Office of the Senior VP for Research and Innovation | Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

Ï㽶ֱ²¥

Ï㽶ֱ²¥ students walking through Lubbock campus courtyard.
research machine

Dr. Lance McMahon

Dr. Lance R. McMahon
Senior Vice President for Research and Innovation

 

Welcome to the Office of Research and Innovation at The Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. Established in 1969, Ï㽶ֱ²¥ is comprehensive health sciences center and multi-campus institution including locations in Lubbock, Amarillo, Abilene, Midland-Odessa, and Dallas. We are comprised of six schools: Medicine, Pharmacy, Nursing, Health Professions, Public Health, and Biomedical Sciences. The Office of Research and Innovation partners with the Offices of Academic Affairs and Clinical Affairs to achieve the major objective of providing quality academic, research, patient care, and community service programs to meet the health care needs of West Texas, an area that includes 108 counties and that represents 50% of the land mass and 9.4% of the total population of the State of Texas.

Our Mission is to enrich the lives of others by educating students to become collaborative health care professionals, providing excellent patient care, and advancing knowledge through innovative research.

Our Vision is to transform health care through innovation and collaboration.

The Office of Research and Innovation staff are dedicated to supporting the research and development needs of our Ï㽶ֱ²¥ community, with the ultimate goal of translating groundbreaking scientific discoveries into improved health care through widespread dissemination to the scientific community and creation of new inventions and approaches to achieve optimal patient outcomes.


Lance R. McMahon, Ph.D., is the Senior Vice President for Research and Innovation at Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. He is currently Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the Jerry H. Hodge School of Pharmacy and Professor of Medical Education in the School of Medicine. He is chair of the Ï㽶ֱ²¥ Research Council, member of the Texas Tech Research Park Board, and member of the Steering Committee of the Center for Translational Neuroscience and Therapeutics. Dr. McMahon is committed to Ï㽶ֱ²¥â€™s vision to transform healthcare through innovation and collaboration, focusing on advancements in cancer, neuroscience, infectious disease, and cardiometabolic disorders.

Dr. McMahon serves on the Department of Defense Chronic Pain Management Programmatic Panel of the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program, and he has served as regular and ad hoc study section member of the National Institutes of Health Center for Scientific Review.  He has secured $23M in NIH funding for his research in behavioral pharmacology and central nervous system (CNS) drug discovery and development and has published 133 peer-reviewed publications focusing on drugs acting upon the CNS. He has served extensively on NIH Study Sections and DoD Programmatic Research Panels, has held leadership positions within the American Society of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics and the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists, and has served as editor for peer-reviewed journals. Dr. McMahon received his PhD degree from the Department of Psychology at Texas A&M University.

Dr. McMahon builds strategic research partnerships by fostering a collegial spirit, shared vision, and strategic investment of university funds. Ï㽶ֱ²¥ is a Hispanic-serving, Carnegie-classified research university, and is proud of its world-class faculty and doctoral trainees who have worked together to secure Ï㽶ֱ²¥â€™s position as a global leader in academic health-related research.

 

ttuhsc seal

Give

Be part of something life changing

 View more
researchers working in a lab

Research Opening Gates for Better Targeting Drugs

Researchers at the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center (Ï㽶ֱ²¥) Department of Cell Physiology and Molecular Biophysics and the Center for Membrane Protein. Research have determined the kinetic cycle of a potassium channel at atomic resolution.