Health Disparities
The United States has become increasingly diverse in the last century, and though health indicators such as life expectancy and infant mortality have improved for most Americans, some minorities experience a disproportionate burden of preventable disease, death, and disability compared with non-minorities.
The FIU-Health Disparities Initiative, funded in part by a $9.5 million National Institute of Health's National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) grant, provides community-based prevention, treatment, and outcome research focused on HIV, substance abuse, diabetes, obesity and other chronic illnesses that disproportionately impact underserved communities in South Florida and the Caribbean region.
The Brain, Behavior and the Environment Program is a transdisciplinary initiative that unites the dynamic and diverse neuroscience community at FIU in the pursuit of advancing research on the environmental, social and biological causes of neurological disease, with an emphasis on diverse and older populations of African Americans and Latinos in the United States. FIU’s researchers and other national thought leaders are devising strategies for the early diagnosis of neurological disease; the identification of risk associated with toxic exposures, social and economic factors; and interventions for neurological disorders using cutting-edge science and engineering.