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When thinking about the term “Hawaiian culture,” Kamuela Enos, director of the UH System Office of Indigenous Innovation, has begun to use the phrase “ancestral sciences and technologies calibrated for integrated biosystems management.” This paradigm shift positions Indigenous practices as potent sites of innovation, applying traditional knowledge and practices to address contemporary problems.

The now year-old University of Hawaiʻi Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity (CIIHE) was initially established with a $1 million grant in 2021 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Minority Health.  Enos and Aimee Malia Grace, director of the UH System Office for Strategic Health Initiatives, co-lead the initiative.

Now an anonymous donation has given a major boost to the center in the form of a $4.6 million gift that will fund the center’s first endowed chair and provide funding for programs and activities to advance the Center’s work.

“This gift validates and affirms our work to restore and improve the health of our Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities,” said Enos, the project’s principal investigator. “We are deeply grateful for the support and recognition for our program and the incredible potential it has to lift up our Indigenous communities.”

Research has shown that cultural loss and the severing of Indigenous peoples from their traditional and collaborative place-based practices are key contributors to significant health disparities such as chronic disease and poverty. Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders have a higher prevalence of such chronic conditions as obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease and tend to have higher death rates from cancer.

“The University of Hawai‘i is extremely grateful for this generous gift that will help to ‘move the needle’ on existing and future efforts by our Center for Indigenous Innovation and Health Equity,”  said UH Vice President for Research and Innovation Vassilis L. Syrmos.  “Helping to improve the health and way of life for our residents, especially those in the Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities, is one of the key focal points in our research and innovation efforts at UH.” 

Applying traditional Indigenous knowledge and practices has already demonstrated promising results toward improving health for members of this community. For example, studies have shown the promise of organic farming for youth, traditional dance such as hula, and an increase in Native language fluency to have positive health outcomes.  Many other promising practices exist and warrant further identification and study.

“In Year One of our CIIHE grant, we invested in building our team and collaborated with community leaders to develop an Indigenous framework for our initiative,” said Grace. “We also completed a landscape analysis survey with nearly 50 respondents from Hawaiʻi and the U.S.-Associated Pacific Islands to help us identify Indigenous innovations with the potential for positive health outcomes.”

In Year Two of the initiative, CIIHE plans to leverage its diverse staff team (consisting of Johnny Aldan, Shanda Delos Reyes, Sharde Freitas, and Ikaika Ramones) to advance these Indigneous innovations to improve health equity by focusing on three pillars -- research initiatives, policy strategies, and economic development initiatives that are all co-produced with community. 

In addition to Enos and Grace, the Center’s leadership team is composed of Alika Maunakea, associate professor leading Indigenous-informed biomedical research underlying health disparities at the UH Mānoa John A. Burns School of Medicine Department of Anatomy, Biochemistry and Physiology; Marjorie Leimomi Mau, director and principal investigator at the JABSOM Center for Native and Pacific Health Disparities Research; and core partner organizations Hauʻoli Mau Loa Foundation, a private foundation assisting a network of ʻāina-based organizations; MAʻO Farms, Hoʻoulu ʻĀina (Kōkua Kalihi Valley), the Edith Kanakaʻole Foundation, and Chaminade University.

 

If you would like to learn how you can support UH students and programs like this, please contact us at 808 376-7800 or send us a message.

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The University of Hawai‘i Foundation, a nonprofit organization, raises private funds to support the University of Hawai‘i System. The mission of the University of Hawai‘i Foundation is to unite donors’ passions with the University of Hawai‘i’s aspirations by raising philanthropic support and managing private investments to benefit UH, the people of Hawai‘i and our future generations. uhfoundation.org