11 Oct 2008 01:00 PM

UNC Receives $8.5 Million For New Public Health Preparedness Research Center



The North Carolina Institute for Public Health has been awarded an $8.5 million, five-year grant to create a new research center focused on helping protect the state from a wide range to disasters and threats.

The institute, part of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Gillings School of Global Public Health, was selected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to head up one of seven new Preparedness and Emergency Response Research Centers.

The new center will be known as the North Carolina Public Health Preparedness Systems Research Center. Edward L. Baker, M.D., the institute's director and professor of health policy and management in the public health school, was principal investigator of the grant proposal.

The center will focus on conducting research related to public health preparedness and emergency response in North Carolina. Researchers will evaluate disease surveillance and reporting systems, emergency alerting systems, regional response systems and the effects of health department accreditation on preparedness and response capacities.

"What will come out of this center will improve the quality of preparedness and response to all hazards, from hurricanes to contagious diseases to suspected terroristic acts," Baker said…