Community Engagement Core: Abstract The goal of the Community Engagement Core (CEC) is to build bi-directional partnerships with four target communities in Northern New England to enhance their ability to understand and address the health risks posed by toxic metals in the environment. These communities include: (1) private drinking water well owners, (2) consumers of food products of concern, (3) parents and expectant parents, and (4) students at high schools located near Superfund sites. To accomplish our goal, we will pursue the following specific aims:
Aim 1 : Establish sustained engagement with target communities and community-serving organizations to better understand each other's existing and needed capacities for supporting healthy decisions that consider the risks posed by arsenic and mercury exposure. We will use a structured engagement approach based on elicited mental models as a means for comparing expert and community beliefs about the causes and consequences of target risks. This will reveal both community misconceptions and gaps in scientific understanding that need to be addressed.
Aim 2 : Serve communities by cultivating opportunities for Dartmouth to provide resources, information, communications, and expertise that meet immediate environmental health needs while jointly building long- term capacity. In collaboration with our community organizational partners, we will design tailored strategies for meeting the needs identified in Aim 1. Implementation will then involve the Center's Cores and Projects, as well as the energy and expertise of Dartmouth's community at-large. Throughout the process, we will use explicit metrics arising from our logic model to evaluate the success of activities, outputs, and impacts.
Aim 3 : Foster collaborative community-engaged research that advances the science of health risk assessment, communication, and reduction. As a long-term goal, the CEC will advance opportunities for community- engaged science that investigates novel ways to understand and address the health concerns of communities affected by Superfund sites and related environmental contaminants.

Public Health Relevance

Community Engagement Core The overarching goal of SRP research is to improve public health. Communities have skills, ideas, and capabilities for accomplishing this goal that SRPs do not. We seek to link these proficiencies with scientific understanding to strengthen the ability of people to use factual information to make healthy choices. Through partnerships, we will also enhance the capacity of public and private institutions to address future concerns.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
Type
Hazardous Substances Basic Research Grants Program (NIEHS) (P42)
Project #
3P42ES007373-23S2
Application #
9921556
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZES1)
Program Officer
Carlin, Danielle J
Project Start
Project End
Budget Start
2018-04-01
Budget End
2019-03-31
Support Year
23
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Dartmouth College
Department
Type
DUNS #
041027822
City
Hanover
State
NH
Country
United States
Zip Code
03755
Smith, T Jarrod; Sondermann, Holger; O'Toole, George A (2018) Co-opting the Lap System of Pseudomonas fluorescens To Reversibly Customize Bacterial Cell Surfaces. ACS Synth Biol 7:2612-2617
Wang, Chengcheng; Na, GunNam; Bermejo, Eduardo Sanchez et al. (2018) Dissecting the components controlling root-to-shoot arsenic translocation in Arabidopsis thaliana. New Phytol 217:206-218
White, Alexandra J; O'Brien, Katie M; Jackson, Brian P et al. (2018) Urine and toenail cadmium levels in pregnant women: A reliability study. Environ Int 118:86-91
Hsu-Kim, Heileen; Eckley, Chris S; Achá, Dario et al. (2018) Challenges and opportunities for managing aquatic mercury pollution in altered landscapes. Ambio 47:141-169
Taylor, V F; Buckman, K L; Seelen, E A et al. (2018) Organic carbon content drives methylmercury levels in the water column and in estuarine food webs across latitudes in the Northeast United States. Environ Pollut 246:639-649
Shi, Xiangming; Mason, Robert P; Charette, Matthew A et al. (2018) Mercury flux from salt marsh sediments: Insights from a comparison between 224Ra/228Th disequilibrium and core incubation methods. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 222:569-583
Andrew, Angeline S; Chen, Celia Y; Caller, Tracie A et al. (2018) Toenail mercury Levels are associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis risk. Muscle Nerve :
Eagles-Smith, Collin A; Silbergeld, Ellen K; Basu, Niladri et al. (2018) Modulators of mercury risk to wildlife and humans in the context of rapid global change. Ambio 47:170-197
Obrist, Daniel; Kirk, Jane L; Zhang, Lei et al. (2018) A review of global environmental mercury processes in response to human and natural perturbations: Changes of emissions, climate, and land use. Ambio 47:116-140
Farzan, Shohreh F; Howe, Caitlin G; Chen, Yu et al. (2018) Prenatal lead exposure and elevated blood pressure in children. Environ Int 121:1289-1296

Showing the most recent 10 out of 372 publications