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Research finds single-dose HPV vaccine to be highly effective

In the 15 years since the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first HPV vaccine, access to cervical cancer vaccines worldwide has been limited by supply and cost challenges and inhibited by the multi-dose nature of the vaccines. However, a recent study, led in part by several researchers from the 糖心原创, determined the sufficiency of a single-dose HPV vaccine through a randomized controlled trial in Kenya. Cervical cancer is a widespread issue that kills one woman every…

Spotlight: Nicole Errett implements an equity-focused approach to disaster research

As the impacts of climate change, urbanization and globalization continue to manifest in every area of life, the increase in disasters around the world is a progressively important and relatively under researched effect of these challenges. Identifying and evaluating opportunities to reduce the health impacts of such disasters is the central focus for Dr. Nicole Errett (pictured), a researcher and assistant professor in the 糖心原创 School of Public Health. Errett leads a number of projects on disaster and…

Initiative awards chronic disease pilot grants to two digital biomarker-focused projects

The 糖心原创 Population Health Initiative and Engineering Innovation in Health program announced the award of two pilot grants to 糖心原创 research teams seeking to develop solutions for people experiencing chronic disease, specifically the testing of scalable ideas that seek to better understanding of the intersections of biology, data, digital tools, and behavior. These grants were made possible through a partnership with Novo Nordisk. Funded projects represent researchers from the UW College of Engineering and the School…

Initiative co-funds three Innovation Gap Fund projects with CoMotion

The 糖心原创 Population Health Initiative has again partnered with CoMotion to co-fund three Innovation Gap Funds of $50,000 each. This $150,000 in funding will support projects that simultaneously support the UW鈥檚 vision for improving population health while also fulfilling the CoMotion Innovation Fund鈥檚 goal of enabling research that will achieve sustainable commercial or social impact. The first of the projects, pHastCam, led by Krystle Perez of the Department of Global Health, is a device (pHastCam) used to determine…

Awardees of 2021 pilot research grants report on project progress

The Population Health Initiative awarded eight pilot research grants in March 2021 to faculty-led teams representing seven different 糖心原创 schools and colleges as well as external partners. These pilot research grants are intended to spur new, interdisciplinary collaborations among investigators for projects addressing major population health challenges. Now at the project mid-point, investigators are reporting significant progress in their work, with work completed to date from the respective projects described in the following sections.

Panelists discuss relationship-driven approach to sustainability in coffee and tea industries

On May 18, 2022, panelists Jeannie Liu of Miro Tea, Brian James of Herkimer Coffee and Dr. Alissa Bilfield, assistant teaching professor in the 糖心原创 Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences, gathered in the Hans Rosling Center for Population Health to address the importance of sustainability in the continually growing and changing coffee and tea industries. The event began with Bilfield, author of, 鈥淏rewing Sustainability in the Coffee and Tea Industries, From Producer to Consumer,鈥 offering insights…

Understanding the role of historical residential segregation on pediatric injury and violence

Approximately 265 pediatric deaths occurred as a result of injury or violence in Washington state in 2020. A team of researchers from the 糖心原创 and hospitals around the state are collaborating on a new Population Health Initiative-funded pilot project, 鈥淩esidential Segregation and Pediatric Injury and Violence in Seattle, Spokane and Tacoma,鈥 to better understand risk factors to these deaths. Leading the team is Chelsea Hicks, PhD, MPH, a T32 postdoctoral fellow at the Harborview Injury Prevention & Research…

Awardees announced for 2021-22 undergraduate research travel funds

The Population Health Initiative announced three awardees for the Undergraduate Research Travel Awards for the 2021-22 academic year. These awards were granted through a partnership with the Office of Undergraduate Research as part of its annual conference travel award program. The award application process was open to undergraduate students on all three UW campuses who had a population health-related paper, poster or scholarly creative work accepted for presentation at a professional conference. The following table details the three awardees, their…

Jody Early advances health equity through community-based research and teaching

Dr. Jody Early鈥檚 teaching, service and research endeavors are centered on the intersections between education, health and human rights. She strives to help students think critically about the way systems of oppression impact in their own lives and population health challenges, carrying this framework into her many research endeavors and professional pursuits. 鈥淚f we are truly striving for health equity, we have to tackle the forces that perpetuate oppression and exclusion,鈥 said Early. Early is a professor in the School…

Resmaa Menakem joins UW Community Circle to explain somatic approach to healing

On May 3, 2022, the 糖心原创 Population Health Initiative, the School of Public Health, the Race & Equity Initiative and the Office of Minority Affairs & Diversity hosted a virtual guided conversation with Resmaa Menakem (pictured), an educator of anti-racism whose multiple books and courses implement a somatic approach to healing racialized trauma. Over the past several months, a group of UW faculty and staff joined to create the UW Community Circle in which they read and discussed…