Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos
Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos
22 Projects, page 1 of 5
assignment_turned_in ProjectPartners:APHM, University of Gaevle, University of Applied Sciences Emden Leer, Staffordshire University, Vilnius University +5 partnersAPHM,University of Gaevle,University of Applied Sciences Emden Leer,Staffordshire University,Vilnius University,University of Iceland,Keele University,VID,Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos,Πανεπιστήμιο Πατρών, Πολυτεχνική Σχολή, Τμήμα Ηλεκτρολόγων Μηχανικών και Τεχνολογίας ΥπολογιστώνFunder: European Commission Project Code: 2019-1-UK01-KA203-061608Funder Contribution: 397,725 EURThe REVAMP project will develop, test and implement an innovative and sustainable transnational freely accessible online training package to enhance medical and healthcare practitioners knowledge and skills, to recognise and understand the health needs and impact of violence, abuse and neglect on victims, thereby improving their health outcomes. The World Health Organization (WHO) identifies Intimate Partner Violence and Abuse (IPVA) as a pandemic, with a 1:3 global prevalence rate in most countries (WHO, 2013). IPVA includes physical, sexual, emotional abuse and controlling behaviours by an intimate partner (WHO, 2012). The WHO (2017) estimates that globally almost 1/4 of adults suffered physical abuse and/or neglect as a child and about 1/3 of women experienced either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or nonpartner sexual violence at some point in their life. Tackling and ending gender-based violence is recognised by the European Commission, and further supported by combating gender-based violence and protecting and supporting victims (European Union, 2017). The Council of Europe indicates that about 1 in 5 children has suffered this type of abuse and that, in 70-85% of cases, the perpetrator was known to the victim. ‘Violence against women and domestic violence continue to be one of the most pervasive human rights violations, both in Europe and beyond’ (Council of Europe, 2014, page 1). The need for effective transnational education of medical practitioners to recognise victims of IPVA is clear due to the plethora of evidence that IPVA is a common problem that has a significant negative impact on individuals and families. Medical and healthcare practitioners will see victims of IPVA on a daily basis given the high number of victims. There has been little attention to producing a robust and freely accessible training. This project will be carried out transnationally as IPVA is prevalent across all countries, and migration might result in a victim trying to access support in several countries. The REVAMP project represents an original approach of joining forces across Europe to deliver this training to all medical and healthcare providers. REVAMP's target group are medical and healthcare practitioners as defined by Eurostat Statistics Explained (2017), where 'practitioner' means a person who delivers healthcare to a person such as: medical doctor, nurse, midwife, dentist, pharmacy, physiotherapist, social worker etc. REVAMP partners are embedded in the delivery of training medical and healthcare professionals, ideally placed to co develop and disseminate the training. REVAMP has the following objectives: 1-To develop a freely available and easily accessed online training package consisting of five modules for medical and healthcare practitioners to enhance their recognition of an understanding of IPVA, thereby improving the health outcome of victims.2- To use innovative teaching methods3- To involve a multi-lateral partnership of institutions4- To contribute to the public health strategy for recognition of victims of IPVA5-To ensure a broad dissemination of findings to relevant stakeholders6-To recognise the new acquisition of skills and knowledge by 5 ECTS for successful participationThe methodology that will apply to the REVAMP project is designed to support the development of an effective and transnationally relevant training programme for medical and healthcare practitioners to enhance the recognition of and understanding of the impact of violence on victims and are able to then refer these victims for ongoing support. REVAMP will be freely accessible from an outward facing website. Using a variety of pedagogical methods to engage medical and healthcare practitioners in the training programme, each of the five modules of the REVAMP training package will present a different aspect of IPVA. REVAMP will be developed into five modules (OCAPA): Orientation to the training package, IPVA and the child, IPVA and the adult, IPVA and the older person, Analysis and Evaluation. The effective open access REVAMP Platform from which the training is accessed is a significant step towards transnational recognition and training of IPVA giving wider exposure and access to medical and healthcare practitioners across Europe. Medical and health care practitioners across Europe will have the opportunity to engage in free and consistent training to support an effective response to victims of IPVA. Training participants will have improved skills competencies resulting in positive impact on the health and wellbeing of the victim. There is currently no standard training focussing on the training of medical and health care practitioners transnationally and REVAMP fills this gap. After completion, this project may be used to develop further trans European training.
more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications assignment_turned_in Project2013 - 2018Partners:Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos, FWFW, ARTTIC, NWTCB, UZA +17 partnersVilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos,FWFW,ARTTIC,NWTCB,UZA,ATVB,University of Glasgow,ULEIHC,Uppsala University,University of Lübeck,NIC,AZIENDA SOCIO SANITARIA TERRITORIALE DI LECCO,GABO:mi,Leipzig University,INSELSPITAL,Insel Gruppe AG,IHF,Azienda Sanitaria Unità Locale di Reggio Emilia,UMC,Amsterdam UMC,ACTION,AP-HPFunder: European Commission Project Code: 602202more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2027Partners:REGIONH, UKE, Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos, SIOPE, PrinsesMaximaCentrumvoorKinderoncologieREGIONH,UKE,Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos,SIOPE,PrinsesMaximaCentrumvoorKinderoncologieFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101159949Funder Contribution: 1,499,720 EURThe SCARLET (SCAling up early and late effects Research in Lithuanian childhood cancer survivors through Education and Twinning) proposal aims to increase scientific excellence and innovation capacity at Vilnius University Hospital Santaros Klinikos (VULSK) and its affiliated entity National Cancer Institute (NCI) by scaling up research activities in Lithuanian childhood cancer survivors (CCS). The area for twinning was defined based on the emerging importance of survivorship research due to the increasing number of CCS in Europe and identified gaps in Lithuania. The key challenges addressed in the proposal are 1) lack of data on the prevalence of CCS in Lithuania exploitable in research initiatives; 2) poor transition from paediatric to adult care depriving young CCS over the age of 18 of advantages of surveillance in a research context; 3) the need to implement innovative solutions for monitoring and prevention of early and late effects through joint research activities; 4) suboptimal competences in management and administration of large-scale research projects. Four research-intensive institutions from 4 European countries will bring to the consortium their specific expertise to address identified shortcomings. The proposal aims to build on and exploit current shared research initiatives that will be leveraged to achieve SCARLET’s goal and objectives. The twinning exercise will be implemented through secondments of Lithuanian staff to the partner premises and engagement in the research activities led by partner institutions, organisation of educational events, and participation in knowledge-of-transfer meetings. As a result of the twinning activities, VULSK and NCI will improve their research profile and reputation, international visibility, and attractiveness. The expanded networking channels will facilitate Lithuanian professionals to join international research groups focused on survivorship research ultimately improving the quality of survival in Lithuania.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2009 - 2014Partners:LATVIJAS INFEKTOLOGIJAS CENTRS (INFECTOLOGY CENTER OF LATVIA), FZB, Sciensano (Belgium), UNISI, EDM +25 partnersLATVIJAS INFEKTOLOGIJAS CENTRS (INFECTOLOGY CENTER OF LATVIA),FZB,Sciensano (Belgium),UNISI,EDM,ERS,QMUL,FIND,FCSR,Vita-Salute San Raffaele University,Instytut Gruźlicy i Chorób Płuc,Hain Lifescience GmbH,Bolnisnica Golnik,FSM,CIPH,Riga East University Hospital,SSI,Institutul de Pneumoftiziologie "Marius Nasta",SPITALUL DE PNEUMOFTIZIOLOGIE BRASOV,Vilnius University,Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos,University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey,SIHTASUTUS TARTU UELIKOOLI KLIINIKUM,THL,NIPH,FoHM,FoHM,MONTESSORI GUIDO,IPL,ITMFunder: European Commission Project Code: 223681more_vert Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2024 - 2031Partners:VINNOVA, University of Coimbra, FHG, Children's Clinical University Hospital, SAV +149 partnersVINNOVA,University of Coimbra,FHG,Children's Clinical University Hospital,SAV,MYSCIENCEWORK,RARE DISEASES INTERNATIONAL,STICHTING DUCHENNE DATA FOUNDATION,BIU,UEF,UOC,Ministry of Health,VHIR,SFU,University of Belgrade,Uppsala University,UCSC,FONDAZIONE GIANNI BENZI ONLUS,FNR,INSERM,BBMRI-ERIC,NSFB,CONECT4CHILDREN STICHTING,PEI,RSU,Ministry of Health,NORTH DENMARK REGION,UCD,LMU,MSAE,CVBF,AZIENDA SANITARIA UNIVERSITARIA FRIULI CENTRALE,VETENSKAPSRADET - SWEDISH RESEARCH COUNCIL,ACU,THE RESEARCH COUNCIL OF NORWAY,UM,Service Public de Wallonie,FSJD-CERCA,IOR,ECRIN,OPBG,RARE DISEASES GREECE,Goethe University Frankfurt,PLUS,LUMC,University Hospital in Motol,UAB,IABS.eu,KUL,EURORDIS - EUROPEAN ORGANISATION FOR RARE DISEASES ASSOCIATION,University of Tübingen,RANNIS,FUNDACIO CENTRE DE REGULACIO GENOMICA,CONSORCIO PARA LA EXPLOTACION DEL CENTRO NACIONAL DE ANALISIS GENOMICO,UT,CHECKIMMUNE,STICHTING WORLD DUCHENNE ORGANIZATION,AUH,UMC,MINISTRY OF HEALTH OF THE SLOVAK REPUBLIC,AIT,FFWF ,HRB,CIBER,Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon Bourgogne,Copenhagen Economics,RT,University of Twente,ST. ANNA KINDERKREBSFORSCHUNG GMBH,Charité - University Medicine Berlin,Sorbonne University,UPM,GENETHON,Medical University of Sofia,IZMIR BIOMEDICINE AND GENOME CENTER,University Hospital Heidelberg,UKA,MINISTRY OF UNIVERSITY AND RESEARCH,FWO,RSD,NATIONALINNOVATION OFFICE NIH,University Medical Center Freiburg,Ghent University, Gent, Belgium,University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli",Lietuvos Mokslo Taryba,UMCG,DANMARK INNOVATIONSFOND,CNRS,SONIO,Sciensano (Belgium),STICHTING AMSTERDAM UMC,FRS FNRS,AOU MEYER IRCCS,C-PATH,MAPI RESEARCH TRUST,BMBF,RS,RCSI,Vilnius University Hospital Santariskiu Klinikos,AFM,EATRIS,Telethon Foundation,Riga East University Hospital,UHasselt,TÜBİTAK,Scania Regional Council,REGIONH,GERAD,DLR,IMGGE,LCS,NCRD,ISCIII,ETAg,AP-HP,INSTITUTE OF GENETIC DESEASES,ZON,UEFISCDI,RARE DISEASES BULGARIA,Ministry of Science and Higher Education,INSA,Sapienza University of Rome,VIB,UNISI,JSI,IPG,Ministero della Salute,RPF,AMU,UAntwerpen,TEAMIT RESEARCH SL,TEDDY - EUROPEAN NETWORK OF EXCELLENCE FOR PAEDIATRIC CLINICAL RESEARCH,ANR ,ISS,AICIB,FCT,HSJD,Fondation Maladies Rares,UoA,FRRB,TIF,CENTOGENE GMBH,TEKKARE,San Raffaele Hospital,INSTITUT GENETYKI CZLOWIEKA POLSKA AKADEMIA NAUK,UCA,HRCI,University of Otago,ERASMUS MC,IRCCS,CSO-MOH,ELS,RADBOUDUMC,TUMFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101156595Overall Budget: 145,831,008 EURFunder Contribution: 56,317,400 EURThe European Rare Diseases Research Alliance (ERDERA) aims to improve the health and well-being of the 30 million people living with a rare disease in Europe, by making Europe a world leader in Rare Disease (RD) research and innovation, to support concrete health benefits to rare disease patients, through better prevention, diagnosis and treatment. This Partnership will deliver a RD ecosystem that builds on the successes of previous programmes by supporting robust patient need-led research, developing new diagnostic methods and pathways, spearheading the digital transformational change connecting the dots between care, patient data and research, while ensuring strong alignment of strategies in RD research across countries and regions. Structuring goal-oriented public-private collaborations targeted at interventions all along the R&D value chain will ensure that the journey from knowledge to patient impact is expedited, thereby optimising EU innovation potential in RD. To support its ambition and missions ERDERA has been designed as a comprehensive and integrated ecosystem of which structure can be compared to an institute encompassing three main parts: (i) funding, (ii) internal (in house) Clinical Research Network that implements research activities targeting clinical trial readiness of RDs and accelerating diagnosis and translation of research discovery into improved patient care, and (iii) related supporting services (Data, Expertise, Education and Training) as well as an acceleration hub that serve external and internal RD community, all supported by all-embracing coordination and strategy and foundational (inter)national alignment.
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