The University of Southern Mississippi (USM) will provide research assistance in health-related issues as part of a collaboration with My Brother’s Keeper, which recently received a 2023 National Institutes of Health (NIH) ComPASS Award.

The NIH Common Fund Community Partnerships to Advance Science for Society (ComPASS) Program is a pioneering community-led research program aimed at investigating ways to address the underlying structural factors within communities that impact health. These factors encompass access to safe spaces, healthy food, employment opportunities, transportation, and quality healthcare.

The NIH’s announcement in late September highlighted 26 award recipients from across the nation.

With this prestigious award, MBK will initiate research into sustainable solutions that promote health equity, fostering lasting change in Mississippi. MBK is committed to collaborating as an equal partner with the ComPASS program in this unprecedented opportunity.

This initiative marks a meaningful collaboration as MBK and its esteemed partners, including USM, the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and the Mississippi State Department of Health, embark on the Achieving Optimal Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) Project Among Racial/Ethnic and Sexual/Gender Minorities in Mississippi.

The SRH Project has been meticulously designed to address the reproductive healthcare needs of adults in the reproductive age group (18 to 45 years old) who identify as racial/ethnic and sexual/gender minorities. The project’s primary objective is to eliminate the racialized prioritization of needs in our largely rural state. It will employ more nuanced markers of social vulnerability to identify priority areas.

MBK President and CEO Dr. June Gipson emphasized, “Our approach, a community-based participatory approach, ensures that the very lives we aim to improve have the leading voice in this project.”

Dr. Jennifer L. Lemacks, Associate Dean for Research in USM’s College of Nursing and Health Professions, will serve as the research consultant and will work toward a plan to leverage the University’s faculty and resources to support MBK in its mission.

“This award is a testament to what authentic community-academic partnerships can accomplish. Together, we can achieve good health for our neighbors,” said Dr. Lemacks.”

Dr. Lemacks has more than a decade of experience conducting community based participatory research focusing on marginalized underserved populations with the goal of achieving health equity in the Deep South. Additionally, she continues to have a longstanding working relationship with Co-PIs Dr. June Gipson and Dr. Victor Sutton with the Mississippi Department of Health.

USM Vice President for Research Dr. Kelly Lucas noted, “We understand that ComPASS is a community-led submission and look forward to offering our faculty expertise and research resources as well as assisting with implementation, evaluation and dissemination of structural interventions. We have no doubt that Dr. Lemacks will represent USM well in accomplishing this community-academic mission.”

My Brother’s Keeper, Inc. (MBK) is a private, nonprofit, 501(c) (3) organization with three offices in the Jackson, MS metropolitan area, (headquarters in Ridgeland) and two offices in South Mississippi – Hattiesburg and Gulfport. MBK’s mission is to reduce health disparities throughout the United States by enhancing the health and well being of minority and marginalized populations through leadership in public and community health practices, collaboration and partnerships.

The ComPASS program is generously funded by the NIH Common Fund and is collaboratively managed by NIH staff from the Common Fund, National Cancer Institute, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, National Institute of Nursing Research, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and the NIH Office of Research on Women’s Health. Many of the NIH Institutes, Centers, and Offices have played a pivotal role by providing input and actively participating in program development and management.

The University of Southern Mississippi (USM) is a comprehensive public research institution delivering transformative programs on campuses in Hattiesburg and Long Beach, at teaching and research sites in central and southern Mississippi, as well as online. Founded in 1910, USM is one of only 130 universities in the nation to earn the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education’s "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity” designation, and its robust research enterprise includes experts in ocean science and engineering, polymer science and engineering, and sport venue safety and security, among others. USM is also one of only 40 institutions in the nation accredited in theatre, art and design, dance and music. As an economic driver, USM generates an annual economic impact of more than $600 million across the state. USM welcomes a diverse student body of approximately 15,000, representing 71 countries, all 50 states, and every county in Mississippi. USM students have collected four Truman Scholarships and 36 National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships, while also leading Mississippi with 24 Goldwater Scholarships, an honor that recognizes the next generation of great research scientists. Home to the Golden Eagles, USM competes in 17 Division I sports sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). For more information, visit usm.edu.

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