Ann Cheney, a medical anthropologist at the University of California "conducts health research in partnership with communities living near the Salton Sea, California’s largest saline lake, roughly 50 kilometers north of the Mexican border. In 2017, Cheney and her colleagues worked with researchers at the U.S. Border Health Commission to identify the health needs of Mexican immigrants in rural southern California," Gewin writes. "She has partnered with local groups to further analyze health impacts, particularly in undocumented immigrants. A major challenge, she says, is that many of these communities have grown resentful of urban academics who — backed by hefty grants — swoop in to collect their data but then fail to return with solutions."
Rural California has experienced "wildfires, flash floods, heatwaves and drought, and researchers are asking what they can do to help, says Diana Moanga, who manages the Spatial Analysis Center at Stanford University," Gewin explains. "Moanga has interviewed ranchers affected by dwindling water supplies, helped to create a risk index of mobile homes that are vulnerable to wildfires and assessed the potential for solar projects on tribal lands. Notably, she says, funders want to ensure that research results reach communities.
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PRIME medical student are trained for unique communities. (UC David photo) |
from The Rural Blog https://ift.tt/xnOPpyW Academics in California strive to help rural communities solve problems by using science and collaboration - Entrepreneur Generations
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