Leaders with the National Institutes of Health met with Massachusetts policymakers last week at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard in Cambridge to share key highlights of the work of the All of Us Research Program in building its national health research infrastructure.
As we approach the six-year anniversary of the All of Us Research Program’s national launch, I find myself reflecting on how far we’ve come in a few short years. Our program – once just a visionary idea – has become an integral part of the scientific enterprise, powering research around the world to advance personalized prevention, treatment, and care.
field_application_due_date
field_award_date
field_description
field_disclaimer
field_earliest_submission_date
field_funding_opportunity_link
field_funding_opportunity_pdf
field_id_number
field_program_partner
On April 10, the All of Us Research Program released SAS Viya (known as “SAS Studio”) on its cloud-based Researcher Workbench platform. In the point-and-click SAS Studio application, researchers can perform powerful statistical analyses and data visualizations with data from electronic health records, surveys, wearables, and more. This release could open opportunities for additional researchers to join the more than 10,100 researchers already on the platform and power new health insights.
The National Institutes of Health’s All of Us Research Program is traveling to dozens of cities and towns from coast to coast engaging communities historically underrepresented in medical research. The 2024 nationwide tour, called “the All of Us Journey,” begins April 16th with stops planned in California to the Midwest and throughout New England.