This application represents a partnership between Long Island University, a minority serving institution, and Columbia University?s Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center, dedicated to reducing the unequal cancer burden in minority communities. It builds upon an existing research collaboration and is designed to strengthen that partnership through a series of activities. Its research and training components will focus on older minority populations with regard to cancer, prevention and control: the goal is to use pilot projects and other activities to develop RO1s and other full-scale grants. The Principal Investigator is an oncologist/epidemiologist with a strong track record in cancer research, notably colon and breast cancers. He as established comprehensive community links with the African American (AA) and Dominican populations of North Manhattan. Much of his recent research has been based on these populations, focused on academic detailing to primary car physicians serving these communities. The Co-Principal Investigator has conducted several major population-based survey studies of older adult in Brooklyn?s large AA community, including depression, anxiety, coping and adaptation. This work has revealed striking social, cultural, and behavioral differences between US born AAs and African Caribbeans from the English and French-speaking islands, and is virtually unique in exploring differences between ethnic subgroups within the community. These two investigators have complement backgrounds and strengths; each has access to special populations. Because NYC as one of the largest and most ethnically diverse populations in the country, the Principal Investigators wish to meld their institutions strengths and resources, and their individual expertises, to explore cancer-related behavioral and sociocultural issues in NYC. In year 0l, the Principal Investigators will extend their current study of breast cancer screening to a Dominican sample, and will extend the Principal Investigator?s current studies of academic detailing to a Brooklyn-based population of physicians. Additionally, they plan retreats and workshops for researchers from both institutions and minority faculty interested in cancer research to familiarize one another with their past research, to consolidate their partnership, and to generate ideas for future pilot projects. In Years 02 and 03, pilot projects on a full range of sociocultural, behavioral and molecular epidemiologic topics which can profit from studying these ethnic subgroups will be solicited and reviewed for funding. Coordination of this P20 will be facilitated by the geographic proximity of the two institutions, their scientific strengths, and their commitment to similar programs.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Exploratory Grants (P20)
Project #
1P20CA091372-01
Application #
6335806
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZCA1-SRRB-5 (J2))
Program Officer
Aguila, H Nelson
Project Start
2001-07-01
Project End
2004-06-30
Budget Start
2001-07-01
Budget End
2002-06-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2001
Total Cost
$203,607
Indirect Cost
Name
Columbia University (N.Y.)
Department
Public Health & Prev Medicine
Type
Schools of Public Health
DUNS #
167204994
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10032
Consedine, Nathan S (2012) The demographic, system, and psychosocial origins of mammographic screening disparities: prediction of initiation versus maintenance screening among immigrant and non-immigrant women. J Immigr Minor Health 14:570-82
Consedine, Nathan S; Fiori, Katherine L; Magai, Carol (2012) Regulating emotion expression and regulating emotion experience: divergent associations with dimensions of attachment among older women. Attach Hum Dev 14:477-500
Consedine, Nathan S (2012) Are we worrying about the right men and are the right men feeling worried? Conscious but not unconscious prostate anxiety predicts screening among men from three ethnic groups. Am J Mens Health 6:37-50
Kudadjie-Gyamfi, Elizabeth K; Magai, Carol; Consedine, Nathan S (2010) The obscuring object of race: clinical breast exams and coping styles in ethnic subpopulations of women. Br J Health Psychol 15:289-305
Consedine, Nathan S; Adjei, Brenda A; Horton, David et al. (2009) Fear and loathing in the Caribbean: three studies of fear and cancer screening in Brooklyn's immigrant Caribbean subpopulations. Infect Agent Cancer 4 Suppl 1:S14
Magai, Carol; Consedine, Nathan S; Adjei, Brenda A et al. (2008) Psychosocial influences on suboptimal adjuvant breast cancer treatment adherence among African American women: implications for education and intervention. Health Educ Behav 35:835-54
Yaeger, Rona; Avila-Bront, Alexa; Abdul, Kazeem et al. (2008) Comparing genetic ancestry and self-described race in african americans born in the United States and in Africa. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 17:1329-38
Kudadjie-Gyamfi, Elizabeth; Magai, Carol (2008) The influence of coping styles on mammography screening in a multiethnic sample. Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol 14:183-92
Kudadjie-Gyamfi, Elizabeth; Consedine, Nathan S; Ungar, Tracey et al. (2008) Influence of coping with prostate cancer threat on frequency of digital rectal examinations. Am J Health Behav 32:188-200
Consedine, Nathan S; Horton, David; Ungar, Tracey et al. (2007) Fear, knowledge, and efficacy beliefs differentially predict the frequency of digital rectal examination versus prostate specific antigen screening in ethnically diverse samples of older men. Am J Mens Health 1:29-43

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