# Community Engagement Core

> **NIH NIH P30** · ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAI · 2021 · $208,556

## Abstract

Project Summary 
 The rapidly expanding field of environmental health science (EHS) holds great promise for informing policy, 
bettering communities, and improving health. EHS research efforts are propelled by innovative and inclusive 
partnerships that engage the stakeholder groups who understand and can impact environmentally driven 
disparities, and an infrastructure designed to rapidly and efficiently focus teams on emerging EHS questions 
and opportunities. The heart of our P30 Center, the CEC, is a powerful collaborative accelerator, receiving 
critical input from stakeholders into Center activities and taking equally critical output—our research results—to 
communities. The CEC has united Mount Sinai's community of EHS researchers, experts in stakeholder 
engagement and diverse advocates, educators, clinicians, funders, policymakers, systems leaders and 
entrepreneurs to form our highly collaborative Stakeholder Advisory Board (SAB), our infrastructure for 
groundbreaking EHS research. Over the past three years, we built the capacity to facilitate collaborative 
dialogue between stakeholder groups and Center Members to translate cutting edge science into prevention 
measures that reach and resonate with diverse audiences, inform policies, and act as catalysts for 
environmental change. We initially focused our activities in multicultural areas of NYC, specifically our 
neighboring communities of East Harlem and the South Bronx, which have high exposures to environmental 
toxicants and social stressors and disproportionately poor health. We have used what we have learned to 
further address national and international EHS concerns. We have innovated in four areas: clinical (exploring 
development of an EHS screener to link patients to local resources); educational (training dozens of inner city 
teachers to teach EHS/citizen science); community and policy dissemination (in-person through hosting 
summits, inner-city school teacher trainings, and virtually through robust social media, our website, short films, 
cartoons, infographics); and sparking novel partnered research (skin bleaching, crumb rubber turf CBPRs). 
 We aim to continue our robust engagement activities by innovating: (1) clinical care by developing and 
implementing an electronic EHS screener for use in clinical care to identify and address EHS challenges for 
high risk children; (2) education by supporting EHS champions to translate and disseminate EHS research for 
diverse stakeholders who can enhance the impact of the research, inform future research and facilitate 
community-based research; (3) traditional and social media dissemination so stakeholders act on research 
findings, effectively identify EHS issues of local concern and communicate them to researchers and moving 
from research to action; (4) evaluation by enhancing the capacity of our partners to use mixed-methods 
evaluation of processes and outcomes. Promotion of community academic partnerships of this nature ...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10140358
- **Project number:** 5P30ES023515-08
- **Recipient organization:** ICAHN SCHOOL OF MEDICINE AT MOUNT SINAI
- **Principal Investigator:** MAIDA GALVEZ
- **Activity code:** P30 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2021
- **Award amount:** $208,556
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2020-04-01 → 2023-03-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10140358

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10140358, Community Engagement Core (5P30ES023515-08). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-22 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10140358. Licensed CC0.

---

*[NIH grants dataset](/datasets/nih-grants) · CC0 1.0*
