Asian Resource Centers for Minority Aging Research (RCMAR)
亚洲少数民族老龄化研究资源中心 (RCMAR)
基本信息
- 批准号:9977072
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 61.52万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:2018
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:2018-09-15 至 2023-06-30
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:Academic achievementAccountabilityAchievementAdvisory CommitteesAgingAsian AmericansAsiansBehavioralBehavioral MechanismsBenchmarkingBiomedical ResearchChicagoCitiesCommunicationCommunitiesData SetElderlyEnsureEnvironmentEvaluationExcisionFamilyFosteringFundingFutureFuture GenerationsGoalsGovernmentGrantGrowthHealthHeterogeneityImmigrantImmigrationIncomeInfrastructureInstitutionInterdisciplinary StudyIntervention StudiesKnowledgeLanguageLeadLeadershipMeasurementMentorsMentorshipMethodsMinorityMinority GroupsMissionModelingNatureOutcomeOutcomes ResearchPilot ProjectsPoliciesPopulationPopulation ResearchPovertyPreparationPreventive InterventionProcessRecordsReligionResearchResearch InfrastructureResearch PersonnelResearch TrainingResourcesScientistStereotypingStressStressful EventSystemTestingTrainingTraining and EducationTranslatingTranslational ResearchTraumaUnderrepresented PopulationsUnited States National Institutes of HealthVariantWorkadverse outcomebasebehavioral/social sciencecareercaucasian Americancohortcultural valuesdesigneducation researchevidence baseexpectationexperiencehealth disparityhealth equityimprovedintergenerationalinvestigator trainingnext generationoutreachpreventprogramsrecruitresiliencesexual identitysocialsocial science researchstress resiliencesuccesstheoriestooltrauma exposure
项目摘要
Abstract: Overall RCMAR
We propose the Chicago Asian RCMAR to advance careers of investigators from underrepresented
populations through translational trauma and resilience research amongst one of the most understudied, yet
fastest growing populations in the U.S.: Asian American older adults. Such an important focus in
research, population and investigators will inform both practice and policy at community, regional and national
levels. Asians are the fastest growing yet most understudied US minority group at 21 million people and
growing 56% from 2000-2013. Yet, < 1% of NIH research funding in the last 10 years were focused on US
Asian populations, with only 3-5 total funded NIH grants/yr that focus on US Asian older adults. Moreover, this
population experiences the “Asian Paradox”: while on average, US Asians, are the highest-income earners
and the most highly-educated, more Asians, especially older adults, live below the poverty line, are less likely
to participate in biomedical research, and suffer disproportional health disparities compared to white
Americans. These health inequities are further complicated by the heterogeneity of these immigrant
populations, especially with respect to culture, religion, language, sexual identity, and trauma exposure, many
of which challenge our assumptions about the “model minority” stereotype. Such exposures and
heterogeneities lead to isolation and further removal from opportunities to participate in research, thus
restricting benefits conferred from population level research. However, despite this diversity, there are unifying
themes across Asian cultures with regard to shared experiences of immigration, trauma, strong family bonds,
cultural values and expectations, and the intergenerational nature of the aging process.
Building on two decades of rigorous aging research in minority populations and track records of
successful academic achievements, we have leveraged strong existing transdisciplinary partnerships across
multiple academic and community institutions to build a center designed to foster the next generation of
diverse researchers in a nurturing environment that is conducive to success and promotes highly relevant and
rigorous trauma, resilience and health outcomes research among Asian American older adults. We propose
the following scientific lines of inquiry: 1) Understand the cross-ethnic variations in the social, cultural, and
behavioral mechanisms of trauma and stress across Asian populations; 2) Explore the potential differential
health outcomes associated with trauma, immigration, and mechanisms of resilience in ameliorating adverse
consequences among Asian populations; and 3) Build institutional and community capacity that tests and
adapts and implements evidence based behavioral change strategies to prevent and treat trauma, promote
resilience, and mitigate the effect of stressful events in Asian aging populations. The overall aims of the
application reflect the synergistic work of Administrative (AC), Research Education (REC), Measurement and
Analysis (AnC) and Community Liaison & Recruitment (CLRC) Cores.
摘要:总体 RCMAR
我们建议芝加哥亚洲 RCMAR 促进代表性不足的调查人员的职业发展
通过转化创伤和复原力研究对人群进行研究,这是迄今为止研究最多的研究之一
美国增长最快的人口:亚裔美国人老年人是一个重要的焦点。
研究、人口和调查人员将为社区、区域和国家的实践和政策提供信息
亚洲人是美国增长最快但研究最不足的少数群体,人口达到 2100 万,
2000 年至 2013 年期间增长了 56%,然而,过去 10 年 NIH 研究经费的不到 1% 集中在美国。
亚洲人群,每年只有 3-5 笔 NIH 拨款专注于美国亚裔老年人。
人口经历“亚洲悖论”:平均而言,美国亚裔是收入最高的人
受教育程度最高的亚洲人,尤其是老年人,生活在贫困线以下的可能性较小
参与生物医学研究,并与白人相比遭受不成比例的健康差距
美国人的健康不平等由于这些移民的异质性而变得更加复杂。
人口,特别是在文化、宗教、语言、性别认同和创伤暴露方面,许多
其中挑战了我们对“模范少数族裔”刻板印象的假设。
异质性导致孤立并进一步剥夺参与研究的机会,从而
然而,尽管存在这种多样性,但仍存在统一的授予。
亚洲文化的主题涉及共同的移民经历、创伤、牢固的家庭纽带、
文化价值观和期望,以及老龄化过程的代际性质。
建立在二十年对少数族裔人口的严格老龄化研究和跟踪记录的基础上
成功的学术成就,我们利用了跨学科领域现有的强大合作伙伴关系
多个学术和社区机构建立一个旨在培养下一代的中心
多元化的研究人员在一个有利于成功并促进高度相关和
我们建议对亚裔美国老年人进行严格的创伤、复原力和健康结果研究。
以下科学探究路线: 1) 了解社会、文化和文化方面的跨种族差异
亚洲人群创伤和压力的行为机制;2) 探索潜在的差异
与创伤、移民和改善不利影响的恢复机制相关的健康结果
3) 建立机构和社区能力来测试和评估
适应并实施基于证据的行为改变策略,以预防和治疗创伤,促进
恢复力,并减轻压力事件对亚洲老龄化人口的影响。
应用反映了行政(AC)、研究教育(REC)、测量和
分析 (AnC) 和社区联络与招聘 (CLRC) 核心。
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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XINQI DONG其他文献
XINQI DONG的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('XINQI DONG', 18)}}的其他基金
XD GrantTransfer #6 from Rush to Rutgers PHS Grant #R01NR014846: Culture and Caregiving Need for Chinese Elderly with Cognitive Impairment
XD 拨款转让
- 批准号:
9754945 - 财政年份:2019
- 资助金额:
$ 61.52万 - 项目类别:
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Asian Resource Centers for Minority Aging Research (RCMAR)
亚洲少数民族老龄化研究资源中心 (RCMAR)
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10224080 - 财政年份:2018
- 资助金额:
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