(Press-News.org) The University of California San Diego School of Medicine’s Centers for Integrative Health has received a five-year, $6.2 million grant from the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish the REACH Center for Translational Science on Whole Person Health.
The three principal investigators are Cassandra Vieten, Ph.D., clinical professor in the Department of Family Medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine, Gene “Rusty” Kallenberg, M.D., professor emeritus in the Department of Family Medicine at UC San Diego School of Medicine and founding director of the Centers for Integrative Health, and Ryan Bradley, N.D., M.P.H., associate professor at UC San Diego Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science.
The goal of whole person health is to promote health and prevent disease by addressing the interconnected physical, social and emotional factors that contribute to overall well-being, as well as a patient’s values and beliefs. It emphasizes personalized, coordinated care across different health care providers and disciplines.
“Conventional medicine is hyper-specialized, and that's been extremely powerful for helping us cure disease and make advancements in health, but we aren't just separate organs or body systems,” said Vieten, who is also director of the UC San Diego Center for Mindfulness.
The initiative is designed to advance research in whole person health through strategic partnerships between UC San Diego and accredited institutions specializing in complementary and integrative health (CIH) modalities such as acupuncture, physical therapy, naturopathic medicine and East Asian medicine.
While these institutions offer training in whole person health, many lack access to research and funding opportunities — as well as cutting-edge technology — to conduct translational studies that can turn scientific discoveries into real-world health solutions for patients.
“The REACH Center will create a virtual resource hub for these schools so that they can have access to the world-class biomedical research infrastructure that we have here at UC San Diego,” said Vieten.
The collaboration will initially support at least 26 new research scholars from six CIH institutions through a two-year career advancement program, pairing them with integrative medicine and translational research faculty mentors from UC San Diego and other University of California health campuses, including the Samueli Institute for Integrative Medicine at UC Irvine, the Center for Integrative Medicine at UC Davis, the UCSF Osher Center for Integrative Health, and the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA.
Participants will receive micro-credential training in research methodologies, guidance on developing pilot projects, and access to UC San Diego’s state-of-the-art facilities, including the CIT Biomarker Lab, the Center for Microbiome Innovation at Jacobs School of Engineering and the Altman Clinical and Translational Research Institute (ACTRI).
In addition, the initiative will fund between 15 and 30 pilot grants to assist research scholars and other faculty from CIH institutions in launching their own research careers in order to drive innovation in translational science. These projects will leverage the University of California’s advanced technologies and large patient populations, addressing longstanding challenges such as study size, statistical rigor, and access to clinical data.
“This funding opportunity was specifically designed to build capacity at complementary and integrative health universities,” said Bradley.
UC San Diego can also benefit from collaborative research with these institutions to investigate possible mechanisms of action for various modalities, which modalities work, and what works for each individual patient, according to Vieten.
Within five years, the REACH Center aims to significantly increase the number and quality of research grants submitted by complementary and integrative health institutions, foster long-term collaborations, and retain talented researchers within the field. The objective is to generate innovative, evidence-based approaches that improve health outcomes and inform national health care policy.
“The ultimate goal is to have these universities submitting higher quality research grants that are fundable, and that process will likely start with collaborative grant opportunities with us here at UC San Diego,” said Bradley. The first cohort of UC San Diego REACH trainees will begin in January 2026, and opportunities to apply for pilot grants are already open.
“This effort to help other CIH institutions develop their research programs and research-capable faculty will also help our own CIH faculty, who can collaborate with them along the way and also participate in the group educational activities our REACH Center develops,” said Kallenberg.
# # #
END
$6.2M grant will launch UC San Diego REACH Center for Translational Science on Whole Person Health
The initiative will expand research in whole person health, linking complementary and integrative health institutions with UC San Diego to drive innovation and improve patient outcomes.
2025-10-22
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Bay Area Lyme Foundation opens applications for 2026 Emerging Leader Awards and research grants
2025-10-22
PORTOLA VALLEY, Calif., October 22, 2025 - Bay Area Lyme Foundation, a leading sponsor of Lyme disease research in the US, today announced its call for applicants from academia and the private sector for the 2026 Emerging Leader Awards (ELA). These annual awards recognize innovative researchers advancing novel approaches in tick-borne disease diagnostics and treatments, while embodying the future of research leadership in this critical field.
In 2026, Bay Area Lyme Foundation will award two $150,000 ELA grants:
Lyme ...
A new post-processing route to improve tensile strength and ductility in 3d-printed alloys
2025-10-22
In International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing, researchers have developed a dual post-processing method to make 3D-printed metals much stronger and tougher, addressing one of the field's most persistent challenges.
By combining deep cryogenic treatment and laser shock peening, researchers find a new way to transform the microscopic structure of 3D-printed metals, relieving internal stresses and enhancing their mechanical resilience. Their method offers a practical route to producing stronger and more damage-tolerant components for industrial-grade metal additive manufacturing in aerospace, automotive, energy, and defense sectors.
The Hidden Problem in Metal ...
JMIR Publications’ Journal of Medical Internet Research invites submissions on Navigating AI-Enabled Uncertainty
2025-10-22
(Toronto, October 22, 2025) JMIR Publications invites submissions to a new theme issue titled “Navigating AI-Enabled Uncertainty – Strategic Implications for Digital Health Management” in its open access journal Journal of Medical Internet Research. The premier, peer-reviewed journal is indexed in in all major literature indices including National Library of Medicine(NLM)/MEDLINE, PubMed, PMC, Scopus, DOAJ, Clarivate (which includes Web of Science (WoS)/ESCI/SCIE), and others.
Health care administrators are increasingly facing ambiguous decisions as artificial intelligence (AI) permeates reimbursement, documentation, workforce planning, and vendor ecosystems. ...
Small changes in alcohol intake linked to blood pressure shifts
2025-10-22
WASHINGTON (Oct. 22, 2025) — Light-to-moderate alcohol consumption is associated with increases in blood pressure (BP) and stopping drinking – even drinking less – may lead to clinically meaningful BP reductions, according to a study published today in JACC, the flagship journal of the American College of Cardiology. Findings show that slight changes in alcohol consumption can affect BP and can be a strategy for BP management and improvement.
Alcohol consumption is a well-established contributor to elevated BP, a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease (CVD). The 2025 ACC/AHA High Blood Pressure ...
Natural Japanese and Taiwanese hinoki cypresses genetically differentiated 1 million years ago
2025-10-22
Tsukuba, Japan—Hinoki cypress is a commercially vital species used as a high-quality building material, second only to sugi cedar in planted forest area and timber production in Japan. Natural hinoki cypress forests extend from Fukushima Prefecture in the north to Yakushima Island in the south. Taiwanese hinoki cypress is a variety and close relative of the Japanese hinoki, and its large-diameter timber was historically imported from Taiwan to Japan for constructing shrines and temples. By conducting a comprehensive population genetic analysis, this study aimed to elucidate genetic diversity, regional genetic structure, and evolutionary history across ...
GemPharmatech announces research collaboration with leading cancer center to advance antibody discovery
2025-10-22
SAN DIEGO, CALIF. — GemPharmatech, a global leader in preclinical research solutions and genetically-engineered mouse models, today announced a collaboration with Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSK) to accelerate the discovery of new therapeutic antibodies.
Through the non-exclusive agreement, researchers at Memorial Sloan Kettering will have access to GemPharmatech’s extensive preclinical service capabilities and resources, utilizing the NeoMab® platform — a next-generation ...
Deciding whether a breathing tube is best for a child
2025-10-22
NEW YORK, NY – Oct. 22, 2025 – The emotional strain on parents and other caregivers faced with deciding whether a tracheotomy is the best treatment for their child is hard to measure. The latest clinical practice guideline from the American Thoracic Society aims to give clinicians and parents/caregivers a way forward so they can navigate difficult decisions to ensure better outcomes for young patients. The guideline was published early online today, Wednesday, Oct. 22, in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.
A tracheostomy is a tube that is surgically placed through an ...
A ‘dead’ 1800s idea rises again... with clues to the mystery of the universe’s missing antimatter
2025-10-22
In 1867, Lord Kelvin imagined atoms as knots in the aether. The idea was soon disproven. Atoms turned out to be something else entirely. But his discarded vision may yet hold the key to why the universe exists.
Now, for the first time, Japanese physicists have shown that knots can arise in a realistic particle physics framework, one that also tackles deep puzzles such as neutrino masses, dark matter, and the strong CP problem. Their findings, in Physical Review Letters, suggest these “cosmic knots” could have formed and briefly dominated in the turbulent newborn ...
Roboticists reverse engineer zebrafish navigation
2025-10-22
A paradox of neuroscience is that while brains evolve within specific sensory and physical environments, neural circuits are usually studied in isolation under controlled laboratory conditions. But we can’t fully understand how environmental factors shape brain function without considering the body in which that brain evolved.
The BioRobotics Lab in EPFL’s School of Engineering specializes in developing bioinspired robots to tease apart the brain-body interactions involved in sensorimotor coordination. Now, they have published a study in Science Robotics that provides detailed insight into embodiment, or how the body ...
FAU historian traces the transformation of U.S. nursing homes into big business
2025-10-22
In postwar America, as suburbs spread and federal social welfare programs expanded, one underexamined building type quietly became a fixture of the American health care landscape: the nursing home.
In a new article published in the Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, historian Willa Granger, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the School of Architecture within Florida Atlantic University’s Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters, examines how a little-known company from midcentury Illinois helped lay ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Brian Cleary awarded $2.25 million NIH grant to advance single-cell gene expression research
Gut parasites identified from feces of ancient Mexican people
Remission achievable for 1 in 3 Indian diabetics through intensive app-based lifestyle program
Idiopathic hypersomnia is a rare disease of excessive sleepiness, with patients revealing they never feel rested or awake no matter how much sleep they get, in analysis of online posts
Backyard birders in South Africa may continue to enjoy biodiversity in visiting birds under climate change scenarios, while climate change and declining biodiversity may decrease birding in protected
Ingestible pill developed to diagnose intestinal disorder
‘Chronic lung-transplant rejection has been a black box.’ New study gives answers, drug targets.
Neutrino experiments in US and Japan join forces
Hunting for the chromosomal genes that break the heart
Trial enrollment and survival disparities among patients with advanced epithelial ovarian carcinoma
Adverse pregnancy outcomes and long-term risk of atrial fibrillation
Study: Dangerous E. coli strain blocks gut’s defense mechanism to spread infection
No benefit of ketamine for patients hospitalised with depression, clinical trial reports
Ants use a genetic 'bulldozer' to achieve a hyper-specific sense of smell
Scientists pinpoint a key gene behind heart defects in Down syndrome
$6.2M grant will launch UC San Diego REACH Center for Translational Science on Whole Person Health
Bay Area Lyme Foundation opens applications for 2026 Emerging Leader Awards and research grants
A new post-processing route to improve tensile strength and ductility in 3d-printed alloys
JMIR Publications’ Journal of Medical Internet Research invites submissions on Navigating AI-Enabled Uncertainty
Small changes in alcohol intake linked to blood pressure shifts
Natural Japanese and Taiwanese hinoki cypresses genetically differentiated 1 million years ago
GemPharmatech announces research collaboration with leading cancer center to advance antibody discovery
Deciding whether a breathing tube is best for a child
A ‘dead’ 1800s idea rises again... with clues to the mystery of the universe’s missing antimatter
Roboticists reverse engineer zebrafish navigation
FAU historian traces the transformation of U.S. nursing homes into big business
CABI study reveals major inequalities in global One Health research
Reptiles ‘pee’ crystals, and scientists are investigating what they’re made of
Drug prevents congenital heart block recurrence in a high-risk pregnancy
Wiley announces winners of Advanced Science Young Innovator Award
[Press-News.org] $6.2M grant will launch UC San Diego REACH Center for Translational Science on Whole Person HealthThe initiative will expand research in whole person health, linking complementary and integrative health institutions with UC San Diego to drive innovation and improve patient outcomes.