Community Engagement Core (CEC)

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P42 · $122,297 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Abstract Supporting the aim articulated in NIEHS’s 2018-2023 strategic plan to “recognize and seek to address the disparate health impacts of environmental hazards on disadvantaged and diverse communities,” and the focus of the Duke University Superfund Research Center (DUSRC) on neurodevelopmental health impacts of early- life co-exposures to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and metals, the Community Engagement Core (CEC) will engage with low socioeconomic status communities of color in Durham and Navassa, NC, experiencing disproportionate exposure due to geographic proximity to hazardous sites and exacerbated health risks from exposures due to social determinants of health1–10. The CEC’s holistic, three-tiered approach to prevention and intervention is based on the environmental health literacy framework11–14, generating awareness of, and promoting self-efficacy to reduce early life exposure to PAHs and metals by generating solutions at the individual, community, and policy levels. Co-produced in collaboration with our extensive network of our community partner organizations in the two geographic areas, and in accordance with their expressed interests and needs, the proposed CEC initiatives will facilitate bidirectional communication between affected communities and Center researchers and trainees, other SRPs and local, state and federal agencies. The first initiative will promote individual awareness and self-efficacy to reduce exposure among pregnant women and children in Durham, NC, through report-back and bidirectional communication. In collaboration with Project 1 and the Administrative and Research Translation Core (ARTC) and Data Management and Analysis Core (DMAC), the CEC will apply best practices in risk communication and employ effective report-back and bidirectional communication strategies to develop accessible, culturally appropriate communication tools that promote informed decision-making and empower individual participants to take action to reduce exposures. Secondly, the CEC will foster community level awareness of and the capacity to investigate and reduce exposures through Environmental Health Academies, co-developed and implemented with partner organizations in Durham and Navassa. The content of these Academies will be developed based on community interests and concerns and in conjunction with our community partners, DUSRC researchers and trainees from Projects 1, 4, and 5 and the Analytical Chemistry Core (ACC), DMAC, and Research Experience and Training Coordination Core (RETCC), as well as relevant local, state, and federal agency stakeholders. Lastly, we will build the capacity of affected communities to assess and utilize environmental health data to promote more effective and inclusive policies aimed at reducing exposure. In conjunction with our community partner organizations in Durham and Navassa, the CEC will collaborate with the ARTC, RETCC, and DMAC to synthesize and report aggregate results of DUSRC resea...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10353159
Project number
2P42ES010356-20
Recipient
DUKE UNIVERSITY
Principal Investigator
Elizabeth Shapiro
Activity code
P42
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$122,297
Award type
2
Project period
2000-06-01 → 2027-06-30