Thursday, September 01, 2022

‘YES Oklahoma’ project aims to improve American Indian representation in cancer research

Grant and Award Announcement

UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA

YES Oklahoma 

IMAGE: THE PROJECT, “NATIVE AMERICAN YOUTHS ENJOY SCIENCE - YES OKLAHOMA,” WILL DEVELOP A PROGRAM TO IMPROVE THE REPRESENTATION OF AMERICAN INDIAN STUDENTS IN BIOMEDICAL AND CANCER RESEARCH. view more 

CREDIT: PROVIDED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA

The National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health has awarded the University of Oklahoma an expected $2 million over five years to develop a program to improve the representation of American Indian students in biomedical and cancer research. 

“American Indian professionals are underrepresented in scientific fields, particularly those in biomedical research, and near-absent in cancer research,” said the project’s director, Cecil M. Lewis Jr., Ph.D. “This discrepancy impacts community health; there is a substantial health disparity in cancer impacting American Indians, particularly cancer types where regular screening, early detection and access to health care have a large impact. A more robust health care workforce and infrastructure, one with strong ties to communities, should reduce these rates.”

Lewis is a professor of anthropology in the Dodge Family College of Arts and Sciences at OU. The project’s co-directors are Cara Monroe, Ph.D., research scientist for OU’s Center for the Ethics of Indigenous Genomics Research; Rajagopal Ramesh, Ph.D., professor of pathology in the OU College of Medicine, and associate director for education and training at the OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center; and Kent Smith, Ph.D., (Comanche/Chickasaw), professor of anatomy and cell biology at the Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences and associate dean for the Office of American Indians in Medicine and Science that serves both the OSU-CHS Tulsa campus and the OSU College of Osteopathic Medicine at the Cherokee Nation.

Lewis said the program will provide a research training strategy in which American Indian high school students will engage in hands-on scientific research, with a strong emphasis in cancer research. Two different cohort groups, one of students and one of Oklahoma teachers, will support community building and sustainability of the student training pipeline.

YES Oklahoma Scholars, eligible high school juniors and seniors, will have the opportunity to participate in an intensive summer research experience and earn college credit. YES Oklahoma Teachers, middle and high school teachers from partner schools across the state, will participate in a summer training event that includes curriculum development, as well as salary and compensation benefits. Students enrolled in these teachers’ classes, a third beneficiary group called YES Oklahoma Trainees, also benefit from the teachers’ participation by taking part in the curriculum.

Lewis said the grant also provides support for graduate student training and mentorship at OU and the OSU Center for Health Sciences.

“Together, the directors, scholars, teachers, trainees and graduate students, along with associated communities and tribes, will form the YES Oklahoma Outreach Team, providing education in cancer prevention focused on families and communities,” Lewis said. “The YES Oklahoma program will directly impact over 76 scholars and teachers annually, and the combined outreach events will indirectly impact thousands of underserved students, teachers, families and community members.”

This project is a partnership between the University of Oklahoma’s Norman campus, OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center on the OU Health Sciences Center campus, and the OSU Center for Health Sciences, among other centers and programs. The grant proposal received letters of support by the tribal president of the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes, the Kiowa Tribe Higher Education Program, and the chairman of the Comanche Nation, as well as superintendents representing partnering schools in Oklahoma and more than 20 Oklahoma faculty mentors in biomedical related sciences. The YES Oklahoma proposal received a perfect review score, referred to as an “Impact 10,” by the NIH review panel, a rare triumph for grant proposals and strong demonstration of the potential impact of partnership between Oklahoma institutes and tribal partners.

 

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About the Project
The project, “Native American Youths Enjoy Science - YES Oklahoma,” is funded by the National Cancer Institute of the NIH, grant no. 1R25CA274172-01

About the University of Oklahoma Office of the Vice President for Research and Partnerships 

The University of Oklahoma is a leading research university classified by the Carnegie Foundation in the highest tier of research universities in the nation. Faculty, staff and students at OU are tackling global challenges and accelerating the delivery of practical solutions that impact society in direct and tangible ways through research and creative activities. OU researchers expand foundational knowledge while moving beyond traditional academic boundaries, collaborating across disciplines and globally with other research institutions as well as decision makers and practitioners from industry, government and civil society to create and apply solutions for a better world. Find out more at ou.edu/research.

About the University of Oklahoma

Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university located in Norman, Oklahoma. OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. For more information visit www.ou.edu.

About Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences

Oklahoma State University Center for Health Sciences is a nationally recognized academic health center focused on teaching, research and patient care. Learn more at medicine.okstate.edu/

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