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Living With Lupus: Health Information Basics for You and Your Family

https://www.niams.nih.gov/es/iniciativa-de-alcance-comunitario/comprender-la-salud-de-las-articulaciones/como-vivir-con-lupus

Lupus is a chronic (long-lasting) autoimmune disease. This webpage focuses on systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), the most common form of lupus. Lupus is different for each person and can affect different areas of the body, including: skin; joints; heart; lungs; kidneys; and the brain. If you have lupus, you may have times of more symptoms (flares) and times of feeling better (remission).

Accelerating Medicines Partnership® Bespoke Gene Therapy Consortium (BGTC)

https://www.niams.nih.gov/es/node/11741

To support the newly launched Accelerating Medicines Partnership® Bespoke Gene Therapy Consortium (BGTC), the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health (FNIH) has released multiple opportunities for researchers, clinicians, and patient advocates to contribute to the work of the consortium. Two Requests for Proposals (RFPs) have been announced. The BGTC is seeking high-throughput screens or other promising developments to optimize individual steps of the adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector generation and human gene expression pathways. The AAV Vector Generation RFP is available here. The AAV Gene Expression RFP is available here. The BGTC Steering Committee also seeks information on rare diseases

New Opportunities for Advancing Pain Science

https://www.niams.nih.gov/es/node/11791

Dear Colleagues, From the Hippocratic corpus, the author writes, “I consider the responsibility of medicine to be to entirely relieve the suffering of the sick and to blunt the extremities of disease” (The Art 3.4-7)1. Note that despite the acknowledgment that disease may only be blunted, in promoting health it is our duty to relieve suffering wherever possible.

NIAMS Reportable Events Requirements and Guidelines for Investigators Conducting NIAMS-Funded Clinical Research Studies

https://www.niams.nih.gov/es/node/10801

A. Introduction These requirements and guidelines created by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) detail the safety reporting processes that investigators are required to follow when conducting NIAMS-supported clinical research studies. These studies include clinical trials and other types of clinical research studies e.g., observational

Scientific Peer Review

https://www.niams.nih.gov/es/node/10816

An overview of the Scientific Review Branch (SRB). SRB is responsible for the initial scientific and technical merit review of grant applications submitted in response to NIAMS requests for applications, program announcements with special receipt, referral, and/or review considerations, career development (K) awards, R13 conference grants, clinical trials, and other special initiatives.

Typically materials from NIAMS that are more than 5 years old will be archived.