$6.9M Grant Benefits Environmental Health Research in Arid Climates

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The Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center, headquartered at the University of Arizona College of Pharmacy, has been awarded a five-year $6.9 million grant to continue to study the effects of arsenic, air particulates, sunlight and other environmental factors affecting the health of individuals residing in arid climates worldwide.

"For nearly 25 years, we've committed ourselves to exploring and understanding underlying human diseases that are influenced by environmental exposure, particularly in desert climates," said Nathan Cherrington, director of the center. "Our overarching goal has never wavered — to improve the lives of the people of Arizona, the Southwest and in arid environments worldwide."

The Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center, which has been funded continuously since 1994, received the grant from the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences. A large portion of the funding will be given to the UA's facilities, Cherrington said.

The center has three core initiatives that support collaborative, multidisciplinary research. The funds support infrastructure for state-of-the-art facilities and equipment in research enterprises, including a cellular imaging facility core, a genomics facility core and an integrated health sciences facility core.

The research themes, which span across each of the facility cores, include environmental exposures among Southwest populations, environmental lung disease and adaptive responses to environmental stress.

"The new grant funding provides an opportunity for us to expand collaboration with communities, to help determine the potential health effects from their environmental exposures and identify ways to reduce hazardous exposures," said Dr. Jeffrey Burgess, associate dean of research and professor at the UA Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and co-director of the integrated health sciences facility core at the Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center. Burgess has been a member of the center for more than 20 years.

The center includes 49 investigators, 13 staff and four key personnel from 17 departments within six colleges at the UA, and one investigator from Northern Arizona University.

"Research doesn't happen with a scientist sitting alone in a lab; it takes a multitude of people who bring their areas of expertise to focus on a problem. We provide expertise in statistics and big data and technologies to aid investigators at the Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center with their research," said Dean Billheimer, professor of biostatistics at the UA Zuckerman College of Public Health, co-director of the integrated health sciences facility core and leader of the data science resource at the center.

"The research conducted by Southwest Environmental Health Sciences Center's faculty exemplifies the UA's global impact," said UA President Robert C. Robbins. "By embracing collaborations that cut across several disciplines, they generate new knowledge that is rooted in our unique locale and positively impacts not only our region, but other arid locations in the Southwestern United States and across the world."

The center's administration provides seed money for pilot research projects to explore new areas of environmental health research, enabling researchers to acquire the essential preliminary data to pursue long-term extramural funding. Faculty members in the center train and mentor junior faculty members in environmental health sciences and help young scientists and clinician-scientists build foundations for careers in research areas funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences.

Another important center component is the community engagement core, which educates Southern Arizona tribal and underserved communities. Faculty and staff members disseminate environmental health information aligned with center research and areas of interest, including air pollution, lung disease, asthma, cancer, and the effects of ultraviolet radiation and arsenic exposure, among other topics.

"We've been able to disseminate environmental health research and information through effective forums including science cafes, which are public forums held throughout Southern Arizona with experts addressing environmental health issues," said Marti Lindsey, community engagement program director. "Additionally, environmental health curricula and lessons are made available to teachers, health-care providers, community members and students. It's been an effective way to engage our communities and provide environmental health education concepts and materials."

"In terms of environmental health, the University of Arizona remains in the upper echelon of leading research universities," Cherrington added.

A version of this article originally appeared on the UA College of Pharmacy website: http://www.pharmacy.arizona.edu/news/2018/ua-swehsc-receives-69-grant-continue-environmental-health-research-arid-climates

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