The Columbia Population Research Center (CPRC) seeks Research Infrastructure FY 2014 (P2C) funding from the Population Dynamics Branch at NICHD/NIH (RFA-HD-14-016). We request $1,297,874 in direct costs over the five-year period beginning September 1, 2014. The CPRC has four primary research areas: (1) children, youth, and families, (2) gender, sexuality, health, and HIV, (3) immigration/migration, and (4) urbanism. Research in these four areas is united by two cross-cutting themes: (1) the health and well-being of vulnerable populations; and (2) the formation, implementation, and evaluation of public health and social policies that address these vulnerabilities. Our goals are to: (1) nourish a vibrant intellectual community of population researchers at Columbia University; (2) advance population research in our four signature areas; (3) become a leading population center specializing in research on the health and wellbeing of vulnerable populations locally, nationally, and internationally, and on public policies relevant to those populations; and (4) take advantage of Columbia's location in New York City, both to address issues specific to or aggravated by its status as a global city, and also to exploit and further develop the many partnerships between Columbia researchers and local academic, city, and international institutions. We will accomplish these goals through three research infrastructure cores: Administrative, Computing and Methods, and a Development Core. The latter will foster cross-disciplinary and cross-campus research linkages among Columbia faculty whose work advances those goals. The CPRC is co-directed by Irwin Garfinkel, Mitchell I. Ginsberg Professor of Contemporary Urban Problems in the Faculty of Social Work, and Constance A. Nathanson, Professor of Sociomedical Sciences and of Population and Family Health in the Mailman School of Public Health.

Public Health Relevance

The CPRC will contribute to the public's health both by our commitment to unraveling the social, economic, and environmental circumstances that contribute to health risks, in particular risks to populations made vulnerable by poverty, race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, and migrant status, and by our equal commitment to translating our research into policies to mitigate those risks.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Resource-Related Research Multi-Component Projects and Centers (P2C)
Project #
5P2CHD058486-07
Application #
8932729
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHD1-DSR-W (51))
Program Officer
Clark, Rebecca L
Project Start
2014-09-24
Project End
2019-08-31
Budget Start
2015-09-01
Budget End
2016-08-31
Support Year
7
Fiscal Year
2015
Total Cost
$281,600
Indirect Cost
$105,600
Name
Columbia University (N.Y.)
Department
Other Health Professions
Type
Schools of Social Work
DUNS #
049179401
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10027
Philbin, Morgan M; Parker, Caroline M; Parker, Richard G et al. (2018) Gendered Social Institutions and Preventive Healthcare Seeking for Black Men Who Have Sex with Men: The Promise of Biomedical HIV Prevention. Arch Sex Behav :
Parker, Caroline M; Parker, Richard G; Philbin, Morgan M et al. (2018) The Impact of Urban US Policing Practices on Black Men Who Have Sex with Men's HIV Vulnerability: Ethnographic Findings and a Conceptual Model for Future Research. J Urban Health 95:171-178
Pilkauskas, Natasha V; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne; Waldfogel, Jane (2018) Maternal employment stability in early childhood: Links with child behavior and cognitive skills. Dev Psychol 54:410-427
Lu, Yao; He, Qian; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne (2018) Diverse Experience of Immigrant Children: How Do Separation and Reunification Shape Their Development? Child Dev :
Schneider, Madeline; Hirsch, Jennifer S (2018) Comprehensive Sexuality Education as a Primary Prevention Strategy for Sexual Violence Perpetration. Trauma Violence Abuse :1524838018772855
Allen, Heidi; Wright, Bill; Broffman, Lauren (2018) The Impacts of Medicaid Expansion on Rural Low-Income Adults: Lessons From the Oregon Health Insurance Experiment. Med Care Res Rev 75:354-383
Philbin, Morgan M; Kinnard, Elizabeth N; Tanner, Amanda E et al. (2018) The Association between Incarceration and Transactional Sex among HIV-infected Young Men Who Have Sex with Men in the United States. J Urban Health 95:576-583
Philbin, Morgan M; Parker, Caroline M; Flaherty, Mary Grace et al. (2018) Public Libraries: A Community-Level Resource to Advance Population Health. J Community Health :
Duque, Valentina; Pilkauskas, Natasha V; Garfinkel, Irwin (2018) Assets among low-income families in the Great Recession. PLoS One 13:e0192370
Ssewamala, Fred M; Wang, Julia Shu-Huah; Neilands, Torsten B et al. (2018) Cost-Effectiveness of a Savings-Led Economic Empowerment Intervention for AIDS-Affected Adolescents in Uganda: Implications for Scale-up in Low-Resource Communities. J Adolesc Health 62:S29-S36

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