NIH Forms Expert Group to Study Health Disparities

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WASHINGTON—The National Institutes of Health launched on Aug. 5 a multidisciplinary network of experts who will explore new approaches to understanding the origins of health disparities, or differences in the burden of disease among population groups.

The network will use Using state-of-the-science conceptual and computational models to identify important areas where interventions or policy changes could have the greatest impact in eliminating health disparities.

The Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research (OBSSR), part of NIH, is contracting with the University of Michigan's School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, to establish the Network on Inequality, Complexity, and Health (NICH).

The NICH is made up of scientists with expertise across disciplines, including economics, biology, ecology, computer science, education, sociology, mathematics and epidemiology. NICH will be the first network to apply systems science approaches to the study of health inequities, according to NIH.

Systems science methods enable investigators to examine the dynamic interrelationships of variables at multiple levels of analysis (e.g., from cells to society) simultaneously. They also study the impact on the behavior of the system as a whole over time.

For example, factors such as access to health care, neighborhood environment, educational opportunities, physiology and genetics all may interact over the course of a person’s life to influence risk for diseases like diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

Besides exploring hypothesized causes of health inequalities, these simulations could reveal unexpected causes, and help researchers predict better which interventions have the most potential for reducing or eliminating health disparities, according to NIH. The computational models function as computer-simulated laboratories in which to probe the causes of health disparities, as well as their solutions.

“NICH brings together scientists from many different disciplines to create a new conceptual approach for examining the behavioral, social and biological factors which interact to cause inequalities in health,” said Deborah H. Olster, PhD, acting director of OBSSR.

Led by chair and principal investigator George A. Kaplan, Ph.D., at the University of Michigan School of Public Health, NICH’s primary goal is to catalyze groundbreaking research on health disparities and population health using systems science methods. NICH will foster areas of health disparities research that are receptive to using a systems science approach.

"Much of the health disparities research conducted to date took place within single disciplines, and therefore could not comprehensively approach the multitude of factors that are involved. NICH will fundamentally change this approach by embracing perspectives from the biological to the societal, while employing cutting-edge simulation methods from computer science," Kaplan said.

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