CFAR Early Career Investigator Retreat 2024
The morning will include an applied session on Storytelling for Scientists as a
Each year's symposium is organized around a translational aspect of HIV research targeted by our Center (basic, clinical and population studies). The format typically combines presentations from senior scientists at leading research institutes in the United States and abroad with a select number of UCSF postdoctoral researchers or clinicians working in complementary areas of research. The symposium was not held during the Covid pandemic.
The morning will include an applied session on Storytelling for Scientists as a
The UCSF-Gladstone Center for AIDS Research will present the 2019 CFAR Symposium on Friday, May 31, 2019, in the Robertson Auditorium at the Mission Bay Conference Center. Organized jointly by the CFAR’s Administrative and Developmental Cores, the day will be a celebration of CFAR’s legacy in helping to catalyze the stellar HIV research happening here in San Francisco. We will be featuring the work of many former CFAR awardees/mentees who have gone on to be successful independent HIV researchers.
The purpose of this meeting is to update the San Francisco Bay Area (HIV research) community on the opioid epidemic and the current state of the science, especially as it pertains to HIV. We envision a broad scope covering national epidemiology and trends, an overview of the drug market (heroin versus fentanyl, an overview of clinical interventions available, a panel discussions on innovative uses of buprenorphine and safe consumption spaces, current research and interventions happening at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and policy and social justice developments.
Jim Pickett
AIDS Foundation of Chicago
“PrEP in Chicago – Spreading Tingle
Welcome: Paul A. Volberding, MD and Warner Greene, MD, PhD
Opening Address
Morning Session
Moderator: Charles S. Craik, PhD
This was designed for all HIV/AIDS investigators. The symposium presented a comprehensive series of lectures. They reviewed the new basic, clinical, and behavioral studies providing insights into the biology of HIV prevention and treatment.
Moderator: Charles C.J. Carpenter, MD
The 2002 symposium focused on new developments in basic biological research in HIV.