Institute for Human Health and the Environment
The environment we live in plays a huge role in our health: quality of life and longevity are more closely tied to zip code than genetic code. At the University of Rochester’s Institute for Human Health and the Environment (IHHE), we believe that solutions to the 21st century’s most pressing health issues require collaborative, creative, and sustained commitment to research, education, and engagement to understand how the environment influences health across the lifespan.
The IHHE integrates programs and expertise across the University of Rochester, fostering new collaborations and approaches to create effective solutions to major issues that are at the intersection of environmental factors and human health. Key areas of transdisciplinary research will be related to:
- Climate change and health
- Environmental justice
- What’s in our water and air and how it impacts our health
- How environmental factors shape health across our whole lifetime
The IHHE is anchored by 3 interactive pillars: Career Development & Education, Research, and Engagement.
Education
The Institute supports education and career development across all career stages, with a focus on enhancing and diversifying the environmental health workforce.
Research
Creating new opportunities to share knowledge and different points of view and catalyzing unique collaborations will foster scientific synergies and propel research on environmental health.
Engagement
By engaging a diverse range of stakeholders, the Institute will transform knowledge on how the environment influences health into actions that tangibly improve the health of communities.
Latest News
May 7, 2024
Lainie Ross Honored with Distinguished Graduate Award from Penn
April 17, 2024
New Microplastics Center Awarded $7.3M
February 14, 2024
Housing, Health and Environmental Justice Research Workshop
September 20, 2023
Lainie Ross Co-Authors Recommendations for Neurodevelopmental Screening for Kids
August 10, 2023
What Makes Us Tick: Smoking’s Effect on Our Biological Clock