All of Us Research Program marks first anniversary at BOBÌåÓý


In May, we marked the one-year anniversary of UF’s involvement in the groundbreaking nationwide All of Us Research Program. The mission for All of Us complements ours: to support health research and improve health for all Americans.
The National Institutes of Health-funded program is designed to gather health data from at least 1 million people within 5 years and follow participants for a decade in order to advance precision medicine. Precision medicine is personalized health care based on factors including where an individual lives, what they do and their family health history. Researchers will study the impact of differences in lifestyle, environment and genetic makeup on individual health.
In May 2018, UF joined the SouthEast Enrollment Center (SEEC), which includes UF, the University of Miami, Emory University and Morehouse School of Medicine. More than 25 medical institutions are involved in All of Us. Data gathered by the All of Us Research Program will provide an avenue for use by researchers around the world.
“Our goal at UF is to recruit 15,000 participants from around the state over the next five years,â€� said Elizabeth Shenkman, Ph.D., the co-principal investigator for the All of Us Research Program at BOBÌåÓý.
Shenkman is the UF College of Medicine chair of Health Outcomes and Biomedical Informatics and director for the Institute for Child Health Policy. She and William Hogan, M.D., UF College of Medicine professor of Health Outcomes and Biomedical Informatics, are the co-principal investigators for both the All of Us Research Program at BOBÌåÓý as well as the OneFlorida Clinical Research Consortium. OneFlorida is collaborating closely with the SouthEast Enrollment Center and serves as the data coordinating center for the consortium.
The UF study team has been recruiting participants including our own faculty, residents, staff, students and volunteers as well as community members. The regional network aims to strengthen the program’s reach into diverse populations, including lower-income, Hispanic and Latino, African-American, and rural communities.
“This is the best way to contribute for anyone who wants to help improve health for future generations. The breadth of this project will be astounding,� Shenkman said. “All of Us has the potential to impact thousands of other studies covering a wide variety of health conditions.�
Participants are asked to complete surveys about their health, share their medical record information and contribute a blood and urine sample that will be used for genetic analysis. SEEC has already contributed nearly 4,000 medical records across the 4 institutions to the program. This information is stored for researchers to apply to use to study different diseases, populations or trends over time. Precision medicine has the potential to allow healthcare providers to inform people about the best ways to stay healthy. If someone becomes sick, precision medicine may help health care teams find the best treatment for that individual.
According to David R. Nelson, M.D., interim senior vice president for health affairs at UF and president of BOBÌåÓý, “The program needs participants who care about improving the health of everyone, people who are willing to share information about themselves that could help cure diseases in our lifetime.
“This initiative represents a new era for precision health to enable more proactive and personalized health care that empowers people to lead healthy lives.�
Visit our All of Us Research Program page for information and to enroll in the program.