Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UAMS to study disparitie­s with $18.9 million

- NEAL EARLEY

WRIGHTSVIL­LE — The National Institutes of Health have awarded the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences a $18.9 million grant to establish a new center to study health disparitie­s in Black and rural communitie­s.

At a press conference in Wrightsvil­le Monday, officials from UAMS said the grant will focus on interventi­on and prevention for cancer and heart disease for communitie­s in Northwest Arkansas and the Delta.

The grant will fund the Center for Research, Health and Social Justice for five years, giving it a mandate to study ways to close the racial and rural gaps in health outcomes and access to treatment.

“These two communitie­s have suffered too long and disproport­ionately from cancer and cardiovasc­ular disease, and the social and structural conditions — like poverty — that cause these disparitie­s,” said Pebbles Fagan, who, along with Carol Cornell, will lead the Center for Research, Health and Social Justice at UAMS.

Arkansas’ Black and rural communitie­s have long suffered from an outsized number of cases of cancer and heart disease, which are caused in large part by the high levels of poverty in those communitie­s, Fagan said.

In particular, poverty causes poor health outcomes for many, as food insecurity leads to poor nutrition and high healthcare costs often make people decide between seeking treatment or going into medical debt.

“It’s expensive to be poor — it’s very expensive to be poor,” Fagan said.

Pulaski County Judge Barry Hyde said the county is a good research subject for the grant, calling it the “perfect blend of rural and urban living.”

“In partnershi­p and through funding provided by this grant, [UAMS] will be able to further provide services into areas that remain primarily underserve­d and vulnerable to effects of health disparitie­s,” Hyde said.

In rural Arkansas, where cancer and heart disease rates are the highest, access to affordable healthcare can be hard to find as there are few doctors and health clinics in some parts of the state.

“Even people who have insurance or who have Medicaid have issues getting to healthcare in a lot of our rural areas,” Cornell said.

Heart disease is the No. 1 cause of death in Arkansas followed by cancer, according to the Centers for Disease Control.

In both heart disease and cancer mortalitie­s, Arkansas ranked ahead of the national average, coming in at third for heart disease mortality and seventh for cancer in 2019 according to the CDC.

Particular­ly hard hit is the Arkansas Delta with its high rates of poverty, lack of access to healthcare and high rates of cancer mortality.

Four of the five Arkansas counties with the highest rates of cancer in 2015-2019 are in the eastern part of the state, with Monroe County having the highest rate at 249.5 deaths per 100,000, according to NIH.

Drilling down on the causes and working on outreach to Black and rural communitie­s will be one of the primary objectives of the grant, with Cornell saying UAMS will partner with all the Historical Black Colleges and Universiti­es in the state.

Some of the research projects funded by the grant will focus on food insecurity and tobacco use, alcoholism and the nutrition of free and reduced lunches at schools in Northwest Arkansas.

With alcohol abuse being one of many causes of cancer in the state, UAMS will use the grant to fund research on rural barbershop­s to help reduce “excessive alcohol use among African American males.”

The grant will also go towards training researcher­s and community engagement to “help communitie­s become more socially just and, in turn, facilitate access and uptake of preventive health care.”

While the grant won’t go towards funding access to affordable healthcare, it can help facilitate it, Cornell said.

“We don’t specifical­ly have funding to develop more resources in terms of healthcare, you know, bringing a doctor into a rural community — but UAMS does,” Cornell said.

Shuk-Mei Ho, vice chancellor for research and innovation at UAMS, said the $18.9 million grant could be used to leverage more resources in around 30 counties across Arkansas.

The covid-19 pandemic has also had an effect on health disparitie­s as many people have forgone preventati­ve treatments and screenings.

“Covid has delayed many treatment and prevention programs,” Ho said. “Our communitie­s are actually stressed right now and desperatel­y need additional investment.”

UAMS is one of just 11 recipients of $200 million in NIH funding for research into chronic disease and how they “disproport­ionately affect population­s with health disparitie­s.”

For UAMS, the grant could also help the Winthrop P. Rockefelle­r Cancer Institute gain national recognitio­n through a NIH National Cancer Institute designatio­n, according to UAMS vice chancellor Dr. Michael Birrer.

“This award expands on our statewide efforts to address three major risk factors for cancer: tobacco use, obesity/nutrition issues and alcohol use,” Birrer said in a statement. “Arkansas communitie­s are hit disproport­ionately by cancer compared to other states in the nation. We now have an opportunit­y to address cancer risk and social determinan­ts of cancer risk factors.”

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? Dr. Pebbles Fagan, chairman of the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education at UAMS, addresses the audience Monday at the Wrightsvil­le Community Center during the announceme­nt of a grant from the National Institutes of Health.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) Dr. Pebbles Fagan, chairman of the Department of Health Behavior and Health Education at UAMS, addresses the audience Monday at the Wrightsvil­le Community Center during the announceme­nt of a grant from the National Institutes of Health.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States