COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
RESEARCHERS RECEIVE $6 MILLION
GRANT TO ESTABLISH
HEALTH DISPARITIES CENTER
New York, February
13, 2003 – Researchers from Columbia University have received a $6
million grant from the National Institutes of Health’s (NIH) National Center
on Minority Health and Health Disparities to establish a research center
on minority health and health disparities. The interdisciplinary center,
which will be named the Columbia Center for the Health of Urban Minorities
(CHUM), will focus on identifying ways in which access to care shapes racial
and ethnic disparities in health care use and outcomes.
CHUM, which is one
of 10 NIH Project EXPORT (Excellence in Partnerships for Community Outreach,
Research on Disparities in Health and Training) centers nationwide, will
be based at the Center for Community Health Partnerships at Columbia University’s
Health Sciences campus. Olveen Carrasquillo, M.D., MPH, assistant professor
of medicine at Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons
(P&S), will be the principal investigator of the center. Rafael Lantigua,
M.D., professor of clinical medicine at P&S, will serve as the co-principal
investigator.
“This is a wonderful
opportunity for Columbia Health Sciences to conduct health disparity research,
which will lead to a greater understanding of health disparities both in
research and training,” said Gerald D. Fischbach, executive vice president
for health and biomedical sciences and dean of the Faculty of Medicine
at Columbia University. “The Center for Community Health Partnerships is
a natural home and ideally situated for the oversight of this project.
We are very pleased to have been chosen.”
Over the next five
years, 27 researchers (including 13 minority investigators) from Columbia
University College of Physicians & Surgeons, the New York State Psychiatric
Institute, Harlem Hospital, and the Mailman School of Public Health at
Columbia University will join together with members of the northern Manhattan
community to explore ways to improve health in minority populations, especially
within northern Manhattan.
“A central feature
of CHUM will be to establish a culture of community collaborations within
the medical center’s research activities,” said Dr. Carrasquillo. “One
of our goals is to make a paradigm shift in the way community-based research
is conducted. Rather than holding on to the traditional academic
perspective in which research is done either ‘on’ or ‘for’ the community,
it will be done ‘with’ the community.”
To help facilitate
this shift, a planning council composed of community-based organizations
and
academic researchers
will collectively develop, evaluate and modify approaches to community-based
activities in each of the grant’s research areas: financial barriers and
how barriers to access affect cardiovascular disease, mental health, diabetes,
and unintentional injuries.
In addition, researchers
at the center will develop a four-year cultural competency curriculum for
all medical students at Columbia University’s College of Physicians &
Surgeons, as well as special masters of public health program to support
the training of minority investigators and other researchers who focus
on minority health and health disparities research.
“This grant provides
Columbia with the opportunity to be at the forefront of cultural competency
training and to develop a national model for all health sciences students,
” said Dr. Robert Lewy, medical director for the Center for Community Health
Partnerships.
The Center for Community
Health Partnerships (CCHP) is a resource center that enables physicians,
dentists, nurses, and public health professionals at Columbia University
to collaborate on community-based projects that reduce health care disparities
while opening avenues to improve community health. It is based at Columbia
University’s Health Sciences Division.
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Note: Dr. Carrasquillo is available
for interviews in both English and Spanish.
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