The long-term goal of the Partnership for Native American Cancer Prevention (NACP) is to eliminate cancer disparities in Native Americans of the southwest. The University of Arizona Cancer Center and Northern Arizona University as NACP, partner with tribal communities to develop research, outreach, and training activities aimed at defining and eliminating obstacles to health equity in areas of Native American cancer incidence, mortality, survivorship, and representation. Expected outcomes include: an increase in the numbers and relevance of cancer-related research projects addressing disparities in cancer among Native Americans of the southwestern US; an increase in the number and diversity of researchers at Northern Arizona University working on cancer-related projects; an increase in the number of university - tribal community partnerships focused on cancer outreach and research; an increase in the numbers of Native American and other students moving into graduate and professional programs focused on health disparities.
Aim One : Our Research and Development Core will foster and support culturally-appropriate research capacity at our institutions both through research projects and through faculty recruitment and development.
Aim Two : We will honor the culture of the Native American communities we serve by providing opportunities to integrate their values, beliefs and needs into every aspect of the NACP.
Aim Three : We will increase the number of culturally competent biomedical researchers and health workers by increasing the number of students, postdocs, and faculty (especially Native Americans) trained in cancer prevention, cancer control, and cancer-related health care policy through our Training Core. NACP has three cancer research projects; (1) Physical activity and cancer among Native American cancer survivors, (2) Functional genetic variants as modifiers of prostate cancer progression in Native Americans and (3) Microbes, bile acids and colorectal cancer.
We propose to use the Three Cores (listed above) of NACP to create respectful and effective interactions among the UACC, NAU and the Native American communities we serve to further build the capacity for culturally-sensitive and community-relevant research on cancer, and to act as brokers between tribal communities, and federal and state agencies so that these sovereign tribal communities can be further empowered to define, implement, and achieve their defined goals of health equity.
Gilbert, Jack A; Blaser, Martin J; Caporaso, J Gregory et al. (2018) Current understanding of the human microbiome. Nat Med 24:392-400 |
Bokulich, Nicholas A; Dillon, Matthew R; Zhang, Yilong et al. (2018) q2-longitudinal: Longitudinal and Paired-Sample Analyses of Microbiome Data. mSystems 3: |
Varadaraj, Archana; Magdaleno, Carina; Mythreye, Karthikeyan (2018) Deoxycholate Fractionation of Fibronectin (FN) and Biotinylation Assay to Measure Recycled FN Fibrils in Epithelial Cells. Bio Protoc 8: |
Bea, Jennifer W; de Heer, Hendrik Dirk; Valdez, Luis et al. (2018) Physical Activity among Navajo Cancer Survivors: A Qualitative Study. Am Indian Alsk Native Ment Health Res 25:54-73 |
Bokulich, Nicholas A; Kaehler, Benjamin D; Rideout, Jai Ram et al. (2018) Optimizing taxonomic classification of marker-gene amplicon sequences with QIIME 2's q2-feature-classifier plugin. Microbiome 6:90 |
Huenneke, Laura F; Stearns, Diane M; Martinez, Jesse D et al. (2017) Key Strategies for Building Research Capacity of University Faculty Members. Innov High Educ 42:421-435 |
Jim, Venessa; LaViolette, Corinne; Briehl, Margaret M et al. (2017) Spatial distribution of uranium in mice kidneys detected by laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. J Appl Bioanal 3:43-48 |
Schwartz, Anna L; de Heer, Hendrik Dirk; Bea, Jennifer W (2017) Initiating Exercise Interventions to Promote Wellness in Cancer Patients and Survivors. Oncology (Williston Park) 31:711-7 |
Bokulich, Nicholas A; Rideout, Jai Ram; Mercurio, William G et al. (2016) mockrobiota: a Public Resource for Microbiome Bioinformatics Benchmarking. mSystems 1: |
Corlin, Laura; Rock, Tommy; Cordova, Jamie et al. (2016) Health Effects and Environmental Justice Concerns of Exposure to Uranium in Drinking Water. Curr Environ Health Rep 3:434-442 |
Showing the most recent 10 out of 20 publications