Advancing Health Equity through Research

Inside building photograph of the Clinical Translational Science Institute at UB.

A Journey with Clinical Translational Science Institute and Beyond

Tim Murphy

Tim Murphy headshot.

Tuesday, March 11, 2025
Noon-1 p.m. EST

This webinar, featured on a TUESDAY, will highlight the critical role of the CTSI and research in addressing health disparities and promoting health equity in WNY and beyond. Learn the community-based approaches, innovative studies and interdisciplinary collaborations that address systemic barriers to equitable healthcare to improve access to care, reduced disparities, and inform policy changes. Attendees will also learn about Dr. Murphy’s role, advancing research and the training programs that are conducted and coordinated in Buffalo to improve healthcare for all. 

About Tim Murphy
Dr. Tim Murphy is a SUNY Distinguished Professor; Senior Associate Dean for Clinical and Translational Research; Director, Clinical and Translational Science Institute; and Director, Community Health Equity Research Institute. He recently received the UB President’s medal and announced that UB was awarded $3.6 million to address WNY health inequities. 

Dr. Murphy is responsible for overseeing strategies that aim to transform the school’s research programs into new or improved treatments for patients and for assisting faculty and trainees at all levels in their research activities.  He also directs the CTSI, a facility that includes a nine-bed Clinical Research Center with support services for clinical research.  A wide variety of clinical and translational research training programs are conducted and coordinated at the facility.

He is an internationally recognized expert in respiratory tract bacterial infections and specializes in research on pathogens responsible for ear infections (primarily in children) and on lower respiratory tract infections in adults with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).

He holds more than a dozen patents related to vaccine development and is co-principal investigator on the longest-standing study of COPD, which he is conducting at the Buffalo Veterans Affairs Medical Center. His laboratory is based at the school’s Clinical and Translational Science Institute, and his work is funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health.

Dr. Murphy received his medical degree from Tufts University School of Medicine and completed a fellowship in infectious diseases at Tufts before coming to UB in 1981. He has published more than 150 articles in peer-reviewed journals and serves as a reviewer for 20 medical journals, including the New England Journal of Medicine.