Abstract
From 2014-2019, the University of Hawai‵i (UH) at Manoa offered a National Institutes of Health funded Minority Health International Research Training (MHIRT) Program for undergraduate research experiences in infectious diseases. The goal of the program was to immerse undergraduate students in conducting global infectious diseases research to train a new generation of scientists to combat future global pandemics. The MHIRT program trained educationally underrepresented groups unique in Hawai‵i: Native Hawai‵ians and other Pacific Islanders, and underrepresented Asian Americans, e.g., Filipinos and Vietnamese. A 12-member Advisory Committee guided the program development, implementation, recruitment strategies, recruitment, retention, and program evaluation. The program provided an eight-month classroom and field based international research training. Students learned about “8 steps of research” and cultural competency, experienced a hands-on research project abroad, and presented their results to the research community in the host country and at UH. Students’ research topics focused on ongoing projects of UH faculty including those with international collaborations in infectious disease and tropical medicine. Students spent two months on an international research mentor’s project at an international site under the mentorship of a Hawai‵i based research faculty. After eight months, students graduated from the program by presenting their research to family, friends, mentors, and UH faculty and administrators. Trainees in this program pursued academic graduate or professional health degrees. The majority of students pursued further studies related to infectious diseases contributing to workforce development in infectious disease health research. The UH-MHIRT program provides an example of student immersion in international infectious disease research to foster future interest in global health research providing potential benefits for the student and faculty and their research efforts.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Sources of Support: This project was supported by a grant (T37MD008636) from the National Institute of Minority Health and Health Disparity (NIMHD), grant (P30GM114737) from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, National Institutes of Health (NIH) and from the University of Hawaii at Manoa Provost Office.
Conflict of Interest Notification Page: All authors have no conflicts to report