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October 4, 2007 URC PARTNERS WITH STATE HEALTH PROVIDERS AS PART OF NATIONAL CHILDREN’S STUDYAn alliance of Michigan’s three University Research Corridor universities, two leading health care systems, and state and local health agencies will join together in a national research project to study how the environment affects the health and development of children. Funded by an $18 million research contract from the National Institutes of Health, the National Children’s Study (NCS) will monitor more than 100,000 children nationally from before birth to age 21. In Michigan, researchers will recruit and monitor approximately 1,000 participants in Wayne County. Michigan State University will lead Michigan’s role in the project, which is believed to be the most ambitious children’s health study of its kind. Project collaborators include MSU, the University of Michigan, Wayne State University, Children’s Hospital of Michigan, Henry Ford Health System, Michigan Department of Community Health (MDCH), and Wayne County and city of Detroit health departments. Directing the Michigan project will be Nigel Paneth, an MSU professor of epidemiology, and pediatrics and human development. “No child health study of this size and scope has ever been conducted,” Paneth said. “It should provide more useful information about the effects of the environment on child health than any study ever undertaken. “Environmental influences are broadly defined,” he added. “Not only are we looking into environmental toxins, but also looking at infections, nutrition, growth and the child’s family and social environment. “By studying children through several phases of growth and development, including their development before birth, we will be better able to understand the role of these factors on health and disease.” The first phase of the Michigan part of this project focuses on Wayne County. Participant recruitment is expected to begin sometime in 2009. In the future, it is anticipated that the study will include four other Michigan counties that were selected to be among the 105 counties representing the U.S. in the NCS: Genesee, Grand Traverse, Lenawee and Macomb counties. Planning for this project began in 2002 when MSU and the other partners formed the Michigan Alliance for the National Children’s Study, or MANCS. The idea, said Paneth, was that each institution brings unique skills to the table. “The structure of MANCS reflects a sustained collaborative effort among Michigan State, Wayne State, University of Michigan and Henry Ford which collectively account for 96 percent of NIH research dollars in Michigan,” Paneth said. Each institution will play a specific role in the study.
“It’s important that Michigan be a part of the largest and most comprehensive national study of child health ever mounted,” Paneth said. “But we also expect that issues especially important to the health of Michigan children will be addressed, leading to new ways of treating and preventing disease in our children and to new public health programs in our state.”
Listen to a podcast with Paneth at http://spartanpodcast.com/?p=322
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