Deep South Center to Reduce Disparities in Chronic Diseases

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $4,260,643 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT: OVERALL The “Deep South,” including Alabama, Mississippi, and Louisiana, has the highest rates of obesity, diabetes and hypertension in the nation. As a result, life expectancy in the Deep South is substantially lower than other regions, and this discrepancy is even greater for Black Americans. The mission of the Deep South Center to Reduce Disparities in Chronic Diseases is to promote health equity and reduce the burden of cardiometabolic diseases across the Deep South. The Center will focus on the prevention, treatment and management of cardiometabolic diseases among Black Americans and low-income populations who suffer disproportionately from these conditions in our tri-state region. The Center is unified thematically through the application of the precision public health approach across the care continuum to achieve health equity, as the elimination of disparities will require precision public health, i.e., “providing the right intervention to the right population at the right time”. This approach acknowledges the importance of context, culture, individual beliefs and preferences as well as the need for multi-level and multi-domain interventions. The Center brings together a trans- disciplinary team of investigators from 4 institutions in 3 contiguous states (the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Tuskegee University, Louisiana’s Pennington Biomedical Research Center, and the University of Mississippi Medical Center) as well as regional non-academic partners to extend cardiometabolic research into real-world community and clinical settings. The Center will drive academic and nonacademic partners toward a new level of intellectual synergy, collaboration, and sustainable efforts to disseminate effective interventions that reduce health disparities in the region. To achieve the long-term goal of improving health equity, the Center will provide and coordinate resources not currently available through the following: 1) an Investigator Development Core, to expand and diversify the region’s research workforce through enrichment activities and a robust pilot program; 2) a Community Engagement Core, to promote equitable collaborations between researchers and non-academic partners; and 3) the Administrative Core, to provide leadership and support for all Center initiatives. The Center also includes three interrelated research projects evaluating multi-level and multi-domain interventions that are informed by, and conducted with, academic and community stakeholders in the region to address cardiometabolic health disparities among Black Americans and low-income populations. Given the significant health disparities in cardiometabolic diseases evident in the Deep South, the strong research base present at the partnering institutions, and the potential to expand and focus these energies on health equity research, the Deep South Center to Reduce Disparities in Chronic Diseases is ideally situated to inform research, clinical car...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10494283
Project number
5P50MD017338-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM
Principal Investigator
MONICA L. BASKIN
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$4,260,643
Award type
5
Project period
2021-09-24 → 2026-06-30