Presented by
There are dozens of webinars, online workshops, symposiums and conferences for the IACUC, IBC and IRB communities — but there’s only one Three I’s conference.
The Three I’s & Biosecurity: Creating Connections, Sharing Solutions, Building Strategies will address the emerging and complex challenges that touch the IACUC, IBC and IRB communities — issues relating to nanotechnology, CRISPR technology, importing/exporting and much, much more. It’s essential for the collaboration that drives the research community forward, enabling attendees to work smarter, not harder.
What’s more, attendees consistently rank the quality and ease of networking at the intimate Three I’s conference as a primary reason for selecting it over other national conferences each year.
Highlights will include:
- Action vs. Reaction: Disaster planning for the 21st century
- Collaboration & Compliance: The ABCs for IACUCs & IBCs
- PRIM&R IRB Course
- Timely Topics: Dual use, Common Rule revisions, conflict of interest, research integrity
- Dozens of other presentations that will engage and provide hands-on materials and experiences to take home
The Massachusetts Society for Medical Research, the North Carolina Association for Biomedical Research and the FBI Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate, together with recognized industry experts and compliance professionals, will impart concrete strategies that will allow you to stay ahead of challenging regulatory and security issues. Panels and interactive discussion groups promise to offer a multifaceted learning experience.
The main conference will be held April 14–15. Half-day workshops will be held Wednesday, April 13, on disaster planning, the ABCs for IACUCs & IBCs, and specialized training for IRBs led by PRIM&R.
Each attendee may attend only one half-day workshop, which is included in the price of a main conference registration. There is a separate fee to attend the half-day workshop without attending the main conference.
Speakers From...
- Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
- Boston Children’s Hospital
- Brigham and Women’s Hospital
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
- Copernicus Group
- Duke University/ Duke University Health System
- Emory University
- FBI Weapons of Mass Destruction Division
- Harvard University/ Harvard Medical School
- National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
- NIH Office of Biotechnology Activities (OBA)
- NIH Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare (OLAW)
- North Carolina State University
- Novartis
- PRIM&R
- Tulane University
- U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
- U.S. Department of Commerce
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
- University of Connecticut
- University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- University of Rhode Island
- University of Wisconsin-Stout
- Yerkes National Primate Research Center
Half-Day Workshop Agenda (Wednesday, April 13)
Option #1:
12:00 pm–5:00 pm
PRIM&R’s Specimens, Servers and Situations: Ethical Considerations in Protocol Design, Conduct and Review
Sponsored and conducted by PRIM&R
This intensive half-day program is designed for research professionals who understand the basic principles governing human subjects research but want to deepen their knowledge of core regulatory and ethical issues and learn practical strategies for effective design, conduct and review of research with human subjects. The program begins with a brief overview of the criteria for review applicable to federally funded human subjects research, including an examination of the recently proposed changes to the Common Rule. Three interactive modules on research with biological specimens, unanticipated problems and adverse events, and Internet research will round out the program. The course is designed for all members of an institution’s human research protections program, including institutional review board members and staff, investigators and research staff and institutional officials.
George Gasparis
President
The Peer Consulting Group, LLC
Option #2:
12:00 pm–5:00 pm
ABCs for IACUCs & IBCs: Frameworks for Compliance™
Conducted by MSMR
ABCs for IACUCs & IBCs: Frameworks for Compliance™ is an MSMR training program designed and developed for IACUCs and IBCs. Those who will profit most from this training program are IACUC and IBC administrators and staff, committee members (including non-affiliated members), research administrators, compliance staff, occupational health and safety staff, vivarium staff and attending veterinarians.
ABCs for IACUCs & IBCs: Frameworks for Compliance™ gives a detailed overview of the laws, regulations and policies that govern the work of these two important oversight committees. Presentations are intermingled with pertinent team exercises and sample protocols. This program is designed to help meet the requirement stated in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, 8th edition, 2011, that states “All personnel involved with the care and use of animals must be adequately educated, trained, and/or qualified in basic principles of laboratory animal science to help ensure high-quality science and animal well-being.” It will also address USDA/APHIS/AC Policy 15.
Both the IACUC and the IBC are committed to ensuring the protection of the research staff, the animal husbandry staff, veterinarians and all others involved in research or who may have contact with or exposure to biohazardous agents. Those participating in the program will:
- Receive a clear overview of the laws, regulations and policies that govern the care
and use of laboratory animals - Learn about the NIH OBA, the contents of the NIH guidelines for Research Involving Recombinant DNA Molecules and the history of IBCs, and they will develop an understanding of the range of responsibilities that IBCs have under the NIH Guidelines
- Examine the relationship of IBC and IACUCs in terms of their respective roles and responsibilities
- Discuss obstacles and other issues that both committees experience in meeting their ongoing research efforts and objectives
- Review the key components of an integrated program through case studies and protocol review
- Engage in discussion with colleagues to share ideas about best practices, resources, innovative approaches and collaborations
Barbara Garibaldi, DVM, DACLAM
Director, Animal Research Facility
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
Instructor, Department of Medicine
Harvard Medical School
Kathryn A. Holthaus
Director
Research Subjects Protection and Laboratory Safety Compliance
Research Administration and Compliance
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
David Goldberg, MS
Associate Director, Research Operations
Boston Children’s Hospital
Ted Myatt, ScD
Director of Research Integrity
University of Rhode Island
Option #3:
12:00 pm–5:00 pm
Disaster Planning for the 21st Century
This workshop will include lecture-style presentations from speakers representing each of the 3 I’s and the FBI, followed by a participatory scenario game. The initial presentations will provide the tools and information that participants will use to act out their roles in the interactive scenario game later in the session. Following the game activity, there will be a debriefing and a panel-style discussion between attendees and panelists.
Ron E. Banks, DVM, ACLAM, ACVPM, CPIA
Duke University
Angie Birnbaum
Director of Biosafety
Tulane University
CeCe Brotchie-Fine, MA, CPIA
Manager, Animal Welfare Compliance
IACUC Chair & Animal Welfare Officer
Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, Inc.
Marcy Brown, B.S., M.A., CPIA
PRIM&R CPIA Council Vice-chair
AAALAC, International Ad Hoc Specialist
Charlotte H. Coley, MACT, CIP
Training Coordinator
Office of Human Research Ethics—IRB
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Lisa Newbern
Chief, Public Affairs
Emory University
Yerkes National Primate Research Center
Will So, Ph.D.
Policy & Program Specialist
Biological Countermeasures Unit
Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate
Day 1 Agenda (Thursday, April 14)
7:00 am
Registration & Breakfast
8:00 am–8:15 am
Welcome & Introduction
Alan Dittrich, Ph.D.
President
Massachusetts Society for Medical Research (MSMR)
Suzanne Wilkison
President
North Carolina Association for Biomedical Research (NCABR)
Edward H. You
Supervisory Special Agent
Biological Countermeasures Unit
Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
8:15 am–9:10 am
for All audiences
Who’s Behind the Wheel? Gene Drives and Biosafety Challenges
Jennifer Kuzma, Ph.D.
Goodnight-NC GSK Foundation Distinguished Professor
Co-Director, Genetic Engineering and Society Program
School of Public and International Affairs
North Carolina State University
9:15 am–10:10 am
for All audiences
Biosecurity and CRISPR
Kathleen M. Vogel, Ph.D.
Director, Science, Technology and Society Program
Associate Professor, Department of Political Science
North Carolina State University
10:15 am-10:35 am
Break
10:40 am–11:25 am
Regulatory Breakout Sessions
for IACUC audiences
OLAW Update, PHS Policy and Assurance Expectations
Eileen Morgan
Director, Division of Assurances
Office of Laboratory Animal Welfare (OLAW)
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
for IBC audiences
NIH-OBA
Kathryn Harris, Ph.D., RBP
Contractor
Senior Outreach and Education Specialist
Program
Office of Science Policy
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
for IRB audiences
Common Rule Revisions
Daniel Nelson
Director, Human Research Protocol Office (HRPO)
National Health and Environmental Effects Research Laboratory (NHEERL)
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
for Security audiences
Closed Session for FBI only
11:30 am–12:15 pm
for All audiences
Trends in Research Misconduct Cases: Anticipating and Mitigating Risks
Jeff M. Seo, J.D., LLM
Executive Director
Office for Academic and Research Integrity
Harvard Medical School
12:15 pm–1:15 pm
Lunch
1:20 pm–2:05 pm
Breakout Sessions
for IACUC audiences for IBC audiences
Animal Transport: The Grey Area
Angela C. Birnbaum
Director of Biosafety
Tulane University
for IBC audiences
The False Claims Act and the IBC
Jeff M. Seo, J.D., LLM
Executive Director
Office for Academic and Research Integrity
Harvard Medical School
for IBC audiences for IRB audiences
When Interests Conflict-Conflicts of Interest in Research
Wesley G. Byerly, Pharm. D.
Associate Vice President
Office of the Vice President for Research
Research Compliance Services
UCONN Health
for Security audiences
Closed Session for FBI only
2:10 pm–3:45 pm
for All audiences
Best Practices among the Three I’s…Sharing, Integration and Overlapping…Streamlining the Processes and Reducing Burden…
Marcy Brown, B.S., M.A., CPIA
PRIM&R CPIA Council Vice-chair
AAALAC, International Ad Hoc Specialist
Debra L. Hunt, DRPH, CBSP
Director, Biological Safety Division
Occupational and Environmental Safety Office
Assistant Professor
Duke University
Jody Power, M.S., MBA, CIP
Executive Director
Institutional Review Board
Duke University Health System
3:45 pm–4:00 pm
Break
4:00 pm– 5:30 pm
for All audiences
FBI Interactive Exercise
Case studies • Table-top exercises
Edward H. You
Supervisory Special Agent
Biological Countermeasures Unit
Weapons of Mass Destruction Directorate
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
5:35 pm-7:00 pm
Meet & Greet – Welcome Reception
Day 2 Agenda (Friday, April 15)
7:00 am
Registration & Breakfast
8:00 am–8:05 am
Welcome to Day 2
8:05 am–10:05 am
for All audiences
Spot the Issues!
Ted Myatt, Sc.D.
Director of Research Integrity
Division of Research and Economic Development
University of Rhode Island
Kathryn A. Holthaus, M.S.
Director
Research Subjects Protection and Laboratory Safety Compliance
Research Administration and Compliance
Brigham and Women’s Hospital
10:10 am–10:30 am
Break
10:35 am–11:20 am
Breakout Sessions
for IACUC audiences for IRB audiences
Regulatory Burden- What’s Mandatory, What’s Not?
Strategies for reducing self-imposed burden for IACUCs and IRBs
Marcy Brown, B.S., M.A., CPIA
PRIM&R CPIA Council Vice-chair
AAALAC, Intl ad hoc Specialist
Jody Power, M.S., MBA, CIP
Executive Director
Institutional Review Board
Duke Univeristy Health System
for IACUC audiences for IBC audiences for IRB audiences
The Magic of Engagement: Focus on the Learner and Build Effective Training Programs
Marley Thrasher
Manager, Training and Communications
Office of Research, Innovation and Economic Development
Sponsored Programs and Regulatory Compliance Services
North Carolina State University
for IRB audiences
Social Media, Participant Recruitment and Behavioral Studies: Craigslist and Beyond
Elizabeth A. Buchanan, Ph.D.
Interim Director
Research Services
University of Wisconsin-Stout
11:25 am–12:15 pm
Breakout Sessions
for IACUC audiences for IBC audiences
Regulatory Burden- What’s Mandatory, What’s Not?
(continued)
for IACUC audiences for IBC audiences for IRB audiences
The Magic of Engagement: Focus on the Learner and Build Effective Training Programs (continued)
for IRB audiences
Ethical Review and Oversight of Nanotechnology Studies Involving Human Subjects
David B. Resnik, J.D., Ph.D.
Bioethicist and IRB Chair
National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences
National Institutes of Health
12:15 pm–1:00 pm
Lunch
1:05 pm–3:30 pm
for All audiences
Import and Export of Biological Materials
DOT inspections • Permits • Tissue • Animals • Export control issues • Classify biologicals
Kimberly Orr, DVM, Ph.D.
Microbiologist
Chemical Biological Controls Division
Bureau of Industry and Security
U.S. Department of Commerce
Deborah L. Dufficy, DVM, MPH, DACVPM
Senior Staff Officer, Organisms and Vectors
Agriculture Select Agent Services (AgSAS)
National Import Export Services
APHIS, Veterinary Services
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Von McClee, M.S.
Branch Chief
Import Permit Program
Division of Select Agents and Toxins
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Daniel Vick
Export Control Compliance Administrator
Office of Sponsored Programs and Regulatory Compliance Services
North Carolina State University
3:30 pm–3:50 pm
Break
3:50 pm–4:35 pm
for All audiences
FBI General Session: Creating Connections, Sharing Solutions, Building Strategies
4:35 pm–4:45 pm
Closing Remarks
Evaluations
4:45 pm
End of Conference
Continuing Education Details
Certified Research Administrator (CRA)
The Research Administrators Certification Council (RACC) will count attendance at the THREE I’s conference toward the 80-hour contact hours recertification requirement.
Certified Professional IACUC Administrator (CPIA)
The Council for Certified Professional IACUC Administrators (CCPIA) accepts documentation of continuing education hours when the topics fall within the CPIA body of knowledge. If you are unsure about whether a specific session meets these requirements you should consult with PRIM&R.
Certified IRB Professional (CIP)
The Council for Certification of IRB Professionals (CCIP) accepts documentation of continuing education hours when the topics fall within the CIP body of knowledge and the education is intended to be beyond initial, basic or fundamental level education. If you are unsure about whether a specific session meets these requirements you should consult with PRIM&R.
Certified Biological Safety Professional (CBSP)
Registered Biosafety Professional (RBP)
The American Biological Safety Association (ABSA International) requires CBSPs and RBPs to maintain verification of the continuing education activities that they attend. ABSA will provide:
- .5 CM points for the 1/2 day session ABC’s for IACUCs & IBCs
- 2.0 CM points for the full two day conference