Dr. Viali provides training opportunities in perinatal epidemiology /NCD at Yale

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The Yale University/Samoa Ministry of Health Collaborative Research Center provides training opportunities in perinatal epidemiology and non-communicable diseases, in a population that has some of the highest rates of obesity and diabetes in the world.

Training opportunities are offered by Dr. Satupaitea Viali of the National University of Samoa (NUS) and Dr. Nicola Hawley, Associate Professor at Yale University as well as other experts Ministry of Health and NUS faculty.

This was confirmed in a statement by Yale University, one of the most highly prestigious universities around the globe.

Doctors Viali and Hawley have been colleagues since 2009, establishing their collaboration with a study of the genetic origins of adult non-communicable diseases.

Since that initial work, they have extended their research program across the lifespan studying non-communicable and infectious diseases in adulthood, adolescence, and childhood and exploring how obesity, diabetes, and hypertension impact maternal pregnancy health and later offspring health outcomes.

The site is currently supported by three R01 grants from the National Institutes of Health that focus on the genetics of energy balance, cognitive resilience among older Samoans, and the ethical engagement of Pacific Islanders in genetic research.

Together the mentors have provided training to more than 20 undergraduate, MPH and PhD students in the past 10 years, in both short- and long-term placements at the research centre.

Dr. Hawley herself began her postdoctoral career at this site under the mentorship of Professor Stephen McGarvey (Brown University) and Dr. Viali.

She is now a productive faculty member at the Yale School of Public Health with an international reputation for her work on non-communicable diseases.

An additional advantage of this site is the strong ethical review and oversight of research, provided by the Ministry of Health Research Committee.