Center to Improve Chronic disease Outcomes through Multi-level and Multi-generational approaches Unifying Novel Interventions and Training for health EquitY (The COMMUNITY Center)

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $4,220,487 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Despite medical advances in treating chronic diseases and epidemiological findings identifying risk factors for chronic diseases, there remain major persistent health disparities driven by the Social Determinants of Health (SDoH). We have come together to address these disparities through the Center to Improve Chronic disease Outcomes through Multi-level and Multi-generational approaches Unifying Novel Interventions and Training for health EquitY (COMMUNITY Center). Our vision is rooted in public health which recognizes that medical advances alone can only partially reduce the burden of disease and that reducing health disparities in chronic diseases requires improving the health and wellness of individuals, families, communities and societies throughout life. We seek to realize this vision within the communities we serve that are among the most highly diverse in the U.S. with approximately 2/3 non-white, 1/3 foreign-born, and 1/5 living below the Federal poverty line. The mission of the COMMUNITY Center is to reduce health disparities in chronic diseases in the New York City Region through rigorous testing, disseminating and sustaining of interventions that incorporate the multiple levels of influence from individual, interpersonal, community and societal approaches. We have designed three synergistic projects that address chronic conditions identified by and responsive to the voice and concerns of the communities we serve and each involve novel interventions employing the community health worker (CHW) model for enrollment and/or retention into the studies while also connecting participants to services based on five domains of SDoH (housing instability, food insecurity, transportation problems, utility help needs and insurance enrollment). The three projects are 1) Community Health workers United to Reduce Colorectal cancer and CVD among people at Higher risk (CHURCH); 2) Addressing Sleep Duration, Regularity, and Efficiency: A Multidimensional Sleep Health Intervention for Reducing Disparities in Cardiometabolic Disease (DREAM); and 3) Intervention to iMProve AdherenCe equiTably (IMPACT TRIAL). In addition to the three research projects, the Center supports Health Equity Scholars and pilots funded through the Investigator Development Core (IDC) and community projects funded through the Community Core (known as the CONNECTOME). The Administrative Core (ADMIN) which includes faculty with expertise in biostatistics, implementation science, and data harmonization and biomedical informatics. The COMMUNITY Center involves strong collaborations between researchers, community organizations, clinicians and healthcare systems, public health agencies and other stakeholders and partners Columbia University Irving Medical Center (CUIMC) and Weill Cornell Medical Center (WCM) joined through the greater New York Presbyterian (NYP) Hospital System with City University of New York (CUNY) and the Physician Affiliate Group of New York (PAGNY). The uniqu...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10437176
Project number
1P50MD017341-01
Recipient
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES
Principal Investigator
Elizabeth Gross Cohn
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$4,220,487
Award type
1
Project period
2021-09-24 → 2026-06-30