CHS Faculty Honored for Outstanding Performance in Grantsmanship

Three faculty from the College of Health Sciences were awarded Outstanding Performance Awards by the University of Texas at El Paso Office of Research and Sponsored Programs in the Annual Grantwriters Recognition Dinner on April 28, 2009.

Congratulations  to these three outstanding researchers!

Our 2009 honorees include:

Dr. Chantal Vella
Dr. Chantal Vella, Assistant Professor in UTEP’s Kinesiology program received an NIH award for over $300,000 to conduct a study on metabolically-obese but normal-weight Hispanic women. This study followed closely on a previous award for $75,000 from the Center for Border Health Research to explore the relative role of insulin resistance, body fat distribution and cardiorespiratory fitness on the clustering of metabolic syndrome risk factors in young normal-weight Hispanic women.  She has recently submitted a request for an administrative supplement under the Recovery Act to expand her work to identify Hispanic women at risk for cardiovascular disease.
Dr. Rodrigo Armijos

 

Dr. Rodrigo Armijos, Associate Professor in the Department of Health Promotion serves as a Co-Investigator on an NIH R21 grant studying substance abuse and health vulnerability among Colombian refugees in Ecuador. An expert on air quality, he has also submitted an R21 proposal with to study the relationship between air pollution and systemic inflammation and sub-clinical atherosclerosis in children living at high altitude in Quito, Ecuador.   He was also recently funded with a collaborator from UACJ by PIMSA, an international coalition of U.S. and Latin American universities to conduct the  project, A Bi-national Study of the Health and Disability Challenges of Aged Migrant and Seasonal Farm workers on the US Mexico Border.

Dr. Mary Margaret Weigel

 

Dr. Mary Margaret Weigel, Professor and Co-Chair of the Department of Health Promotion is an expert on international health and nutrition. Dr. Weigel has extensive contacts in Ecuador, which facilitate her work as Co-PI on the NIH grant studying the health status and vulnerability among Colombian refugees in Ecuador. Her collaboration with the UTEP- University of New Mexico ARCH Program on Border Asthma has lead to her recent involvement in a pilot project to study the association of dust events with asthma exacerbation in U.S. Mexico border children.  She also collaborates as Co-PI on the R21 proposal to study the relationship between air pollution and systemic inflammation and sub-clinical atherosclerosis in children living at high altitude in Quito, Ecuador.