Global Health Institute launched

The UC on Nov. 9 launched a new Global Health Institute with nearly $4 million in start-up funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The institute will focus the combined expertise of the university’s 10 campuses on solving increasingly complex global health problems and meeting the health-care needs of the world’s most vulnerable populations.

The institute will include three centers of expertise. Two of the centers will be co-directed by faculty members at UC Davis: one will address the health issues of migrating people, and the other will concentrate on the effects of nutrition, water, animals and the environment on human health.

The new institute was unveiled Nov. 9 during a conference at UC San Francisco that highlighted the $75 billion impact of global health on the California economy. The global health sector, which includes companies that specialize in enterprises ranging from biopharmaceuticals to agriculture and clean energy, also supports 350,000 high-quality jobs in California and provides $19.7 billion in wages and salaries, according to a recent UC study of the effects of global health on the California economy. The study is available online at ucghi.universityofcalifornia.edu/news/eir.

Emerging academic discipline

“I am proud that California is such a leader in the emerging academic discipline of global health,” Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger wrote in the foreword for the economic impact report. “The formation of the University of California multi-campus Global Health Institute and the efforts undertaken by other universities, nonprofit organizations and the business sector directly impact the health of California and the world.”

The institute will begin by offering a one-year master’s degree, enrolling its first students in fall 2011. Eventually, it also will offer two-year master’s and doctoral degree programs, granted by the UC campuses at which the students conduct their work. Under the institute’s umbrella, centers of expertise at the individual campuses will spearhead development of the graduate degree programs and design field projects for students at partnership sites throughout the world.

“UC Davis is well-positioned to play a leadership role in creating solutions to the world’s global health challenges,” said Claire Pomeroy, UC Davis vice chancellor for human health sciences and dean of the School of Medicine.

UC San Francisco’s Global Health Sciences is administering the $3.99 million two-year grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to plan the institute, which is intended to become self-supporting through gifts, grants and revenue from enrollment fees.

Veterinarian expertise

The new institute will include three multi-campus, multi-disciplinary centers of expertise: Migration and Health; One Health: Water, Animals, Food and Society; and Women’s Health and Empowerment. The first two centers will be co-directed by faculty members in UC Davis’ School of Medicine and School of Veterinary Medicine, respectively. The third center will be led by faculty members at UCSF and UCLA.

“With experience in wildlife health issues and diseases that spread from animals to people, our veterinary faculty will make a significant contribution to the development of practical solutions to complex health problems involving people, animals, and environmental quality,” said Bennie Osburn, dean of the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. “Working in this multi-campus effort will also help us provide unique opportunities for education and training in holistic health principles and practice.”

The centers were chosen using a competitive application process that involved proposals from 12 teams of faculty across the UC system. During the 2009-2010 academic year, center leaders will work with the institute’s administrative core, based at UC San Francisco, to plan education, research and partnership programs and intervention activities.

Migration and Health center

The Migration and Health center will be led by Marc Schenker, a professor in UC Davis School of Medicine’s Department of Public Health Sciences, in collaboration with Steffanie Strathdee, associate dean of Global Health Sciences at UC San Diego. The eight other UC campuses also will participate in this center.

“Today we live in a vast global community, linked not only by trade and travel, but also by the people who are permanently relocating from their countries of birth,” Schenker said. “They bring with them a rich mix of talents and cultural diversity but all too often they endure higher rates of occupational injuries and illnesses, and yet have less access to health care.”

Some of the problems that are especially of interest to researchers studying the health problems of migrating people include domestic violence; alcohol, tobacco and substance abuse; Type 2 diabetes and other nutrition-related diseases; occupational health and safety; reproductive health; and chronic disorders such as heart and lung disease.

Schenker noted that the new center will work closely with the new Migration and Health Research Center located at UC Davis and UC Berkeley, which was established in September to conduct and sponsor research related to acute and chronic illnesses and injuries among migrating people in California and around the world.

‘Short flight away’

The One Health: Water, Animals, Food and Society center will be led by Patricia Conrad, a professor in the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, in collaboration with Anil Deolalikar, an economics professor and associate dean of the UC Riverside College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences. Also participating in this center will be the Berkeley, Irvine, UCLA, San Diego, UCSF, Santa Barbara and Santa Cruz campuses.

“It is becoming very clear that we in the United States both receive and contribute to global health problems,” Conrad said. “This year we saw how new diseases like H1N1 influenza, (“swine flu”), are only a short flight away from us in California and how, within days, they can spread worldwide. We also are seeing how financial decisions made in the United States can profoundly impact the entire world’s economy, just as our carbon use can alter the world’s climate.”

Conrad noted that the new One Health center will capitalize on the success of a new UC Davis-based international effort, named PREDICT, which is aimed at detecting and controlling diseases that move between wildlife and people. That global early warning system was established in October with a $75 million grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development to help the world prevent and prepare for outbreaks of infectious diseases like the H1N1 flu, avian flu, SARS and Ebola.

More information: www.news.ucdavis.edu.

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Clifton B. Parker, Dateline, (530) 752-1932, cparker@ucdavis.edu

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