U of T Joins With European, Asian Universities To Tackle Urban Issues

The Presidents From Left, Meric Gertler, Marjan Oudeman
 and Joseph Sung
Urban issues were the main topic of discussion as U of T President Meric Gertler met with Utrecht University President Marjan Oudeman and Chinese University of Hong Kong President Joseph Sung in in Utrecht, Holland recently.

“This is the first time that expertise on and insights into urban issues from three different urban regions of the world have been brought together,” Oudeman said, noting the conference brought together leading academics from the three institutions.

“The research should lead to new, sustainable solutions for the global challenges caused by population growth in cities.”

U of T faculty included engineering professors Mark Fox and Eric Miller, Jackman Humanities Institute Director Robert Gibbs, Sociology professor Eric Fong, and Munk School of Global Affairs professors Jeffrey Reitz and David Wolfe (also professors of sociology and political science respectively).

“I am delighted to join with Presidents Oudeman and Sung in building and broadening the collaborations among our institutions,” Gertler said. “So many of the challenges our communities face are truly global in nature and require international leadership and insights to answer.

“This is particularly evident in public health, urban development, and migration. It is also important to recognize that this new collaboration brings together not just three leading research institutions, but three leading urban regions and their extensive knowledge networks.”

One of the highlights of the conference was the signing of a five-year collaboration on global public health by the three presidents. The project involves researchers from several areas at U of T, including the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Engineering, Earth Sciences and other disciplines.

One of the leaders of the project at U of T is Chemical Engineering professor Greg Evans (left). He told U of T News that the agreement will help with the understanding, prevention and treatment of chronic disease. “Chronic disease – such as heart disease, cancer, lung disease, neurological disease, degenerative disease – is one of the biggest public health issues of our time. It results from a combination of genetics and environmental exposure. We’ve made huge progress on the genetics side, but that only explains a fairly small part of the overall picture. What we’re exposed to over our lifetime – the exposome – also plays a big role.”

Another of U of T’s exposome researchers, Dalla Lana School of Public Health Dean Howard Hu, agreed. “A very large portion of cancer, cardiovascular disease, neurodegenerative disease and other chronic conditions are due to environmental factors or gene-environment interactions. However, our knowledge of what those factors are  – the genes they interact with and their mechanisms – remains extremely limited. Advances by DLSPH scientists and others in exposomics promise to accelerate our understanding of preventable risk factors for the onset and progression of disease.”

The three universities will collaborate in five areas, Evans said: using big data to characterize the exposome, evaluating the exposome through sensors, creating and improving exposome maps, the 24/7 exposome (e.g., the effect of shift work on exposure), and awareness and education.

For example, PhD student Joseph Okeme is working with department of earth sciences professor Miriam Diamond to evaluate wearable air pollution sensing devices, including a broach developed by their own group and a bracelet developed by American researchers. The U of T broach uses a silicone rubber surface that passively absorbs chemicals in the air. The chemicals can then be extracted and analyzed, and the broach cleaned and readied for re-use.

“I originally wanted to measure pollution out-of-doors, but then I realized that we’re more likely to get exposed to chemicals indoors,” Okeme told U of T News.

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