State of the Science Meeting Series: Health and Safety of Gulf Coast and U.S. Caribbean Fishers

NIH RePORTER · ALLCDC · U13 · $55,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

The objective of the proposed State of the Science Meeting Series: Health and Safety of Gulf Coast and U.S. Caribbean Fishers reflects an integrated, multi-disciplinary collaboration focused on evidence informed education bridging the gap between research and practice to improve fishing industry sector worker safety and health. In 2018 the Southeastern Coastal Center for Agricultural Health and Safety (SCCAHS) launched the annual State of the Science (SOS) Meeting to better understand and enhance the uptake of evidence-based practices that improve the health and safety of agricultural, forestry, and fisher populations and spotlight emerging issues. The SCCAHS has convened a total of six meetings 2018 – 2023, with the annual theme driven by community feedback reflecting their priorities, values, and experiences. The focus of this proposal is to use the sound SCCAHS framework to create a forum that addresses cross-sector topics (musculoskeletal health, injury prevention, surveillance, climate adaptation and mental health) and the effectiveness of practices and policies on U.S. Gulf and Caribbean fisher communities. The meeting outcomes will contribute to stronger collaboration between regional researchers and serve as a vehicle to disseminate research findings more broadly to community stakeholders related to NIOSH strategic and intermediate goals on musculoskeletal disorders, workplace safety, and healthy work design and well-being. The leadership team seeks to convene two SOS meetings in partnership with the Gulf and Caribbean Fisheries Institute (GCFI) in November 2024 and 2025. The SOS meetings will be convened pre-GCFI Annual Conference specialty workshops in collaboration with the NIOSH Office of Agricultural Safety and Health and an Organizing Committee. These groups understand the burden and needs of commercial and artisanal fishing workers – climate change impacts, governance, and adherence to safety interventions. These meetings will be driven by the long-term goal to cultivate partnerships and interdisciplinary collaboration, share national and regional research findings, engage the community as leaders in the research process and mobilize responsive programming to serve real- time conditions and challenges. The conference plan will be directed by NIOSH strategic goals and corresponding specific aims: 1) to provide oversight in aligning speakers/discussion leaders in addressing knowledge gaps and emerging issues impacting Gulf Coast and U.S. Caribbean fisher populations, 2) to embed hallmark community led meeting track – Community Voices: The impact of climate variability on fisheries productivity and fisher livelihoods, 3) to implement networking opportunities to advance collaborations among Gulf Coast and U.S. Caribbean stakeholders, and 4) to evaluate, translate, and disseminate research to practice findings into public information products. The proposed work is important because Gulf South, Puerto Rico, Saint Croix, Saint John and Sa...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10907169
Project number
1U13OH012714-01
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA
Principal Investigator
FARAH ADRIANA Arosemena
Activity code
U13
Funding institute
ALLCDC
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$55,000
Award type
1
Project period
2024-09-01 → 2026-08-31