CMS Awards Health Equity Funding to Three New Grantees
The
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
Office of Minority Health (CMS OMH) is excited to announce
this year’s grantees for the Minority Research Grant Program (MRGP).
For more than two decades, the MRGP has supported researchers at
minority-serving institutions through funding to explore and address
health care disparities affecting racial and ethnic minority groups,
people with disabilities, members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual,
transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) community, individuals with limited
English proficiency, individuals residing in rural areas, and
individuals adversely affected by persistent poverty or inequality.
CMS
OMH is proud to announce three recipients will be awarded grants to
expand our commitment to advancing health equity among the populations
we serve. Each grantee will receive $333,000 in funding to support
their projects, which will examine critical public health disparities
and increase health equity research capacities at minority-serving
institutions.
The
2022 grantees include:
- The Board of Trustees
at the University of Illinois, Addressing Disparities
in Access to Transplant: The ESRD Patient Evaluation Clearinghouse
(EPEC)
The University of Illinois, an Hispanic-Serving Institution,
will engage patients at dialysis centers in Cook County’s
low-resourced neighborhoods needing renal transplants. The goals
of the project are to inform patients of their individualized
characteristics impacting transplant ability and educate them
regarding Cook County transplant tendencies, which provide the
most utility to them and do so in a manner respectful of their
culture and transplant knowledgeability. The intended outcome of
the research is the efficient matching of participant
characteristics to transplant program functionality in order to
lessen the socioeconomic and demographic disparities in access to
renal transplantation. Researchers expect significant per patient
savings to the Medicare program each year.
- Prairie View A&M
University, Investigating
the Combined Impact of Spatial Social Networks and Environmental
Exposure on Minority Youths' Mental Health
One of the nation’s
Historically Black Colleges and Universities, Prairie View A&M
will use multiple research approaches to understand the
individual, community, and environmental factors that impact
racial and ethnic minority mental health symptoms. They will
investigate the combined impact of social networks and
environmental exposure. In addition, the researchers will adopt
the life course framework to understand past and present risks and
protective factors of mental illness among youths aged 18-29 in
the US. The research findings have numerous benefits for bridging
the gap in mental health disparity and can identify
community-engaged points of intervention.
- University of Hawaii, Improving Medication
Use to Achieve Health Equity Among CMS Beneficiaries
The University of Hawaii, an Asian American and Native
American Pacific Islander-Serving Institutions, seeks to develop a
statewide infrastructure to support medication use health
disparities research, with a focus on social vulnerabilities
(including funding for Hawaii Health Information Exchange to
enhance existing infrastructure). This will also include testing
pharmacist-driven, scalable interventions to address the root
causes of medication use disparities among vulnerable populations.
Finally, they seek to disseminate models that reduce disparities
and medication-related acute care among people in CMS programs.
To
learn more about the Minority Research Grant Program and sign up for
updates on funding opportunities, please visit the Minority Research Grant Program website.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment