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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SDSU, UCSD Researchers Start Five-Year Partnership
With San Ysidro Community to Study Latino Health Issues
$3.4 Million, CDC-Funded Project to Look
at Ways to Promote Physical Activity
CONTACT: Jason Foster
SDSU Marketing & Communications
(619) 594-2585
foster@mail.sdsu.edu
Sue Pondrom
UCSD Health Sciences Communications
(619) 543-6163
spondrom@ucsd.edu
SAN DIEGO, Monday, Sept. 20, 2004 – Researchers
from San Diego State University and the University of California,
San Diego, in collaboration with the San Ysidro Health Center, will
receive $3.4 million from the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) over the next five years to establish the San
Diego Prevention Research Center. The center will study how to promote
increased physical activity among Latinos in order to prevent diabetes,
heart disease and other chronic diseases that afflict that group,
especially recent immigrants and their families.
The researchers will collect data related to physical
activity via surveys and other tools, and later test programs designed
to increase the amount of exercise Latinos incorporate into their
lives. The project is being led by principal investigator John Elder,
Ph.D, professor of Health Promotion and Behavioral Sciences in SDSU’s
Graduate School of Public Health. Co-principal investigators for
the project are Barbara E. Ainsworth, Ph.D., MPH, professor of Exercise
and Nutritional Sciences at SDSU; and Kevin Patrick, MD, professor
of Preventive Medicine in UCSD’s School of Medicine. They
and other faculty from both universities will collaborate with staff
from the San Ysidro Health Center on the project.
Elder said the San Diego Prevention Research Center
is especially important because its focus on recent immigrants addresses
a rapidly expanding – yet traditionally under-researched and
underserved – element of the local and U.S. population.
“When Mexican or other Latino immigrants
come to the United States, we’ve observed that often one of
the first things to go as they make their transition to living here
is an active lifestyle,” Elder said. “That puts this
particular group at increased risk for the onset of these chronic
diseases. We need to find ways to keep that from happening both
to enhance the health of this group and to reduce strain on our
overburdened health care system.”
Starting this month, the center’s researchers
will examine potential barriers to physical activity, such as time
constraints caused by job pressures; environmental factors such
as access to parks, recreational facilities and youth sports leagues;
and cultural forces.
“Once we identify the most significant factors
that negatively affect physical activity, we’ll begin to target
programs an intervention strategies that will address those factors,”
Elder said.
The project’s funding comes from the CDC’s
Prevention Research Center (PRC) program. The PRC Program is a network
of 28 academic centers, public health agencies, and community partners
conducting applied research and practice in chronic disease prevention
and control. The research strives to develop disadvantaged communities’
long-term capacity for addressing their health issues and some of
the socioeconomic factors associated with those issues.
Patrick, from the Department of Family and Preventive
Medicine within UCSD’s School of Medicine, said PRC status
is very prestigious in public health circles because it means the
CDC has recognized the recipients as national leaders in addressing
a particular health issue. Institutions applying for PRC funding
undergo a rigorous and very competitive peer review process and
have to meet stringent programmatic and facility criteria.
“For years SDSU and UCSD have been very active
in working with the community to address immigrant health issues,
and so has the San Ysidro Health Center,” Patrick said, adding
that the San Diego PRC is the only such center in the country to
partner two universities. “By combining our resources, experience
and expertise, we made a strong impression on the CDC that we are
well-prepared to tackle this complex problem and come up with solutions
that will make an impact here and elsewhere.”
For more information on the San Diego Prevention
Research Center, contact Amelia Arroyo at (619) 594-2395.
Since its founding in 1959, UCSD has rapidly risen
to its status as one of the nation’s premier institutes for
higher education and research exploration, ranking fourth in the
nation in research impact in a report compiled by the Institute
for Scientific Information. The UCSD School of Medicine is one of
the nation's top-ranked academic institutions devoted to medical
research, education, and health care services. Based on faculty
research cited in prestigious journals, the School of Medicine ranks
first in the country in federal dollars expended for research per
faculty member and first nationally for research funding from the
National Institute of Health to the medical school’s Department
of Family and Preventive Medicine. UCSD physicians account for 24
of the 29 San Diegans selected for "America's Top Doctors,"
and in a recent "San Diego's Best Doctors" listing, more
than 80 are UCSD physicians – one-third of all those listed.
San Diego State University is the oldest and largest
higher education institution in the San Diego region. Since it was
founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer bachelor’s
degrees in 81 areas, master’s degrees in 72 areas and doctorates
in 14 areas. SDSU’s more than 33,000 students participate
in academic curriculum distinguished by direct contact with faculty
and an increasing international emphasis that prepares them for
a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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