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ARS Home » Plains Area » Houston, Texas » Children's Nutrition Research Center » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #271922

Title: Promoting innovation in pediatric nutrition

Author
item BIER, DENNIS - Children'S Nutrition Research Center (CNRC)

Submitted to: Nestle Nutrition Workshop
Publication Type: Book / Chapter
Publication Acceptance Date: 7/1/2010
Publication Date: 7/1/2010
Citation: Bier, D.M. 2010. Promoting innovation in pediatric nutrition. In: Koletzko, B., Koletzko, S., Ruemmele, F., editors. Drivers of Innovation in Pediatric Nutrition: Nestle Nutrition Institute Workshop Series Pediatric Program. Volume 66. Switzerland: Reinhardt Druck. pp. 205-215.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Truly impactful innovation can only be recognized in retrospect. Moreover, almost by definition, developing algorithmic paths on roadmaps for innovation are likely to be unsuccessful because innovators do not generally follow established routes. Nonetheless, environments can be established within Departments of Pediatrics that promote innovating thinking. The environmental factors necessary to do so include: (1) demand that academic Pediatrics Departments function in an aggressively scholarly mode; (2) capture the most fundamental science in postnatal developmental biology; (3) focus education and training on the boundaries of our knowledge, rather than the almost exclusive attention to what we think we already know; (4) devote mentoring, time and resources to only the most compelling unanswered questions in the pediatric sciences, including nutrition; (5) accept only systematic, evidence-based answers to clinical questions; (6) if systematic, evidence-based data are not available, design the proper studies to get them; (7) prize questioning the answers to further move beyond the knowledge limit; (8) support the principle that experiments in children will be required to convincingly answer clinical questions important to children, and (9) establish the multicenter resources in pediatric scientist training, clinical study design and implementation, and laboratory and instrument technologies required to answer today's questions with tomorrow's methods.