Represents Grant table in the DB

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            "type": "Grant",
            "id": "10914",
            "attributes": {
                "award_id": "5U01MD017423-02",
                "title": "Community-Engaged Research on COVID-19 Testing Among Underserved and/or Vulnerable Populations Phase II",
                "funder": {
                    "id": 4,
                    "ror": "https://ror.org/01cwqze88",
                    "name": "National Institutes of Health",
                    "approved": true
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                "funder_divisions": [
                    "NIH Office of the Director"
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                    {
                        "id": 8046,
                        "first_name": "Nathaniel",
                        "last_name": "Stinson",
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                "start_date": "2022-01-01",
                "end_date": "2023-11-30",
                "award_amount": 1105831,
                "principal_investigator": {
                    "id": 22341,
                    "first_name": "Marianna K",
                    "last_name": "Baum",
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                        {
                            "id": 207,
                            "ror": "https://ror.org/02gz6gg07",
                            "name": "Florida International University",
                            "address": "",
                            "city": "",
                            "state": "FL",
                            "zip": "",
                            "country": "United States",
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                    "id": 207,
                    "ror": "https://ror.org/02gz6gg07",
                    "name": "Florida International University",
                    "address": "",
                    "city": "",
                    "state": "FL",
                    "zip": "",
                    "country": "United States",
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                "abstract": "The COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented public health and economic consequences globally and in the United States. Long-standing social inequities have been magnified and vulnerable communities have been disproportionately burdened by the pandemic. In Miami-Dade County, Florida, where minority populations experience a high level of social vulnerability, Blacks and Hispanics are overrepresented in COVID-19 related hospitalizations and deaths compared to national rates. Further, Miami-Dade County continues to experience COVID-19 rates well above the state and national levels. Effective vaccines are now available, yet vaccination rates have been persistently lower among U.S. minorities, broadening disparities in COVID-19 outcomes. As such, expanded SARS-CoV-2 testing and vaccine acceptance is critical to mitigating community spread in underserved and vulnerable communities. In this application for Phase II of the RADx-UP project, we will apply the knowledge gained during Phase I to expand community outreach to increase testing and vaccine uptake in minority communities to decrease disparities that contribute to burden of COVID-19 in underserved and vulnerable populations. We propose to continue our RADx-UP community-engaged research by employing new recruitment strategies in conjunction with four community partners to increase reach of testing that include engaging faith leaders and minority health care providers, and placing our mobile testing (and vaccination) unit in church parking areas. We will also conduct a longitudinal study among participants who completed Phase I of the study to assess (a) changes in infection and vaccination status, (b) how the availability of vaccines affects attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors related to testing, (c) changes in SDoH and their impact on COVID-19 testing and vaccine uptake/hesitancy, and (d) the relationship between mental resilience, mental health, and testing and vaccine uptake/hesitancy, and (e) other RADx-UP common data elements. We will also conduct post-infection and post-vaccination studies on antibody production and subsequent infections. For the proposed Phase II application, we have partnered with new community organizations, including Keeping the Faith to Fight COVID-19, an organization of minority health care providers working with Black and Black Hispanic churches, and with the Community Engagement Alliance (CEAL) Against COVID-19 Disparities initiative. We are currently conducting RADx-UP Phase I with established infrastructure and community partnerships to accomplish the aims and enable rapid and measurable impact in access and uptake of SARS- CoV-2 testing by underserved and vulnerable populations. Our community partners have the resources to provide community engagement, public health mitigation, and follow-up care for cases who test positive. Our strategy includes Scientific and Community Advisory Boards; a mobile testing unit; a CLIA-licensed laboratory headed by the PI of this application; data mining and longitudinal approaches for data analyses; and a research team experienced in recruiting and retaining members of the communities targeted in this proposal.",
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                    "vaccine access",
                    "vaccine trial",
                    "vulnerable community"
                ],
                "approved": true
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        },
        {
            "type": "Grant",
            "id": "10915",
            "attributes": {
                "award_id": "3R01HL156994-02S1",
                "title": "Examining How Psychosocial Stress Gets \"Under the Skin\" and Leads to Cardiovascular Disease Risk in Diverse Children: A Mixed-Methods Study",
                "funder": {
                    "id": 4,
                    "ror": "https://ror.org/01cwqze88",
                    "name": "National Institutes of Health",
                    "approved": true
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                "funder_divisions": [
                    "National Heart Lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI)"
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                        "id": 22387,
                        "first_name": "Charlotte A.",
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                "start_date": "2022-01-01",
                "end_date": "2026-12-31",
                "award_amount": 17816,
                "principal_investigator": {
                    "id": 22388,
                    "first_name": "Jerica M",
                    "last_name": "Berge",
                    "orcid": null,
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                        {
                            "id": 764,
                            "ror": "https://ror.org/017zqws13",
                            "name": "University of Minnesota",
                            "address": "",
                            "city": "",
                            "state": "MN",
                            "zip": "",
                            "country": "United States",
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                "abstract": "Recent reports from the American Journal of Public Health and the American Psychological Association identified a critical need to examine mechanisms by which exposure to psychosocial stress in childhood increases the risk for obesity and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in adulthood. Given there is a lag in time before the impact of psychosocial stress experienced in childhood is expressed as disease in adulthood, these calls-to-action urge researchers to investigate the role of modifiable factors over the course of childhood that may mitigate risk for later obesity and CVD. The proposed mixed-methods study is uniquely designed to answer these calls-to-action by examining how stress “gets under the skin” to put children at higher risk for later obesity and CVD, and ultimately health disparities by race/ethnicity. The main objectives of this study are to: (1) comprehensively examine the relationships between multi-level psychosocial stressors (i.e., individual, dyadic, household, societal) and their dimensions (i.e., severity, frequency, timing), biological factors (e.g., hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis activity), and child weight and emerging CVD risk over the course of childhood and (2) identify modifiable factors at the individual, parental, and familial level to interrupt these stress pathways. The proposed study will build on and expand a prior parent R01 study (HL126171). The parent R01 study is a two-phased, mixed-methods study including a prospective epidemiological cohort study with 1307 diverse parent/child (ages 5-16) dyads (≈200 each African American, Hispanic, Native American, Immigrant/Refugee, White) and an embedded ecological momentary assessment (EMA) sub-sample with 627 parent/child dyads (≈100 per each racial/ethnic group). Data was collected at two time points (baseline, 24-month follow-up). In the proposed study, online survey data and 7-day EMA data will be continued at 48 and 72 months, allowing for a total of four waves of data collection. Children, who are now ages 9-16 will be added to both the online survey and EMA data collection, in addition to participating in three 24 hr. dietary recalls and 7-day accelerometry. New biological measures (e.g., hair cortisol, body composition, arterial stiffness) with children and parents, neighborhood factors (e.g., child opportunity and disadvantage index) using geo-spatial measures, and societal-level factors (e.g., structural racism, sociopolitical shift, COVID-19) contributing to psychosocial stressors will also be added at both time points. Human-Centered Design multi-family focus groups will also be carried out to co-create intervention targets with families. This study will provide breadth and depth in understanding the pathways between multi-level psychosocial stressors and child weight and emerging CVD across important developmental milestones (e.g., puberty) and family life cycle stages (e.g., families with young children to families with adolescents). Importantly, this study will identify modifiable factors (e.g., family adaptability/resilience) that mitigate the negative impact of multi-level psychosocial stressors on child CVD that can be targeted in interventions.",
                "keywords": [
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                ],
                "approved": true
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        },
        {
            "type": "Grant",
            "id": "10916",
            "attributes": {
                "award_id": "3R01HL156994-02S2",
                "title": "Examining How Psychosocial Stress Gets \"Under the Skin\" and Leads to Cardiovascular Disease Risk in Diverse Children: A Mixed-Methods Study",
                "funder": {
                    "id": 4,
                    "ror": "https://ror.org/01cwqze88",
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                        "first_name": "Charlotte A.",
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                "end_date": "2026-12-31",
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                    "first_name": "Jerica M",
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                "abstract": "Recent reports from the American Journal of Public Health and the American Psychological Association identified a critical need to examine mechanisms by which exposure to psychosocial stress in childhood increases the risk for obesity and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in adulthood. Given there is a lag in time before the impact of psychosocial stress experienced in childhood is expressed as disease in adulthood, these calls-to-action urge researchers to investigate the role of modifiable factors over the course of childhood that may mitigate risk for later obesity and CVD. The proposed mixed-methods study is uniquely designed to answer these calls-to-action by examining how stress “gets under the skin” to put children at higher risk for later obesity and CVD, and ultimately health disparities by race/ethnicity. The main objectives of this study are to: (1) comprehensively examine the relationships between multi-level psychosocial stressors (i.e., individual, dyadic, household, societal) and their dimensions (i.e., severity, frequency, timing), biological factors (e.g., hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis activity), and child weight and emerging CVD risk over the course of childhood and (2) identify modifiable factors at the individual, parental, and familial level to interrupt these stress pathways. The proposed study will build on and expand a prior parent R01 study (HL126171). The parent R01 study is a two-phased, mixed-methods study including a prospective epidemiological cohort study with 1307 diverse parent/child (ages 5-16) dyads (≈200 each African American, Hispanic, Native American, Immigrant/Refugee, White) and an embedded ecological momentary assessment (EMA) sub-sample with 627 parent/child dyads (≈100 per each racial/ethnic group). Data was collected at two time points (baseline, 24-month follow-up). In the proposed study, online survey data and 7-day EMA data will be continued at 48 and 72 months, allowing for a total of four waves of data collection. Children, who are now ages 9-16 will be added to both the online survey and EMA data collection, in addition to participating in three 24 hr. dietary recalls and 7-day accelerometry. New biological measures (e.g., hair cortisol, body composition, arterial stiffness) with children and parents, neighborhood factors (e.g., child opportunity and disadvantage index) using geo-spatial measures, and societal-level factors (e.g., structural racism, sociopolitical shift, COVID-19) contributing to psychosocial stressors will also be added at both time points. Human-Centered Design multi-family focus groups will also be carried out to co-create intervention targets with families. This study will provide breadth and depth in understanding the pathways between multi-level psychosocial stressors and child weight and emerging CVD across important developmental milestones (e.g., puberty) and family life cycle stages (e.g., families with young children to families with adolescents). Importantly, this study will identify modifiable factors (e.g., family adaptability/resilience) that mitigate the negative impact of multi-level psychosocial stressors on child CVD that can be targeted in interventions.",
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            "type": "Grant",
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            "attributes": {
                "award_id": "5R01HL156994-02",
                "title": "Examining How Psychosocial Stress Gets \"Under the Skin\" and Leads to Cardiovascular Disease Risk in Diverse Children: A Mixed-Methods Study",
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                    "approved": true
                },
                "abstract": "Recent reports from the American Journal of Public Health and the American Psychological Association identified a critical need to examine mechanisms by which exposure to psychosocial stress in childhood increases the risk for obesity and cardiovascular disease (CVD) in adulthood. Given there is a lag in time before the impact of psychosocial stress experienced in childhood is expressed as disease in adulthood, these calls-to-action urge researchers to investigate the role of modifiable factors over the course of childhood that may mitigate risk for later obesity and CVD. The proposed mixed-methods study is uniquely designed to answer these calls-to-action by examining how stress “gets under the skin” to put children at higher risk for later obesity and CVD, and ultimately health disparities by race/ethnicity. The main objectives of this study are to: (1) comprehensively examine the relationships between multi-level psychosocial stressors (i.e., individual, dyadic, household, societal) and their dimensions (i.e., severity, frequency, timing), biological factors (e.g., hypothalamic pituitary adrenal (HPA) axis activity), and child weight and emerging CVD risk over the course of childhood and (2) identify modifiable factors at the individual, parental, and familial level to interrupt these stress pathways. The proposed study will build on and expand a prior parent R01 study (HL126171). The parent R01 study is a two-phased, mixed-methods study including a prospective epidemiological cohort study with 1307 diverse parent/child (ages 5-16) dyads (≈200 each African American, Hispanic, Native American, Immigrant/Refugee, White) and an embedded ecological momentary assessment (EMA) sub-sample with 627 parent/child dyads (≈100 per each racial/ethnic group). Data was collected at two time points (baseline, 24-month follow-up). In the proposed study, online survey data and 7-day EMA data will be continued at 48 and 72 months, allowing for a total of four waves of data collection. Children, who are now ages 9-16 will be added to both the online survey and EMA data collection, in addition to participating in three 24 hr. dietary recalls and 7-day accelerometry. New biological measures (e.g., hair cortisol, body composition, arterial stiffness) with children and parents, neighborhood factors (e.g., child opportunity and disadvantage index) using geo-spatial measures, and societal-level factors (e.g., structural racism, sociopolitical shift, COVID-19) contributing to psychosocial stressors will also be added at both time points. Human-Centered Design multi-family focus groups will also be carried out to co-create intervention targets with families. This study will provide breadth and depth in understanding the pathways between multi-level psychosocial stressors and child weight and emerging CVD across important developmental milestones (e.g., puberty) and family life cycle stages (e.g., families with young children to families with adolescents). Importantly, this study will identify modifiable factors (e.g., family adaptability/resilience) that mitigate the negative impact of multi-level psychosocial stressors on child CVD that can be targeted in interventions.",
                "keywords": [
                    "Accelerometer",
                    "Adolescence",
                    "Adolescent",
                    "Adult",
                    "Affect",
                    "African American",
                    "Age",
                    "American",
                    "American Psychological Association",
                    "Behavioral",
                    "Biological",
                    "Biological Factors",
                    "Biological Markers",
                    "Blood Pressure",
                    "Body Composition",
                    "Body mass index",
                    "COVID-19",
                    "Cardiovascular Diseases",
                    "Child",
                    "Child Behavior",
                    "Child Health",
                    "Child Rearing",
                    "Childhood",
                    "Cohort Studies",
                    "Data",
                    "Data Collection",
                    "Development",
                    "Diet",
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                    "Ecological momentary assessment",
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                    "Family",
                    "Family Life Cycle",
                    "Field Reports",
                    "Focus Groups",
                    "Frequencies",
                    "Hair",
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                    "Immigrant",
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                    "United States National Institutes of Health",
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                    "feeding",
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                    "health disparity",
                    "high risk",
                    "human centered design",
                    "hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis",
                    "improved",
                    "indexing",
                    "innovation",
                    "middle childhood",
                    "novel",
                    "obesity in children",
                    "obesity risk",
                    "prospective",
                    "psychosocial stressors",
                    "racial and ethnic",
                    "racial disparity",
                    "resilience",
                    "retention rate",
                    "risk mitigation",
                    "waist circumference"
                ],
                "approved": true
            }
        }
    ],
    "meta": {
        "pagination": {
            "page": 1419,
            "pages": 1419,
            "count": 14184
        }
    }
}