The STEER and TREES students will visit Bartram’s Garden.
The STEER and TREES students will visit Bartram’s Garden.
Environmental Health Career Panel with Professionals in various Environmental Health Positions.
This lectureship series is for STEER and TREES students.
Michelle Niedermier will be presenting “Integrated Pest Management”
This lectureship series is for STEER and TREES students.
Dr. Jeff Field will be presenting on his research “The Search for the Smoking Gun.”
This lectureship series is for STEER and TREES students.
Researchers from the Center of Excellence in Environmental Toxicology have recently been awarded a $10 million grant from the National Institute for Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) to study asbestos exposure pathways that lead to mesothelioma, the bioremediation of this hazardous material, and mechanisms that lead to asbestos-related diseases.
The grant creates a new Center, Penn Superfund Research and Training Program (SRP) Center, Directed by Ian Blair, PhD, a researcher with extensive experience in biomarker research elucidating the toxicology of chemicals. This blog will continue to highlight the exciting research that comes from the grant.
The Penn Superfund Research and Training Program (SRP) Center evolved from community concerns about living near the BoRit Asbestos Superfund site in Ambler, PA. The Penn Superfund Center is academically located at CEET in Philadelphia, about 20 miles South of Ambler. The Center’s approach will be interdisciplinary involving researchers from the School of Arts and Sciences and the School of Medicine as well as Fox Chase Cancer Center. A unique interdisciplinary training program will marry environmental science and environmental health sciences so that doctoral and postdoctoral students will be trained in both complementary disciplines. Unique features of this training include participation in Superfund webinars sponsored by NIEHS and internships in technology transfer at CTT and the EPA.
The Center will address community-based questions or concerns that have been previously identified by the community through the Community Outreach and Engagement Core:
Ambler residents have a long history of occupational and/or environmental exposure to asbestos. As a result residents of the area face very serious long-term health consequences. The Pennsylvania Department of Health and the COEC at CEET determined an increased rate of mesothelioma in the area compared to other adjacent zip codes. Women had a greater risk than men, despite being less likely to have worked in the asbestos industry. Our researchers will continue to investigate and work with the community to acquire more information about exposure pathways that led to these health risks. The residents in South and West Ambler remain at risk for environmental exposure.
The work and results from the Center’s research will inform other areas of asbestos exposure across the country. For example, a sociological study to identify how asbestos exposure can occur and whether this can explain the cluster of asbestos-induced mesotheliomas in Ambler will be conducted by Fran Barg and Ted Emmett. The results may be applicable to the 15 other Superfund asbestos sites in the US.
This award and the development of the Penn Superfund Research and Training Program Center is the first NIEHS Superfund grant driven by problems identified in a community-academic partnership and promotes bi-directional communication between the University and the community. The interdisciplinary center is uniquely qualified to address the concerns relating to asbestos exposure that have been identified by the Ambler community.
The SRP website is currently being developed and will have the most up to date information regarding the Center, the research, and how to get involved.
You can also visit Resources for Education and Action for Community Health in Ambler (REACH Ambler) and the BoRit Community Advisory Group (CAG) Website
Please share with us any questions you have regarding asbestos or any other environmental health issues by using the comment field, contact us, Twitter or Facebook!
Have a suggestion for a topic to be covered in our blog? Let us know! We would love to cover a topic that you are interested in learning more about!
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Responsible Conduct of Research Discussion with Dr. Jeff Field & Rich Pepino.
This lectureship series is for STEER and TREES students.
We are going to highlight the Integrative Health Sciences Facility Core (IHSFC) and the Lung and Airway Disease Affinity Group and its work on asthma with Dr. Reynold Panettieri
The Integrative Health Sciences Facility Core (IHSFC) focuses on identifying important research questions that can directly address human disease.
In the Lung and Airway Disease Affinity Group, we focus on understanding the cause of asthma and COPD with a focus on new therapeutic agents. Our research at the Lung and Airway Disease Affinity Group and IHSFC is unique. We are one of seven centers nationwide that have a human exposure chamber to directly test hypotheses related to human health. Additionally, we have new experimental platforms using human cells that greatly enhance the relevance of our work. Our laboratory has been active for the past 22 years and has specifically focused on novel therapeutics in the treatment of COPD and asthma. Although we have a legacy of research in this area, our focus is always on using up-to-date, state-of-the-art approaches to address problems.
We help children and adults who have or are affected by asthma. Asthma rates in Philadelphia are some of the highest in the country. In some neighborhoods, asthma rates are as high as 26%!
Our recent evidence suggests that vitamin D is a critical therapeutic that can improve airway obstruction and inflammation seen in asthma and COPD. We are optimistic that the development of vitamin D inhaled solutions may greatly impact human health.
Our laboratories are consistently recruiting research subjects for a number of important studies in asthma and COPD. Visit our website (http://www.med.upenn.edu/airways/), to learn more about opportunities to participate in our research.
Follow #IamEH for all of our posts and learn about what environmental health questions are being asked all over the country!