# Research Experience & Training Coordination Core

> **NIH NIH P42** · UNIVERSITY OF IOWA · 2024 · $71,693

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY: Research Experience and Training Coordination Core 
The 20th century brought the chemical revolution and the steady increase of large-scale production of 
chemicals. Only later did the problem of environmental persistence of some of these new and useful chemicals 
become evident, and only recently did we discover the magnitude of the negative health effects caused by 
these pollutants, including brain diseases and metabolic syndrome, cancer, fertility problems, reduced immune 
system function, and even hearing loss and autism. Moreover, these pollutants may volatilize and contaminate 
indoor and outdoor air. Environmental health and engineering professionals must now deal with these legacy 
contaminants in multiple dimensions to protect humans and the environment, and to prevent future 
contamination. As a consequence, the traditional training approach designed to produce specialized experts in 
individual, narrow disciplines is clearly inappropriate to prepare trainees for leadership roles in environmental 
health and technology. Instead, future scientists and engineers need thorough training in their specific fields, 
supported by basic knowledge of diverse areas (socioeconomics, policy, engineering, and science), along with 
communication and collaboration skills to work with specialists in other disciplines and with varied stakeholders 
and affected communities. To properly prepare students and post-docs, the Iowa Superfund Research 
Program (ISRP) Research Experience and Training Coordination Core (RETCC) will: 1) identify, promote, 
evaluate, and track interdisciplinary training approaches; 2) coordinate training in ISRP methods and 
applications; 3) develop opportunities for trainee participation in the ISRP Community Engagement Core and in 
research translation activities; 4) interact with the ISRP Data Management and Analysis Core to provide 
training in data management, analysis, and data sharing; and 5) offer opportunities for professional career 
development. In the last funding circle (April 2015–November 2018), 48 graduate students and postdocs (24 
ongoing) obtained such training. To build on this success, we are creating and coordinating a unique set of 
courses, seminars, workshops, community outreach, and research translation experiences, so all ISRP 
trainees can gain insights into health effects, risk, detection, and remediation of polychlorinated biphenyls 
(PCBs), the needs of stakeholders and affected communities, and how to build a successful career. ISRP 
researchers make this possible through established, successful, supportive collaborations with colleagues 
representing diverse areas such as toxicology, occupational and environmental health, medicinal 
pharmacology, environmental and medical engineering, and urban and regional planning, along with 
extraordinary support from the University of Iowa Graduate College. The RETCC’s unique resources will 
ensure its future success of preparing a new generati...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10767888
- **Project number:** 5P42ES013661-19
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
- **Principal Investigator:** James Allen Ankrum
- **Activity code:** P42 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2024
- **Award amount:** $71,693
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2006-05-12 → 2025-05-04

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10767888

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10767888, Research Experience & Training Coordination Core (5P42ES013661-19). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-06-01 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10767888. Licensed CC0.

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