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The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM) is a state agency that supports research and education in the fields of stem cell and gene therapiesIt was created in 2004 after 59% of California voters approved California Proposition 71: the Research and Cures Initiative, [1] which allocated $3 billion to fund stem cell research in California.
In January 2016, CPRIT appointed James Willson as its new chief scientific officer. Previously, Dr. Willson was the director of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center's Harold C. Simmons Cancer Center. [23] In June 2017 Governor Abbott signed into law Senate Bill 81, extending CPRIT's Sunset Review date by two years from 2021 to ...
Grant revenue in 2015 was $17.4 million, compared to more than $28 million in 2011. [13] In 2015, California researchers opened the world's largest publicly available stem cell bank, with samples stored at the Buck Institute. The initial bank had 300 stem cell lines, with an ultimate goal of 9,000 lines.
California Rehabilitation Institute is a physical medicine and rehabilitation hospital located in Century City, California. The hospital is a joint venture of UCLA and Cedars-Sinai Medical Center . [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The hospital opened in July 2016 and is being operated by Select Medical Corporation.
Throughout the early 1970s, the foundation focused on funding mental health services for historically underrepresented groups across Texas. [8]In 1971, foundation leaders worked with University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio (UTHSCSA) faculty and community leaders of Crystal City in South Texas to discuss the development of the Zavala County Mental Health Outreach Program, which ...
California used to be the state where people could go to make their fortune. But now, the Golden State is no longer home to a “gold rush.” Data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows that ...
On 1 July 1966, the USAF Hospital at Travis AFB was designated David Grant USAF Medical Center in honor of the late Major General David Norvell Walker Grant, USAAF, MC (1891–1964), the first Surgeon General of the Army Air Corps and U.S. Army Air Forces. The medical center was a wing-equivalent as well as a tenant on Travis AFB.
Six new structures are planned to separate road traffic from freight rail and high-speed trains.