Insect-borne diseases like malaria, dengue fever and West Nile virus are a major public health problem in many urban areas around the world. Principal Investigator Dr. John Beier is going to establish partnerships between faculty at the University of Miami and international collaborators to study the ecology and control of mosquito-borne diseases at seven cities in East Africa, the Middle East, and the Latin America-Caribbean region. Poverty, urban farming, water and sanitation availability, increased population movement, deteriorating infrastructures, overcrowding in urban areas, and natural disasters all contribute to the development of conditions that modify the natural habitats of insects. This Exploratory Center, Vector-Borne Disease Control in Urban Environments, will include experts in remote sensing, virologists, biologists, mathematicians, entomologists, engineers, environmental scientists, economists, epidemiologists, historians, biophysicists, and specialists from the area of public health.
Three of the new Exploratory Centers for Interdisciplinary Research will form new groupings of disciplines to attack obesity, one of America's most urgent public health problems. Dr. Barry Popkin at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill plans to engage researchers from nutrition, epidemiology, health behavior, urban planning, health economics, physiology, psychology, genetics, and clinical medicine to develop an Exploratory Center, An Interdisciplinary Strategy for Obesity. Leading scholars in seven overlapping topical clusters will meet on a regular basis to develop a common language, identify needs, and design and plan specific research projects.
At the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, Dr. Jay Horton will bring together diverse groups of investigators to research the behavioral, metabolic, and molecular events that cause obesity. The major focus of his effort will be on the brain and liver, organs that both play central roles in the development of obesity and its adverse metabolic consequences. This group, the Taskforce for Obesity Research at Southwestern, will study how the brain regulates food intake and energy expenditure, and will reveal how disregulation of glucose and lipid metabolism in the liver contributes to obesity.
Finally, Dr. Adam Drewnowski at the University of Washington in Seattle will develop a center to address biomedical, public health, and policy aspects of the obesity epidemic. The hypothesis behind this center, An Exploratory Center for Obesity Research, is that the social problem of obesity can only be solved using an interdisciplinary approach that blends biomedical research with broader social, economic, environmental, and policy concerns. His "Lab to Leadership" model will allow sustained interactions among researchers, clinicians, public health professionals, local and state government agencies, policy makers, and communities at risk.
Dr. Scott Ransom at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor is going to lead an interdisciplinary team in an attempt to develop new strategic approaches to reduce one of the most stubborn and persistent health disparities in the nation—racial disparities in the outcome of pregnancy. His Center, Health Disparities: Leaders, Providers and Patients, will develop an optimal infrastructure to support interdisciplinary research into the problem, develop testable hypotheses for new and more effective approaches, and provide an effective mechanism for communicating research-based information to caregivers and patients.
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