Grant to increase COVID-19 testing availability

Russell McCulloh, MD

UNMC, Children’s Hospital & Medical Center and the University of Nebraska at Kearney are collaborating on a $3 million grant to help rural Nebraska families working in agriculture stay healthy.

The team will work through the state of Nebraska Migrant Education Program to help migrant families in central Nebraska living primarily in Adams, Hall and Buffalo counties.

Nebraska is one of four states to receive funding from a second installment of the Safe Return to School Diagnostic Testing Initiative, launched earlier this year as part of the National Institutes of Health Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics Underserved Populations (RADx-UP) program.

The RADX-UP program, which will provide up to $15 million over two years, expands the number of community partnership grants aimed at increased availability of COVID-19 testing and school attendance for children from underserved communities.

The grant will focus on implementing an electronic, mobile health (mHealth) guided, at-home COVID-19 testing program for students 5-18 years old and their parents. It also will address challenges families may face due to the pandemic such as food insecurity or job loss.

Russell McCulloh, MD, UNMC associate professor and chief of the division of pediatric hospital medicine at UNMC and Children’s Hospital & Medical Center, is principal investigator of the grant. Jana Broadhurst, MD, PhD, assistant professor in the UNMC Department of Pathology and Microbiology and director of the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit Clinical Laboratory at Nebraska Medicine, is co-principal investigator.

"Migrant families are a vital part of rural communities in Nebraska," Dr. McCulloh said. "Migrant families often face more job, food and housing insecurity risks than their neighbors. Because they move to where the work is, relocation can be a barrier to children getting an education and health care. If parents miss work because of a sick child, they risk losing their jobs.

"Maximizing in-person schooling helps migrant children by providing the best learning environment as well as access to school-based meals, speech or occupational therapy and after school programs. If we can give them the power of our mHealth tools and improve linkages to community resources, we can help avoid the negative effects of COVID complications or spreading COVID and reduce some social stressors. The idea is to make communities more resilient and enable access to programs where they are," Dr. McCulloh said.

Over the next two years, families will be recruited through the Nebraska Migrant Education Program. The goal is to enroll 800 students and caregivers to screen themselves for COVID symptoms in the home and, if needed, conduct home-based COVID-19 saliva test kits that would be mailed to UNMC. Families also can connect with community-based partners including a community navigator in the Children’s Physicians, Kearney office.

2 comments

  1. Lisa Runco says:

    Congratulations Dr. McCulloh, Dr. Broadhurst and team! What a critically important project. The Child Health Research Institute is honored to be connected to it.

  2. Jerrie Dayton says:

    Great program to help the rural and migrant families. We need them to make our economy and country function. We should all care about their well being.

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