Community Engagement Core

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P20 · $264,733 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract The central premise of the Community Engagement (CE) Core is that communities at greatest risk for negative health consequences due to climate change are the same communities who will make the most profound strides to mitigate the impacts of climate change. Indigenous Traditional Ecological Knowledges (ITEKs; also referred to as Native Science) refers to the evolving knowledge acquired by indigenous communities over millennia through their direct contact with the environment and has recently been recognized as having great potential to be leveraged to mitigate the impacts of climate change. To date, much of the existing literature on the capacity of ITEKs to inform efforts to mitigate the impacts of climate change exists primarily outside of the U.S. Additionally, and as reflected in the White House’s Commitment to Elevating Indigenous Knowledge in Federal Policy, efforts are urgently needed to ensure American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN), as well as rural, representatives are at the same table as researchers, clinicians, and policy makers who are discussing the results and implications of research on climate and health. Through the Mni Sota Center for Climate Change and Health we will build capacity for innovative research related to climate change and health as experienced by the two communities who we posit will make the most profound strides to mitigate the impacts of climate change: AIAN and rural communities. This will be achieved by centering ITEKs, conducting community engagement with AIAN and rural communities, and by leveraging the multidisciplinary assets and expertise of the University of Minnesota and our partner institutions. The objective of the CE Core is to co-develop, assist, implement, and evaluate strategies that will catalyze the Center’s capacity to examine the impacts of climate change on health and develop action-oriented solutions to protect AIAN and rural persons. The CE Core has the following aims: Aim 1: Co-develop a research agenda that leverages ITEKs and Western environmental health approaches that identifies a) key research questions related to climate change and health experienced by American Indian and rural persons that can be prioritized in future research and b) data sovereignty guidelines and other recommendations for culturally safe research practices; Aim 2: Assist Center efforts in navigating climate- and health-related community engaged research by providing expertise in CE from planning to dissemination and culturally safe research practices including data sovereignty; Aim 3: Implement a Citizen Science Program that entails digital storytelling (a form of ITEKs) with AIAN youth; Aim 4: Evaluate the Center’s reach and engagement efforts via a multi-pronged approach informed by the RE-AIM Framework, Goodman Assessment of CE, and an Indigenous Evaluation entailing storytelling. The CE Core will be highly impactful given that it represents a braiding together of Native and Western sci...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10981737
Project number
1P20MD019990-01
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
Principal Investigator
Kyle X Hill
Activity code
P20
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$264,733
Award type
1
Project period
2024-09-23 → 2027-06-30