Bristol Myers Squibb/Mead Johnson announces its No-Strings-Attached Grant to
Dr. Dennis M. Bier of Baylor College of Medicine. Thankfully, we can all
have a good night's sleep since there are no strings attached to this grant.
Since this college of medicine does so much research on the nutritional needs
of premies, it would be important not to have any strings attached.....
Valerie W. McClain, IBCLC
http://www.meadjohnson.com/about/pressrelease/baylorpressrelease.html6/6/02
BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE RECEIVES $300,000 BRISTOL-MYERS SQUIBB/MEAD
JOHNSON UNRESTRICTED NUTRITION RESEARCH GRANT
>
Dr. Dennis Bier Will Serve as Administrator and Principal Investigator of
No-Strings-Attached Grant for Children’s Nutrition Research
>
(EVANSVILLE, IN, May 22, 2002) – The USDA Children’s Nutrition Research
Center (CNRC) at Baylor College of Medicine, Texas Medical Center, Houston,
has received a three-year $300,000 Bristol-Myers Squibb/Mead Johnson
Unrestricted Nutrition Research Grant to help support research in key areas
of pediatric nutrition. Dennis M. Bier, M.D., will serve as administrator and
principal investigator of the grant, which will support the CNRC’s research
in fetal origins of adult disease, host defense, and gastrointestinal barrier
functions.
“The long term effects of poor nutrition in childhood are a growing concern
of pediatricians, nutrition researchers, and child health organizations in
the U.S. and throughout the world,” said Robert A. Burns, Ph.D., research
fellow, Global Research and Development, Mead Johnson Nutritionals, a
subsidiary of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company. “Under Dr. Bier’s leadership,
the Children’s Nutrition Research Center has developed innovative research
that is benefiting infants and children as they mature and grow into adults.”
Dr. Bier is professor of pediatrics and director of the CNRC, one of six
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Human Nutrition Research
Centers. Since its inception in 1978, the CNRC has become a leader in
determining the nutritional needs of children from conception through
adolescence, pregnant women, and nursing mothers. Researchers at the center
have developed national reference data for body composition, bone density,
and energy intake and expenditure for pre-term infants and children of all
ages and major U.S. ethnic groups. They have also defined energy requirements
in pregnancy and lactation and are studying how our genes affect absorption
and utilization.
“CNRC researchers have expertise in a wide variety of scientific disciplines
from biochemistry and molecular biology to behavioral nutrition and pediatric
medicine,” said Dr. Bier. “At the CNRC, we take a lifelong perspective. Our
scientists are performing research to understand how nutritional adequacy
during critical periods of development both influences the lives of children
during growth and maturation and impacts on health maintenance in adult life
by preventing chronic diseases whose origins lie in nutritional inadequacy.
The potential impact of the CNRC findings on maximizing health and minimizing
healthcare costs of future generations is immense. This grant from
Bristol-Myers Squibb will allow us to develop a pilot grant program that will
permit investigators to explore highly innovative avenues of research.”
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