Since its inception in 2014, the OHSU Knight Cancer Institute’s Community Partnership Program has supported the development of collaborations with Oregon communities to address solutions for community-identified cancer needs.
Learn more about the projects funded.
The program over the past decade has invested nearly $7.7 million in 216 projects around Oregon, including the latest round of funding that will support 11 community-led projects.
Each funded organization will receive a grant ranging from $15,000 to $60,000 to work with its community on needs across the cancer continuum, from education to prevention to survivorship.
“The Community Partnership Program was designed to grow and change with the evolving needs of Oregon communities,” says Kerri Winters-Stone, Ph.D., co-director of the Community Partnership Program and a professor of medicine (oncological sciences) in the OHSU School of Medicine. “It’s so gratifying to see the diversity of ideas to help address the burden of cancer across our state, including several important projects aimed at raising awareness about the effectiveness of the HPV vaccine to help prevent six types of cancer.”
HIV Alliance in Eugene was founded in 1994 to support people living with HIV/AIDS and prevent new HIV infections. Their prevention and care programs work to support and protect people living with and at-risk for HIV, and provide comprehensive support to respond to a variety of needs.
Their team plans to use the Community Partnership Program funds they received to conduct a needs assessment — using current patient data and surveying local patients and priority populations — to investigate the benefits of self-administered anal and cervical pap tests, as well as the benefits of HPV vaccinations for at-risk, underserved populations in Lane County.
HIV Alliance’s medical director, Gail Hacker, M.D., says their organization has a long history of serving LGBTQIA+ people, and their team is “excited to begin the process of increasing equitable access to HPV cancer prevention services.”
"There is a significant need to protect those in our community who are most vulnerable to HPV and HPV-related cancers,” Hacker says. “Developing new strategies to prevent HPV-related oropharyngeal cancer is particularly needed today, as it has surpassed rates of cervical cancer, with no current options for screening or early detection.”
The Malheur County Health Department in Ontario protects and improves community well-being by preventing disease, illness and injury and impacting social, economic and environmental factors that are fundamental to excellent health.
Their newly funded project is designed to improve HPV vaccination rates among Malheur County adolescents, aged 13 to 17. They plan to host outreach events that will provide education and promotion of the benefits of the vaccine.
"Historically, our HPV vaccination rates have been low. Only 75% of adolescents start the series and 54% complete it,” says Rebecca Stricker, RN, interim director of Malheur County Health Department. “We are excited to be part of this grant project which will ultimately help us decrease cancer rates in our rural communities. Our goal is to educate more youth, and those who care for them, to increase HPV vaccine completion rates. "
The 11 organizations that received funding in this grant cycle include: