Skip main navigation

Military Health System

Clear Your Browser Cache

This website has recently undergone changes. Users finding unexpected concerns may care to clear their browser's cache to ensure a seamless experience.

TRIP initiative bridges the gap between TBI research, clinical care

Image of a statue of a broken circle. The broken circle serves as a symbol of the service members with traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress (Photo by: Dr. Thomas Piazza).

Healthcare providers across the Department of Defense (DOD) must stay up-to-date with the latest modalities and research within their discipline.

To provide the best possible care, centered on traumatic brain injury (TBI) research and brain health, the Defense Intrepid Network for Traumatic Brain Injury and Brain Health had developed a Translating Research into Practice (TRIP) initiative. TRIP was created to support the translation of effective research outcomes into clinical standards of care for the improvement of brain health and management of patients with TBI.

"The Defense Intrepid Network provides a unique interdisciplinary clinical platform to foster partnerships with DOD, interagency, academic, industry, international, and civil society experts to gain greater access to and rapidly implement effective care and treatment modalities for TBI," explained Navy Capt. Carlos Williams, director for the National Intrepid Center of Excellence (NICoE) at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland and first member of the Defense Intrepid Network.

Coordinating these efforts is TRIP Coordinator Theresa Woo. Woo, a neuroscientist, first joined the NICoE in 2015 in support of the neuroimaging division before transitioning into her current role in research operations. As the TRIP Coordinator, Woo will utilize her experience as a clinical researcher and operations specialist to foster connections between the subject matter experts in the Network and the global TBI community.

One of the ways the TRIP Initiative Team hopes to do this is through TRIP Scientific Community Groups, which will bring together clinicians, researchers, and other subject matter experts to help identify cutting-edge research findings that have the greatest potential of being translated into clinical standards of care. Another priority is to formally operationalize the existing Defense Intrepid Network of TBI clinics to more efficiently support multi-site protocols, maximizing the impact and generalizability of research findings.

"Regardless of clinical specialty or scientific expertise, we all share a common goal across the TBI community: to improve the lives of TBI patients and their families. TRIP is, in a sense, a Network-wide implementation of this goal, bringing together providers and researchers at the start to help streamline the process and get results into clinic as quickly as possible," explained Woo.

Building on more than a decade of experience in interdisciplinary care delivery and collaborative partnerships, the Defense Intrepid Network now looks to the TRIP initiative to "break down the silos and barriers in the TBI community [to] ensure that all stakeholders are at the table as we look for the next great treatment to bring to clinical standards of care," stated Dr. Thomas DeGraba, co-chair of the TRIP and chief innovations officer at the NICoE.

Dr. Treven Pickett, NICoE's department chief of research and co-chair of the TRIP initiative, emphasized that the TRIP is not a vehicle to mandate changes in clinical care. Rather, it is an organizational framework that facilitates an "inclusive conversation" about promising research findings and their potential applicability to clinical care among a variety of stakeholders.

From day one, leaders, researchers, and clinicians from across the global TBI community will be a part of the conversation. Pickett added, "This initiative aspires to narrow the gap between promising research developments, and actual clinical care, by implementing a framework for these conversations to happen."

For more information on the TRIP initiative, follow the NICoE on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn. To learn more about getting involved in TRIP efforts, reach out to the TRIP Coordinating Committee at: dha.bethesda.j-11.mbx.trip@mail.mil.

The Defense Intrepid Network for TBI and Brain Health includes the NICoE and 10 Intrepid Spirit Centers (ISCs) across the Military Health System. The Intrepid Network takes an interdisciplinary approach to TBI care and associated health conditions and collaborates closely with partners across the federal government, academia, industries and civil society

You also may be interested in...

Video
Mar 23, 2022

Art Therapy at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence

Creative Art Therapy

Adrienne Stamper, an art therapist at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence (NICoE), provides a window into the process of healing through art therapy. Art therapists are master’s-level behavioral health professionals who are trained to use art as a vehicle for non-verbal thoughts, emotions, and experiences. At NICoE, the service members have ...

Video
Mar 16, 2022

Dance and Movement Therapy at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence

Dance and Movement Therapy

Liz Freeman, lead dance/movement therapist; and Kristine Keliiki, dance/movement therapist at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence (NICoE), discuss the many ways they use dance movement therapy (DMT) to help patients at the NICoE. DMT is the psychotherapeutic use of movement to promote emotional, social, cognitive, and physical parts of a person ...

Video
Mar 16, 2022

Music Therapy at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence

Music Therapy

Nate McLaughlan is a board-certified music therapist at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence (NICoE). In this video, he discusses the many way music therapy can help patients at the NICoE. He explains that music therapy uses music-based experiences to address identified symptoms and goals with a music therapist who is trained to use elements of ...

Article
Mar 4, 2022

It’s True – Carrots (and Other Vegetables) Can Help You See in the Dark

Each color in fruits and vegetables indicates an abundance of specific nutrients.

Have you ever heard that carrots are good for your eyes, or that they can help you see in the dark? It’s true – carrots are rich in the compound beta carotene, which your body uses to make a form of vitamin A that helps your eyes adjust in the dark. A shortage of vitamin A can cause a host of health problems, including blindness.

Skip subpage navigation
Refine your search
Last Updated: July 11, 2023
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on X Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery