A catalytic research fund and a new partnership with The Hartwell Foundation will bolster critical research in Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) at the International Center for Autism Research and Education (ICARE) at Case Western Reserve University.
The Mt. Sinai Health Care Foundation committed $100,000 to establish a Catalytic Autism Research Fund to support promising early-stage research projects that advance ICARE’s mission. The fund is expected to support five to 10 research projects, with awards ranging from $10,000 to $20,000, and will increase the ability of ICARE members to obtain funding from government, foundation, industry and philanthropic sources and establish Northeast Ohio as an innovative leader in autism research and treatment.
“These funds will immediately inject new ideas into ASD research through these pilot projects,” said Lynn Singer, Case Western Reserve’s deputy provost and vice president for academic affairs.
The new foundation partnership will join the ASD patient registry created by ICARE to the Hartwell Foundation’s Autism Research and Technology Initiative (iHART), a global centralized data repository to benefit biomedical research on autism and help children affected by the developmental disorder.
“Collaboration with ICARE will accelerate the addition of genomic data to the open-access iHART database, a centralized repository of bioinformatics data that has the potential to benefit autism biomedical research and, ultimately, those children affected with the disorder,” said Fred Dombrose, president of The Hartwell Foundation.

New initiatives help advance research in autism
FEATURED |
October 31, 2016
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF