UAF RECEIVES $11 MILLION FOR NATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 3, 2001
Fairbanks, Alaska The University of Alaska Fairbanks has been
awarded a grant totaling $11 million over five years to establish an Alaska
Native Health Research Center and Center of Biomedical Research Excellence
in Alaska. The grant award, funded through the National Center for Research
Resources Program of the National Institutes of Health, is intended to
develop knowledge about the behavioral, genetic and nutritional factors
related to obesity and its relationship to diabetes and heart disease.
Alaska Natives have survived extreme environmental conditions with limited
food resources for thousands of years and in spite of a traditional diet
high in fat have experienced little obesity, heart disease and diabetes,
until recently.
For example, between 1985 and 1999 the rate of increase of diabetes for
Alaskan Natives in the Yukon Kuskokwim Delta was 177 percent, according
to Yukon Kuskokwim Health Corporations Dana Hall. This compares
to a rate of increase of 76 percent for all Alaskan Natives/American Indians
in the state of Alaska.
"What were seeing is that our prevalence for diabetes is
still low, but is increasing at an alarming rate," said Hall. "If
we were just looking at national data, without comparing it to ourselves,
we might not recognize the rate of disease in our people."
Native health officials on the front lines in their communities say Alaska
Native research is critical, not only because its based on the Alaska
Native population, but also because its sets the groundwork for badly
needed comparative studies. In a recent screening of Yukon Kuskokwim Delta
college freshmen, one-fourth of students had impaired glucose tolerance
and could go on to develop type II diabetes.
"Recent acculturation has led to a more sedentary lifestyle, increased
alcohol consumption, more smoking and a shift towards a western diet high
in carbohydrates," said Bert Boyer, co-principal investigator and
researcher with UAFs Institute of Arctic Biology. "Thrifty
genes could be at work here," Boyer said. "The thrifty
gene hypothesis suggests that people in a harsh environment with an unstable
food supply enhance their probability of survival by maximizing storage
of surplus energy.
"But our genes dont act alone," added Boyer. "Nutrition
and behavior have a role in body weight maintenance which is why the health
components of this research are so important."
The Alaska Native Health Research Center also has a nutritional and behavioral
focus that will partner with tribal health organization efforts. Kari
Hamrick, with the Institute for Circumpolar Health in Anchorage, will
conduct research aimed at identifying dietary patterns, nutrient intakes
and food sources to improve understanding of the nutritional value of
subsistence foods. Kelly Hazel with UAFs Psychology Department will
work with Alaska Natives to identify a cultural understanding of health
and wellness. This research will be used to work with communities in reducing
the risks associated with increased body weight by improving nutrition
and cultural behavioral health. Additionally, Brian Saylor and Carl Hild
of UAAs Institute of Circumpolar Health are collaborators and partners
within the center.
"What we have is an opportunity to build an Alaska-based research
program with a focus on Alaska Native Health," said Gerald Mohatt,
principal investigator with UAFs Psychology Department. "We
will work closely with Native health organizations to identify immediate
health needs and concerns in communities and partner in the development
of research knowledge and potential prevention strategies."
The proposed research will expand the People Awakening Projects
efforts already underway through a $1.2 million collaborative project
with groups of Alaska Natives statewide, helping to chart effective alcohol
abuse prevention strategies among at-risk populations focusing on healthy
behaviors.
UAF will also be working with a number of scientists and consultants in
biomedical research programs at Duke University, Columbia, the University
of Alabama at Birmingham and the University of Colorado.
"UAFs bio-science program is embryonic compared to programs
across the country, but weve been presented with an incredible opportunity
for our program to grow exponentially within a few years," said Mohatt.
Biomedical and health research at the University of Alaska is supported
by three other major federal initiatives funded within the past year.
The University of Alaska recently received $6 million from NIH to form
an Alaska Biomedical Research Infrastructure Network and is participating
in the National Science Foundations Experimental Program to Stimulate
Competitive Research which includes research in integrative approaches
to environmental physiology and the Alaska Genomics Initiative, both with
biomedical aspects. The NIH/National Institute of Neurological Diseases
and Stroke has also funded a Specialized Neuroscience Research Program
at UAF.
Participants in the latest NIH research project includes the UAF Psychology
Department and the Institute of Arctic Biology as well as UAA's Institute
for Circumpolar Health Studies and Yukon Kuskokwim and Norton Sound Native
corporations.
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CONTACT: UAF Psychology Professor and Principal Investigator Gerald
Mohatt at (907) 474-6415 or e-mail: ffgvm@uaf.edu
UAF Biology Professor and UAF Biology Professor and Co-Principal Investigator
Bert Boyer at (907) 474-7733 or e-mail bert.boyer@uaf.edu.
CJB/12-3-01/026-02

