policies, Substance Addiction, Substance Use Disorder, Symptoms, Testing, Training, Treatment Effectiveness, Treatment outcome, trend, Universities