Faculty

FROM LEFT TO RIGHT, the PVAMU faculty team: Drs. Max Winshell Fontus, Sharon McWhinney, Naznin Sultana, Seungchan Kim, Noushin Ghaffari, and Andrea McDonald.

PRAIRIE VIEW, Texas (October 28, 2021) – Efforts to increase diversity among future public health information technology professionals received a $10 million boost with the awarding of a significant cooperative agreement to the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston. Included in this agreement is Prairie View A&M University, along with eight other universities. Funding has already begun to benefit students and faculty with invaluable learning experiences.

Awarded by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, the money supports the Gaining Equity in Training for Public Health Informatics and Technology consortium, or GET PHIT, which hopes to oversee the training of approximately 1,900 students and health and academic professionals.

“The university’s involvement in this project helps solidify our role in providing our students with cutting-edge technology and skills while preparing them for the workforce,” said Co-investigator Sharon McWhinney, Ph.D., professor and chair of the Human Nutrition, Dietetics and Food Security Group at PVAMU. “As the university seeks to provide a high-quality educational experience for students, the knowledge and training gained through their involvement in this project will boost students’ self-sufficiency and professional competence.”

PVAMU will receive approximately $450,000 to support the faculty involved. UTHealth will sponsor students participating in summer boot camps and certificate programs. It is expected that 90 PVAMU students will participate in the summer boot camps. An additional 100 students will benefit from the program by participating in various undergraduate courses and certificate programs developed by the consortium.

“This cooperative agreement will provide PVAMU students with opportunities to get trained by the top researchers in the field of informatics, with real-world experience through paid internship programs and also job-placement mentoring,” said PVAMU Chief Scientist and Executive Professor Seungchan Kim, Ph.D. Kim is the principal investigator on this project for PVAMU.

Informatics—which involves the storage, processing, and communication of information from a user-centered perspective—is an emerging interdisciplinary field with computer applications in the health care industry. Its use promises to improve patient care by optimizing telehealth, electronic medical records, and health care-related apps through better use and sharing of critical data.

McWhinney said that PVAMU’s share of the funding would provide students with opportunities to be trained by top researchers in the field, receive real-world experience through paid internship programs, obtain valuable mentoring from established professionals and secure job placement upon graduation. PVAMU faculty will also benefit from additional professional development opportunities by working with UTHealth, encouraging others to excel in this promising field.

“Prairie View A&M faculty will be directly involved in curriculum development, especially in data science, curriculum review, and delivery of courses, to not only PVAMU students—by incorporating into existing courses—but also the students from other consortium members through the summer camps,” said Kim.

PVAMU faculty involved in the grant award include McWhinney and Kim, along with Co-investigators Andrea McDonald, Ph.D. (Health & Kinesiology), Max Winshell Fontus, Ph.D. (Undergraduate Medical Academy, Chemistry), Noushin Ghaffari, Ph.D. (Computer Science), and Naznin Sultana, Ph.D. (Undergraduate Medical Academy).

They will partner with UTHealth, Texas Tech University Health Science Center, Huston-Tillotson University, Texas A&M International University, Texas Southern University, The University of Texas Arlington, The University of Texas El Paso, The University of Texas Permian Basin, and The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.

“In partnering with these Texas universities, UTHealth can share best practices and lessons learned while also helping the underrepresented public health informatics and technology workforce flourish,” said McWhinney. “Prairie View’s efforts will increase the representation of underrepresented communities within the public health IT workforce by increasing diversity and growing the nation’s public health workforce to meet future needs.”

The $10 million cooperative agreement is part of a $73 million award to universities across the country.

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