A History of Public Engagement

NOTE: For more information about specific CEEH outreach projects, resources, and events, please explore the links in the navigation menu under Ethics & Research, Community Partners, K-12 Education, and Upcoming Events.

COEC Director: Kelly Edwards, PhD
edwards@uw.edu
(206)  221-6622

COEC Manager: Marilyn Hair, MPH
marhair@uw.edu
(206) 685-8244

The mission of the Community Outreach and Ethics Core (COEC) at the CEEH is to foster bi-directional capacity building between Center researchers and a broad range of professional and public stakeholders, with a special emphasis on the ethical, legal, and social implications of genetics, epigenetics, and environmental exposures research. The CEEH has always had a strong commitment to research translation and outreach, and has included a COEC in its administrative structure since the CEEH was originally funded in 1995. Reaching beyond the walls of the University of Washington, CEEH researchers and staff have engaged with community groups, tribal nations, legislators and agency staff, in challenging discussions of race, poverty, and pollution. Community events such as town meetings and discussion forums laid the groundwork for the CEEH and COEC’s on-going commitment to a truly bi-directional capacity building process. COEC staff have established a presence in the region and earned a reputation as a trusted partner to community groups, educators, and Tribal Nations.

Our COEC has a focus on building capacity and facilitating collaborations through internal investments, external partnerships, and investing in the next generation of environmental health and ecogenetics researchers. The Center is focusing on cutting edge, dynamic areas of science (epigenetics, transgenic animals, metabolomics, nanotoxicology) and it is essential, now more than ever, to keep the public engaged in the promise and future of research. We see our role as catalyst and connector to meet the needs and interests of trainees, Environmental Health Science (EHS) and Clinical and Translational Science (CTS) researchers, and select community-based organizations and disease advocacy groups. The goals of the COEC are to:

 

  1. Partner with stakeholder groups with an interest or need related to ecogenetics research, research ethics, or population-based health research to develop action-oriented education projects;
  2. Build EHS and CTS researcher capacity for public engagement, ethics, and outreach;
  3. Facilitate career development of the next generation of environmental health and translational science researchers, focusing on outreach and ethics capacity;
  4. Leverage collaborations locally and nationally to develop, refine, and promote models and best practices related to outreach and public engagement in environmental health, ecogenetics, and ethical research practices.

To help guide our work, we have developed the logic model below (click HERE or on the image to open a full-sized PDF of the model). The model emphasizes that we are facilitators of knowledge exchange and dissemination. Our role is not to translate knowledge from Center investigators to our various stakeholders, but to open channels of communication that allow information, resources, stories, and goodwill to flow both ways. This model visually captures our dual role as providers of both outreach and capacity building services. There is as much room for capacity building within the Center as without; investigators need the support and knowledge that will encourage them to build lasting bridges to the communities impacted by their research, while communities need the skills and resources that help them conceptualize how research might be useful in context.