John A Burns School of Medicine | University of Hawai驶i System News /news News from the University of Hawaii Sat, 27 Jun 2026 05:21:05 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /news/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-糖心Vlog官方News512-1-32x32.jpg John A Burns School of Medicine | University of Hawai驶i System News /news 32 32 28449828 $1.7M grant expands 糖心Vlog官方 medical school street medicine efforts statewide /news/2026/06/26/jabsom-expands-street-medicine-efforts/ Fri, 26 Jun 2026 20:28:58 +0000 /news/?p=236655 A $1.7 million grant expands JABSOM street medicine training and healthcare outreach for vulnerable populations.

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street medicine team helping a patient

Bringing healthcare directly to individuals experiencing homelessness, the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM) is expanding its street medicine efforts across the state thanks to a new $1.7 million grant.

Awarded by the (HRSA), the multi-year funding will support outreach and training on Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi Island and Kauaʻi through JABSOM‘s . The five-year grant begins with $362,140 in year one, and prepares the next generation of family medicine physicians to serve Hawaiʻi‘s most vulnerable populations.

“This is an absolute blessing,” said Robert Carlisle, project director and JABSOM associate professor. “This is good for the state. This is good for the family medicine physicians. This is good for the people of Hawaiʻi.”

Expanding outreach

carlisle holds up backpack
Robert Carlisle holds up the medical backpack he carries during street medicine outreach.

The funding will launch new street medicine experiences for family medicine residents in Waiʻanae, Hawaiʻi Island, and JABSOM鈥檚 new Kauaʻi program, which will train the first cohort on Oʻahu in 2026.

Carlisle credited partners, including HRSA鈥檚 Steven Coulter, JABSOM鈥檚 Chip Hixon, and site leads Cynthia Ohata, Ellen Bell, Megan Martelly, Doug Rose and Thomas Quattlebaum, with support from various local organizations.

“As physicians and professionals, we have a duty to society and the community around us,” Carlisle said.

Integrating behavioral health

street team walking through camp

Program leaders also plan to expand behavioral health and addiction services.

“The really tough lift will be to integrate behavioral medicine and addiction care into our outreach on the street,” Carlisle said. “Make no mistake, this was a massive effort to bring together four different programs across the state on three different islands. There was a lot of coordination and enthusiasm from all of us to recognize the potential benefits of street medicine.”

Seed funding from the Hawaiʻi Academy of Family Physicians, JABSOM鈥檚 Office of Medical Education, and the Hawaiʻi Medical Association helped launch the project.

“The small seed grants grew this much larger investment in street medicine,” Carlisle said. “This experience should have a profound impact with influence lasting over the next 30 years of their careers.”

To help purchase basic supplies like bandages and footwear, consider supporting the JABSOM .

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$2.2M grant funds next phase of Maui wildfire recovery study /news/2026/06/23/maui-loa-wilfire-grant-renewal-study/ Tue, 23 Jun 2026 18:00:26 +0000 /news/?p=236404 The National Institutes of Health renewed the Maui wildfire study examining long-term recovery, mental health and community resilience.

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community with homes near a large mountain

Researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 were awarded a $2.2 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to support the next phase of the Maui LOA (Learnings to Overcome Adversities) study, which examines the long-term impacts of the 2023 Maui wildfires and factors that influence health and well-being after disasters.

The three-year award is led by Alex Ortega, dean of the , and Keawe Kaholokula, chair and professor in the Department of Native Hawaiian Health at the (JABSOM).

“The first phase of Maui LOA revealed important lessons about the health and mental health consequences of the wildfires,” said Ortega. “With NIH鈥檚 continued support, we can now translate those lessons into evidence-based strategies that improve disaster preparedness, recovery and resilience for communities facing future disasters.”

Lessons from Maui residents

Researchers will survey 1,200 adults who were living on Maui during the wildfires, including those who were displaced, to examine factors that influence long-term recovery and disaster response among individuals, families, communities, healthcare systems and social service organizations across Maui.

Related 糖心Vlog官方 News story: Study links 2023 Maui wildfire to spike in suicide, overdose, August 7, 2025

The new award builds on an initial phase that gathered perspectives from residents, community organizations, emergency responders and healthcare providers to help guide the survey design.

Recent findings published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in August 2025 showed that the mental health effects of the wildfires extended across Maui, not just within burn zones. The study identified housing displacement and income loss as key drivers of depression and anxiety.

The survey findings are expected to inform public policy, emergency response planning, health services and community recovery efforts in Hawaiʻi and nationwide.

“Nearly three years into the recovery, we hope to learn more about the personal, sociocultural, community and system-level factors that promote health and well-being after experiencing a devastating disaster, such as the 2023 Maui wildfire,” Kaholokula said.

He added, “Recovery is not the same for everyone. We hope to understand how these factors evolve over time and vary across different populations as communities continue to rebuild.”

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Newest ʻImi Hoʻ艒la grads celebrate move to medical school /news/2026/06/22/newest-imi-hoola-grads-celebrate/ Tue, 23 Jun 2026 01:41:37 +0000 /news/?p=236454 The 2026 驶Imi Ho驶艒la graduates marked the end of a rigorous year of academic preparation as they begin their journey to medical school.

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People standing and smiling
2026 ʻImi Hoʻ艒la graduates

One year ago, a dedicated cohort of students entered the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM)鈥檚 . On June 10, standing before family and friends, graduates celebrated the completion of their year-long post-baccalaureate journey and their admission to medical school. The ceremony marked the culmination of a year of long hours and academic and personal growth.

Building a foundation for success

For , ʻImi Hoʻōla, which means “those who seek to heal,” has helped prepare students for the academic rigor of medical school while developing a commitment to serve the community.

While the coursework tested students academically, graduates cited the cohort’s strength as a reason for their success.

“The people who I graduate with are really amazing people,” graduate Tyler Chock said. “I’m really happy to have made it here with them.”

That sense of community was evident as the cohort gathered for the final grade reveal of the spring semester. Students braced themselves for what had become a familiar process. Instead, the tutors entered and delivered the news all at once.

People standing and holding letters
ʻImi Hoʻ艒la class with their letters of acceptance to JABSOM

“They just said that we all passed, and we were all done,” graduate Nanea Delostrico recalled. “We all kind of jumped up and hugged each other. It was a beautiful moment and just a big celebratory excitement that we had all made it, and we all did it together.”

The completion ceremony was capped off by a speech from 2005 JABSOM graduate and 2001 ʻImi Hoʻōla alumna, Chia Granda. Graduates were then presented with gifts from the McGuire 驶ohana and Friends of 驶ʻImi Hoʻōla.

The Queen鈥檚 Health Systems provided stipend support to students during their time with the program and has extended its commitment by awarding five full-tuition, four-year medical school scholarships to the current ʻImi graduates. The Clarence T.C. Ching Foundation has also provided its second recipient with a full-tuition, four-year scholarship to support a current graduate’s medical education.

Now that ʻImi Hoʻōla is behind them, the graduates turn their attention toward the next chapter of their journey: medical school.

Read more at .

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糖心Vlog官方 researchers awarded $12M grant to advance AI, data science in medicine /news/2026/06/21/12-million-establishes-pac-aid/ Sun, 21 Jun 2026 18:00:02 +0000 /news/?p=236348 New center will support innovative biomedical research, develop future scientific leaders, and expand research infrastructure in Hawaiʻi.

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The John A. Burns School of Medicine and the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center
The John A. Burns School of Medicine and the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center.

Researchers at the and 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM) were awarded more than $12 million from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish the Pacific Center for Artificial Intelligence and Data Science in Medicine (PAC-AID)—a new research center dedicated to accelerating biomedical discoveries through artificial intelligence and data science to benefit people in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific region, and worldwide.

John Shepherd headshot
John Shepherd

Funded through the NIH‘s (COBRE) program, the five-year award will provide approximately $12 million through February 2031. The award was administered by the National Institute of General Medical Sciences, with a federal award date of June 4, 2026.

The center will be led by Principal Investigators John Shepherd and Youping Deng. Shepherd is chief scientific officer at the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center, and B.H. and Alice C. Beams Endowed Professor in Cancer Research at JABSOM. Deng is co-director, Genomics and Bioinformatics Shared Resource, at the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center; and professor and director, Bioinformatics Core Facility, at JABSOM.

PAC-AID will serve as a central hub integrating AI into biomedical research to improve health outcomes in Hawaiʻi. Over five years, the project will renovate the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center Data Center to establish a new Medical AI Core (MedAI Core), providing advanced, high-performance computing resources and AI expertise. Physically located within both the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center and JABSOM on the shared Kakaʻako campus, PAC-AID will directly fund four major inaugural research projects and establish a Pilot Projects Program to support more than eight new, locally relevant pilot studies.

Youping Deng headshot
Youping Deng

“At the heart of our mission as a flagship research university is the drive to translate innovation into meaningful impact,” said Vassilis Syrmos, incoming chancellor of 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补. “PAC-AID is a vital expansion of that mission, enabling our faculty to harness the power of artificial intelligence to pioneer new avenues of biomedical inquiry that were previously unreachable, solidifying the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补’s role as a global leader in health innovation.”

AI has the potential to unlock major medical breakthroughs and help people live healthier lives, and we need to take advantage of it,” said U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz, who played a pivotal role in securing the grant. “This new funding will help Hawaiʻi continue to attract top-tier talent and develop treatments and cures that will benefit people across the state.”

“The $12 million over five years will substantially strengthen AI and data science capabilities and support the development of the next generation of investigators,” said 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center Director Naoto T. Ueno. “The research advances made possible by PAC-AID will further the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center鈥檚 work toward new understandings and treatments for cancer, to save lives in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific, and across the globe.” In addition, high paying jobs generated by this project will have a strong economic benefit for our local communities.

“At JABSOM, our mission is to improve the health of Hawaiʻi through education and research,” said Sam Shomaker, JABSOM dean. “This investment will help accelerate discoveries that address the real health challenges facing our communities and ensure that advances in AI translate into better outcomes for patients.”

Enabling workforce development

Shepherd and Deng will oversee efforts to build research capacity, as well as foster the next generation of independent investigators using artificial intelligence and advanced data science approaches to address critical medical and public health challenges. Beyond funding research, this award establishes a workforce development mechanism to support the next generation of faculty investigators.

researcher in the lab

“This COBRE award provides the critical infrastructure to bridge advanced AI computational methods with our specific clinical and community health challenges,” Shepherd said. “By fostering a collaborative environment for our investigators, we are equipping them with the technical capabilities to tackle the most persistent health disparities in our islands and turn complex data into actionable health solutions.”

“By the end of this project, we expect to have a nationally competitive Medical AI Core, four independently funded research leaders, and more than 10 pilot projects,” said Deng. “Through these efforts, alongside workshops and collaborative research opportunities, we will significantly strengthen Hawaiʻi‘s capacity for AI-enabled biomedical research and innovation to address important health challenges in our region and beyond.”

Transforming medical research with AI

Artificial intelligence is increasingly transforming healthcare and biomedical research by helping scientists analyze large and complex datasets, identify patterns that may otherwise go undetected, and accelerate the development of new approaches to disease prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.

AI has the potential to unlock major medical breakthroughs and help people live healthier lives, and we need to take advantage of it.
—U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz

Shepherd, who leads the , is using a massive breast imaging database to develop AI biomarkers that predict cancer risk specifically for Asian and Pacific Islander populations.

The new PAC-AID will support similar faculty-led research projects, provide funding for pilot studies, and establish shared research resources that can be used by investigators across disciplines.

Initial funded projects include AI-driven research by 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center researchers Kevin Cassel (using full-body imaging to triage skin lesions) and Elizabeth Nakasone (studying pancreatic cancer in Native Hawaiian and Japanese populations); 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 public health researcher Jonathan Huang (modeling environmental toxicant effects on fetal development); and JABSOM researcher Yiqiang Zhang (identifying genetic traits in congenital heart disease).

cancer center bio storage

COBRE Phase 1 grants focus on the development of independent biomedical researchers and research centers, and are designed to have a 15-year cycle.

PAC-AID is specifically designed to develop six to eight early-stage faculty members at the University of Hawaiʻi and across Pacific Island institutions who will use artificial intelligence and data science to address cancer and chronic disease outcomes in one of the nation’s most medically underserved and understudied regions,” Shepherd said.

He added that the expected impact to Hawaiʻi is substantial. “Our benchmark for success is that the funded faculty projects, four initially and two to four more when those graduate in year 3, and will later achieve independent NIH R01 (Research 01 level university) funding at an estimated $3.25 million per award. That represents a projected $19.5 million in additional federal research funding returned to the State of Hawaiʻi (six funded R01s) on top of the initial $12 million COBRE award itself — a combined potential economic and research impact of more than $31 million for Hawaiʻi‘s research and healthcare workforce. These estimates are for the first 5-year period.”

PAC-AID joins a growing portfolio of NIH-funded Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence at 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补, including the , and the .

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Kona low flooding leads to student research on leptospirosis /news/2026/06/19/kona-low-leptospirosis-research/ Fri, 19 Jun 2026 20:45:01 +0000 /news/?p=236259 Student research addresses the recent Kona low flooding across Hawaiʻi causing urgent concerns about leptospirosis.

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JABSOM researchers
Student researchers Duy Linh Nguyen Tran, Colby Macapagal, Rodson Zorilla and Reyson-Jase Ramos under the mentorship of JABSOM virologist Vivek Nerurkar.

Recent Kona low flooding has heightened concerns about leptospirosis, a bacterial disease transmitted through contaminated floodwaters. Now, University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 student researchers at the (JABSOM) are exploring new methods to track and detect the pathogen.

“For years, we’ve primarily thought of this as a waterborne disease,” said graduate student Rodson Zorilla. “Now, we also see the soil as a possible variable. It could serve as another agent that helps transmit the bacteria.”

These insights broaden understanding of exposure risks, revealing that soil acts as an often overlooked variable in the spread of leptospirosis during flooding events.

Researching environmental spread, prevention

Undergraduate student Colby Macapagal is studying how leptospirosis spreads through Hawaiʻi‘s waterways, including ahupuaʻa systems carrying contaminants from the mountains to urban areas. He notes that floodwaters can carry bacteria into local communities, creating health risks for people and wildlife, and emphasizes the need to further study how these contaminants travel downstream.

Other JABSOM researchers are working to improve detection. While current rapid tests are fast, they can lack precision. Researchers are now developing more advanced diagnostic tools that can better identify immune responses and improve early detection.

Sophomore undergraduate Duy Linh Nguyen Tran is working on improving screening methods using blood samples, while also uncovering a concerning trend. Historical long-term data shows leptospirosis remains present in Hawaiʻi, with positivity rates of 3.8% in 1943 and 2.65% from 2020–2024.

“There have to be some innovative ideas now in which you can really push for prevention,” Nguyen Tran said. “Those ideas will be important for the community to see.”

Zorilla emphasized a broader framework. “These findings highlight what researchers describe as a One Health approach—recognizing the connection between environmental, animal and human health.”

As extreme weather events increase attention on leptospirosis, researchers say improved understanding, detection and prevention remain critical to protecting public health.

The work is supported in part by a Hawaiʻi Community Foundation grant awarded to JABSOM virologist Vivek Nerurkar, with additional support from 糖心Vlog官方 惭腻苍辞补 programs including the IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence (INBRE), Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program (UROP) and Minority Health Research Training (MHRT) program.

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Study reveals how fathers pass inherited traits /news/2026/06/12/paternal-inherited-genes-study/ Sat, 13 Jun 2026 01:21:25 +0000 /news/?p=235972 糖心Vlog官方 research confirms fathers pass environmental traits to children through sperm programmed in the testes.

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researcher in the lab

A recent study by researchers at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and Washington State University shows how fathers pass on traits influenced by their environment to their children. The research provided new data refining the mechanistic basis of paternal epigenetic inheritance.

The team was spearheaded by Monika Ward of the (JABSOM) and Wei Yan of Washington State University, whose work offers new insight into how these hereditary signals function.

, the study challenges the idea that sperm pick up this vital environmental information while maturing in a specific part of the male reproductive system called the epididymis. Instead, researchers found that mature sperm lack the specific mitochondrial DNA (genetic material for cell energy) required to facilitate this process, suggesting the information is set earlier while the sperm is still in the testes.

How testes help pass on traits

To test this, researchers fed male mice a high-fat diet. They then used a specialized fertilization technique to create offspring using both early-stage sperm from the testes and fully mature sperm. They discovered that the early sperm passed on traits from the father’s diet just as effectively as the mature sperm did.

“This work is a perfect example of how assisted reproduction technologies can be used to advance understanding of key processes in male reproduction,” said Ward, a researcher in the and professor of anatomy, biochemistry and physiology.

Related 糖心Vlog官方 News story: 糖心Vlog官方 researchers advance study of key male fertility gene

By using a direct injection technique with early-stage sperm, the team proved that sperm do not need to mature in the epididymis to pass on environmental information.

The study also clarified the amount of mitochondrial DNA in sperm. By testing sperm at various stages, the team confirmed that this material is progressively removed during development, leaving mature sperm almost entirely without it. They also found that small RNA, which carries genetic information, is primarily set during development in the testes.

The findings support a framework in which environmentally responsive molecular information is programmed during sperm development in the testes and later delivered to the egg by mature sperm depleted of mitochondrial DNA.

“The founder of our institute, Ryuzo Yanagimachi, was a pioneer who first developed many of the techniques used in modern IVF,” said Ward. “This study is a great example of how his legacy and our expertise continue to lead to new scientific discoveries.”

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National award honors OBGYN faculty for student leadership /news/2026/06/08/paris-stowers-national-award/ Tue, 09 Jun 2026 01:16:32 +0000 /news/?p=235770 JABSOM faculty Paris Stowers wins national award for empowering medical students in OBGYN advocacy.

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paris stowers
Paris Stowers

University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM) faculty member Paris Stowers has been honored for her efforts in helping medical students find their voice in obstetrics and gynecology.

Stowers, an assistant professor of , received the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists Medical Student Recruitment Award. She was recognized for developing a student leadership and mentorship model within the organization鈥檚 District VIII, which includes Hawaiʻi and several western states.

The initiative was designed to engage medical students in the OBGYN field early by giving them a real seat at the table.

“There was an interest in developing a medical student advisory council so medical students could have a leadership role in the organization,” Stowers said.

As the council鈥檚 first faculty advisor, Stowers helped build a program that connected students across Hawaiʻi and several western states through virtual meetings, mentorship, advocacy work and national conferences.

Strengthening student advocacy, recruitment

“We ask them what kinds of things they want to work on,” Stowers said. “It鈥檚 more successful if it鈥檚 student-driven.”

Students engaged in various health education and advocacy projects and attended national advocacy meetings in Washington, D.C., where they met with lawmakers alongside practicing OBGYN physicians. The program emphasized professional development skills, such as networking at conferences and maximizing mentorship opportunities.

The model has also helped strengthen recruitment in regions historically struggling to retain OBGYN physicians, including rural states facing physician shortages. JABSOM students Brandi Mikami and Paige Harakuni served on the council this year.

“I cannot think of someone more deserving of this award than Dr. Stowers,” said Harakuni. “She has a remarkable ability to bring students into the conversation and make us feel like valued members of the organization.”

Stowers hopes the experience shows future physicians they can help shape healthcare systems and policy. “You can make a change in your medical school, but also at the national level,” she said.

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Medical researcher helping to boost maternal care in American Samoa /news/2026/06/03/boosting-maternal-care-as/ Thu, 04 Jun 2026 02:53:51 +0000 /news/?p=235498 Backed by a federal grant, the project provides vital sonography training and telehealth support for high-risk pregnancies.

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group photo
JABSOM and LBJ Tropical Medical Center partners in American Samoa

University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 researcher Claire Kendal-Wright from the (JABSOM) is leading an effort to transform maternal-fetal care in American Samoa, a region where physicians face severe resource limitations at the LBJ Tropical Medical Center.

“There was one OB and a resident covering labor and delivery,” Kendal-Wright recalled. “I started asking questions about preterm birth and outcomes, and you realize very quickly how dedicated the health providers are despite how limited the resources are.”

Backed by a U.S. Department of Interior grant to the medical center, Kendal-Wright is working with local clinicians to strengthen care through sonography training, telehealth and improved access to specialists.

The effort targets high-risk pregnancies. According to a study in , American Samoa faces challenging maternal health conditions, including high rates of obesity, hypertension and diabetes, alongside limited diagnostic technology.

Overcoming resource and diagnostic barriers

“When this grant ends, we aim to put in place a care pipeline that has not been available to these mothers,” Kendal-Wright said. “This will enable more mothers to gain the vital information required to make important care decisions about the health of their babies. For the mothers of American Samoa, this is not possible right now.”

It鈥檚 incredibly rewarding work.
—Claire Kendal-Wright

During recent visits with collaborators Curtis Lowery (medical researcher), Larenda Casey (lead sonographer) and La-Tisha Frazier (MD/JABSOM fellow), Kendal-Wright saw clinicians improvise by sharing ultrasound images via cell phone photos for outside opinions.

“You’re dealing with a population where many women have significant risk factors during pregnancy,” she said. “Having the ability to identify complications earlier and make informed decisions is incredibly important.”

The project, started by Men-Jean Lee, JABSOM‘s former associate chair of research and innovation, reflects the school’s mission of bolstering Pacific health equity.

Kendall-Wright added, “It’s incredibly rewarding work. These collaborations help ensure that mothers and babies have access to the best care possible, no matter where they live.”

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Tourette Syndrome experience unites JABSOM peers /news/2026/05/28/tourette-syndrome-experience/ Fri, 29 May 2026 02:33:35 +0000 /news/?p=235195 Tourette Syndrome Awareness Month is observed annually from May 15 to June 15, highlighting experiences such as Eugene Santos and Jonathan Kim.

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graphic with photos of Eugene Santos II (JABSOM MS 2029) and Jonathan Kim (JABSOM MD 2026) with words Tourette Syndrome Awareness Month May 15-June 15, 2026

First-year University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 medical student Eugene Santos II is sharing his experience with Tourette Syndrome, a neurological condition marked by involuntary movements called tics and affecting about 1.4 million people in the U.S.

Santos was diagnosed in elementary school after stress from his parents鈥 divorce and frequent travel between Guam and Hawaiʻi contributed to his symptoms. A neurologist later confirmed the diagnosis.

“My intent was to pursue some sort of writing career, whether that was music or poetry,” he said. “One way or another though, I found myself questioning if there was space for me in medicine. I鈥檇 always been interested in it. But because of my Tourette鈥檚, I had an idea of what I could and could not do. And, what I could do, and what I could not do included helping others with their health.”

From diagnosis to medical school

A caregiver experience during college helped reshape his outlook after a patient encouraged him to pursue healthcare despite his tics.

“I remember I was getting her into bed, and she said, ‘You have such good bedside manner. Why don鈥檛 you go into healthcare?’ Despite the fact that my tics were really active that day, she saw something in me that was more than that.”

At the , Santos connected with Johnathan Kim, who graduated in May and also lives with Tourette Syndrome. The two bonded over shared experiences and career paths.

Kim is transitioning to an internal medicine residency at the University of California, Irvine, and expressed gratitude for the support of family, friends, classmates and mentors who helped him persevere with Tourette Syndrome.

“To me, that was so cool,” Kim said. “I felt like someone could actually understand what I felt.”

Santos said that connection has been meaningful as he continues medical training.

“We always say representation is important, in whatever field it is,” he said. “Being able to talk with someone about some of my insecurities and someone who has Tourette鈥檚 has been really helpful.”

Santos hopes his story encourages others not to be limited by their condition.

“You may have this thing, but you are not defined by it,” he said.

.

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Wai膩kea graduate becomes physician after JABSOM journey /news/2026/05/27/waiakea-graduate-jabsom-journey/ Thu, 28 May 2026 01:49:29 +0000 /news/?p=235124 Duke Escobar鈥檚 path to medicine was shaped by his upbringing in his hometown of Wai膩kea on Hawaiʻi Island.

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Duke Escobar in lab coat
Duke Escobar graduated with his MD in spring 2026.

A Wai膩kea High School graduate is now a physician after completing his medical training in May at the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM), a journey shaped by his Hawaiʻi Island roots, early classroom curiosity, and a commitment to returning home to serve.

Duke Escobar has been described by teachers and peers as approachable, trustworthy and easy to connect with.

“You wish you had a full class of Dukes,” one educator said, noting his friendliness and ability to relate to both younger and older people.

Despite his accomplishments, Escobar often returns to a phrase that reflects his perspective growing up: “just a kid from Wai膩kea.” The sentiment speaks to his humility as a first-generation college student raised in a close-knit Hawaiʻi Island community.

Early inspiration

His interest in medicine began at Wai膩kea High School, where a health academy course introduced him to medical problem-solving through activities such as diagnosing cases from the television show House. A teacher recalled his curiosity and enthusiasm in class.

escobar family
Duke Escobar with his parents.

Escobar went on to study cell and molecular biology at before completing research gap years at Stanford University and the University of Washington. He was later accepted to JABSOM after years of preparation and persistence.

At medical school, he joined the School Health Education Program, helping bring medical learning into local classrooms. He said working with students came naturally.

“Maybe it鈥檚 like the same level of maturity, but we get along quite well,” he said.

Serving his community

Escobar also discovered his interest in pediatrics, drawn to working with children and building connections through humor and trust. He matched into a pediatrics residency and will continue training in Hawaiʻi.

“I always kind of felt like I needed more of a human connection, and I felt like being a physician is where I could find that,” he said.

Escobar plans to return to Hilo to serve the community that raised him and hopes to inspire Hawaiʻi Island students to pursue careers in medicine.

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糖心Vlog官方 physician-scientist joins national emerging leaders forum /news/2026/05/21/dominic-chow-emerging-leaders-forum/ Fri, 22 May 2026 02:17:29 +0000 /news/?p=234843 Dominic Chow was selected for national Emerging Leaders forum at National Academy of Medicine.

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Dzau, Chow and Hedges group photo
Dominic Chow, center, with Victor Dzau, President of the National Academy of Medicine, and JABSOM Dean Emeritus Jerris Hedges.

University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM) physician-scientist Dominic Chow has been selected for the 2026 Emerging Leaders in Health and Medicine Forum at the National Academy of Medicine.

The invitation-only program brings together emerging leaders in health care, research and policy from across the country.

“It鈥檚 a real honor,” Chow said. “To be able to interact with members of the National Academy of Medicine and contribute to discussions that help guide health policy is something I don鈥檛 take lightly.”

Chow鈥檚 career spans global public health, including training at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and work in Guyana, where he helped lead a yellow fever outbreak investigation.

At JABSOM, he has advanced HIV research through the Hawaiʻi Center for AIDS and serves as program director of Ola HAWAII, an NIH-funded initiative expanding clinical research access in underserved communities and supporting studies including Long COVID.

“I think bringing clinical trials to various populations across Hawaiʻi helps create more equity,” Chow said.

The forum connects participants to address major health challenges and inform national policy. Chow said he hopes to ensure Hawaiʻi鈥檚 health needs are represented.

“We have a responsibility to address health disparities here in Hawaiʻi and beyond,” he said.

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糖心Vlog官方 symposium highlights culture, wellbeing and connection /news/2026/05/19/aloha-begins-with-us/ Wed, 20 May 2026 02:19:37 +0000 /news/?p=234604 The Aloha Begins with Us symposium explored integrating Native Hawaiian values, resilience, and wellbeing into everyday work and learning.

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group photo of team
Aloha Begins with Us team and volunteers

The University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM) recently hosted its two-day “Aloha Begins with Us” symposium and open house, bringing together faculty, staff, students and community members to explore how Native Hawaiian values, wellbeing and resilience can be integrated into everyday work and learning.

The event highlighted several JABSOM initiatives focused on belonging, professionalism and wellness, while creating opportunities for collaboration across the 糖心Vlog官方 System.

Aloha Begins with Us Symposium
The inaugural Aloha Begins with Us Symposium was held on April 16.

“Positive relationships and meaningful work are core to preventing burnout and improving learning and working environments so that everyone can thrive,” said JABSOM Dean Sam Shomaker. “While JABSOM and the other health science units at 糖心Vlog官方 have been collaborating through research and education, we will all serve our students and communities better by pursuing some strategic collaborative initiatives.”

“For me, ‘Aloha Begins with Us’ was an invitation to be inspired by the many ways that JABSOM is integrating Native Hawaiian Place of Learning across its curriculum and in collaboration with other parts of our campus, work that can be about providing space to recount the academic, professional and familial genealogies that shape us individually, or about how Hawaiian concepts can ground us as we create learning and work environments that promote rather than undermine the health of everything that lives on this ʻāina said Laura Lyons, interim vice provost for academic excellence.

Aloha Begins with Us attendees
The two-day event invited the campus community to learn about programs and getting involved.

The symposium also emphasized JABSOM‘s ongoing work to support the 糖心Vlog官方’s goal of becoming a Native Hawaiian Place of Learning.

Kaiwipunikauikaw膿kiu Punihei Lipe, director of 糖心Vlog官方 Hawaiʻi Papa O Ke Ao, noted that the symposium demonstrated how JABSOM has successfully integrated Native Hawaiian principles into their own action plans and mission.

Organizers said the event aimed to increase awareness of available wellbeing resources while encouraging participants to bring their “whole selves” into their work, teaching and learning.

The second day’s open house expanded those conversations to a broader audience, offering faculty, staff, students, residents and community members opportunities to learn more about programs and ways to get involved.

Read more at .

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糖心Vlog官方 medical school graduates 79 future physicians /news/2026/05/19/jabsom-class-of-2026-graduation/ Tue, 19 May 2026 22:57:25 +0000 /news/?p=234516 The 糖心Vlog官方 medical school celebrated 79 new doctors committed to serving Hawaiʻi communities and beyond.

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JABSOM class of 2026 group
JABSOM‘s Class of 2026 celebrate their graduation.

The University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 (JABSOM) celebrated 79 new locally trained physicians during its 2026 Convocation Ceremony at Kennedy Theatre on May 17. The event marked a major milestone for graduates preparing to serve communities across the state and beyond.

Chong family with Dean Shomaker on stage
Juyoung Chong with her family and JABSOM Dean Sam Shomaker.

As Hawaiʻi continues to face a physician shortage, more than half of the graduates are entering critical primary care specialties including internal medicine, family medicine, pediatrics and obstetrics and gynecology.

The ceremony included the recitation of the Oath of Hippocrates, formally welcoming the graduates into the medical profession.

‘I feel so grateful’

Among the graduates staying in Hawaiʻi are Joseph Li and Juyoung Chong, both eager to give back to the communities they now call home.

Meet more amazing 糖心Vlog官方 graduates

“To just be able to serve the community that I grew up in, so many people pouring in to me and my family, helping to support me to get where I am today,” Li said. “Couldn’t have done it without any of them, so to be able to stay in Hawaiʻi, and support the people of Hawaiʻi, is just an incredible honor and I feel so grateful to have this opportunity.”

JABSOM students
JABSOM graduates recite the Oath of Hippocrates.

Chong, who was born and raised in Busan, South Korea, said Hawaiʻi became his second home after moving to the islands for high school.

“This is just the perfect environment for me because I was able to start my family, have a child, and with the ʻohana and aloha and all the love that I may not be able to have outside of Hawaiʻi,” Chong said. “I’m so happy to share my experience with the soon-to-be mothers who may be very nervous for upcoming life-changing events.”

Thirty-three percent of JABSOM’s Class of 2026 will continue their residency training in Hawaiʻi, helping strengthen the state’s future healthcare workforce.

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Board of Regents honors faculty for excellence in research 2026 /news/2026/05/18/board-of-regents-research-2026/ Mon, 18 May 2026 18:45:03 +0000 /news/?p=234350 The Regents' Medal for Excellence in Research is awarded in recognition of scholarly contributions that expand the boundaries of knowledge and enrich the lives of students and the community.

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word "Congratulations" over ocean photo

The Regents’ Medal for Excellence in Research is awarded by the University of Hawaiʻi Board of Regents in recognition of scholarly contributions that expand the boundaries of knowledge and enrich the lives of students and the community.

Nicolas Gaillard

Nicolas Gaillard
Nicolas Gaillard

Nicolas Gaillard is an associate researcher in the Hawaiʻi Natural Energy Institute (HNEI) in the School of Ocean and Earth Science and Technology at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. He has more than 20 years of experience in materials and surface science, with expertise in photovoltaics, electrochemistry and device integration.

He joined HNEI as a postdoctoral fellow in 2007 and now leads the Thin Films Laboratory. His research focuses on understanding light-matter interactions at solid–solid and solid–liquid interfaces at the atomic scale, advancing the design of next-generation materials for renewable energy technologies.

In 2017, with support from the 糖心Vlog官方 Strategic Investment Initiative, he founded the Materials Science Consortium for Research and Education (MS-CoRE), bringing together 糖心Vlog官方 materials researchers to expand shared resources, strengthen interdisciplinary research and foster collaboration.

“He has established himself as a nationally and internationally recognized leader in the field,” said Richard Rocheleau, HNEI director. “More importantly, his collaborations with other departments and his mentorship of students, postdoctoral fellows and junior researchers, has made important contributions to the education and training of the next generation of scientists and engineers.”

Joseph Keaweʻaimoku Kaholokula

Joseph Kaholokula
Joseph Keaweʻaimoku Kaholokula

Joseph Keaweʻaimoku Kaholokula is professor and chair of Native Hawaiian Health at the John A. Burns School of Medicine (JABSOM). A nationally recognized translational behavioral scientist, he has led federally funded research for more than two decades to improve cardiometabolic health and advance health equity for Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders.

He is lead co-principal investigator of the Pacific Innovations, Knowledge, and Opportunities (PIKO) Clinical and Translational Research Center, where he helps train the next generation of researchers to address Hawaiʻi‘s most pressing health challenges. He also developed programs supporting underrepresented students, fellows and early-career faculty in health research.

With more than 200 publications, his work has influenced healthcare delivery, clinical outcomes and public health policy for Indigenous communities. Kaholokula has held national leadership roles and continues to serve on local boards dedicated to improving community health. In 2024, he was elected to the National Academy of Medicine.

“Through community-engaged research and culturally grounded approaches, he has built trust, advanced our understanding of health disparities, and helped develop solutions for our communities,” said JABSOM Dean Sam Shomaker. “His work continues to shape how we approach disease prevention and public health in Hawaiʻi, the Pacific and beyond.”

Victor M. Lubecke

Victor M. Lubecke
Victor M. Lubecke

Victor M. Lubecke is a professor of electrical and computer engineering in the College of Engineering at the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa. He specializes in wireless sensing and integrated transducers.

Prior to joining 糖心Vlog官方 Mānoa in 2003, he worked at Bell Laboratories, Lucent Technologies, where his research focused on remote sensing and microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) for biomedical and industrial applications. He has also held research positions at NASA‘s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and the Institute for Physical and Chemical Research, working on technologies for space-based sensing and communications.

Lubecke has authored nearly 300 peer-reviewed publications with more than 10,000 citations, holds seven U.S. patents and has co-founded two startup companies. He is an IEEE Fellow, a Fulbright Senior Scholar and an emeritus Distinguished Microwave Lecturer of the IEEE Microwave Theory and Techniques Society.

“Victor Lubecke is truly an internationally recognized researcher for his important contributions in the electrical engineering field,” said Aaron Ohta, professor of electrical and computer engineering. “During one of my research projects, I came across many examples of Victor’s groundbreaking work that provided me with the essential information I needed to successfully complete it. I am honored to be working with such an esteemed colleague.”

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Effects of prenatal methamphetamine exposure on infant neurobehavioral outcomes /news/2026/05/06/prenatal-methamphetamine-exposure-effects/ Wed, 06 May 2026 21:29:37 +0000 /news/?p=233767 This work could lay the foundation for screening tools and targeted intervention programs designed to improve outcomes for children.

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image of a baby's feet
(Photo credit: Omar Lopez/Unsplash)

A University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa project focused on identifying early brain-based markers in infants exposed to methamphetamine before birth has been awarded a $50,000 grant from through the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The research represents a critical step toward improving how children at higher risk for adverse developmental outcomes are identified and supported early in life.

The project aims to identify neurodevelopmental biomarkers that can detect early neurobehavioral impairments associated with prenatal methamphetamine exposure. If successful, this work could lay the foundation for scalable screening tools and targeted intervention programs designed to improve outcomes for children across Hawaiʻi and beyond.

“This project is about providing families with answers sooner and equipping providers with better tools to deliver care,” said Katy Tarrit, assistant professor in the in the , principal investigator of the study, and director of the Hawaiʻi Developmental and Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory. “The identification of objective neurodevelopmental biomarkers of risk in infancy enables a transition from reactive detection of developmental delays to early, targeted interventions that support optimal brain development during critical stages of neurodevelopment.”

Prenatal methamphetamine exposure has been linked to long-term cognitive, behavioral, motor, and developmental challenges. However, many children are not identified until these delays become more pronounced, often years later.

By identifying measurable early biomarkers of neurodevelopmental risk, the research team aims to establish a framework for early, targeted intervention—particularly in communities with limited access to specialized healthcare services.

More about Ola HAWAIʻI

Ola HAWAIʻI is a 糖心Vlog官方 Research Center in Minority Institutions Specialized Center funded by the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, part of the National Institutes of Health. Based at the , the center works to advance minority health and health disparities research in Hawaiʻi, focusing on communities that experience disproportionate disease burden and limited access to care. Supported through a five-year federal NIH award, Ola HAWAIʻI strengthens research capacity, mentors investigators and partners with communities to improve health outcomes statewide.

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糖心Vlog官方 team creates tool to remove objects from kids鈥 ears /news/2026/05/04/stickieears-mind-competition/ Tue, 05 May 2026 01:09:39 +0000 /news/?p=233511 糖心Vlog官方 students from across disciplines compete in MIND Hawaiʻi competition to develop medical innovations addressing real clinical problems.

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group photo of team
The StickieEars team.

A common emergency room issue鈥攐bjects stuck in children鈥檚 ears鈥攊s driving innovation through the University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补鈥檚 (MIND) Hawaiʻi competition.

(JABSOM) pediatric emergency physician Travis Hong said the problem is more frequent than many expect.

“You’d be surprised how often kids come in with things stuck in their ears鈥攂eads, food, small toy parts,” Hong said. “I see these cases at least every couple of weeks, if not more.”

Removing those objects safely can be challenging and sometimes requires improvisation.

“A lot of ER care involves figuring out what works in the moment,” Hong said. “In some cases, we use a small amount of medical-grade adhesive on a cotton swab to try to extract the object鈥攂ut it requires precision, and the child has to stay very still.”

Student-driven solution

ferrer explains poster board to hong
Aileen Ferrer explains the concept of StickieEars to Travis Hong.

That challenge inspired this year鈥檚 winning team in the MIND Hawaiʻi competition.

“We wanted to create something safer, more controlled and designed specifically for this problem,” said Aileen Ferrer, a JABSOM student and leader of the StickieEars team.

The team developed a hybrid suction-adhesive device to improve safety and control during removal.

“It鈥檚 a common issue, but there isn鈥檛 a standardized tool,” Ferrer said. “We saw an opportunity to improve that.”

Developing the prototype required collaboration across disciplines鈥攃entral to MIND鈥檚 mission. The annual competition brings together students from across campus, including JABSOM, the , the and the , to tackle real-world healthcare challenges.

Working with students and mentors from different backgrounds changed how we approached the problem.
—Aileen Ferrer

“Working with students and mentors from different backgrounds changed how we approached the problem,” Ferrer said. “That collaboration was one of the most valuable parts of the experience.”

“Students are addressing real clinical needs, and the level of innovation in these projects is exciting to see,” said faculty advisor Peter Di Rocco, clinical assistant professor at JABSOM.

Ferrer hopes StickieEars will eventually reach clinical use.

“I think this could have a real impact in everyday practice and make a difference for patients,” she said.

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糖心Vlog官方 medical student earns fellowship for pediatric eye cancer research /news/2026/04/20/pediatric-eye-cancer-fellowship/ Tue, 21 Apr 2026 01:53:13 +0000 /news/?p=232609 Elizabeth Rooks earns national fellowship for retinoblastoma research advancing pediatric eye cancer care.

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two people in the lab
Elizabeth Rooks (right) holds her fellowship award with a University of Washington research partner.

University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 student Elizabeth Rooks is earning national recognition for her research on retinoblastoma, a pediatric eye cancer, during a dedicated research year.

Rooks was awarded the Research to Prevent Blindness Medical Student Eye Research Fellowship, a competitive program supporting students advancing the understanding and treatment of eye disease.

“It鈥檚 an incredible honor,” she said. “This fellowship feels like an investment in my future, but more importantly in work that directly impacts patients.”

Advancing retinoblastoma research

Collaborating with researchers at the University of Washington, Rooks examines the genetic mutations behind the retinoblastoma and how they are inherited.

“Some patients also go on to develop osteosarcomas or other cancers in their 40s and 50s, while others never do,” she said.

Her work uses long-read genetic sequencing, which can identify not only mutations but also which parent passed them on.

“Unlike traditional sequencing methods, long-read sequencing lets us see the parental origin of a mutation without needing to test the parents. This is important because earlier research shows that mutations inherited from the father can make retinoblastoma more aggressive,” she said.

Rooks also helps collect and sequence DNA from patients and return findings to clinicians, potentially informing care in a fast-progressing cancer. Understanding the origin may help identify high-risk children earlier and guide more precise treatment.

After her research year, Rooks will return to Hawaiʻi to complete her medical training.

“I am so grateful for this fellowship and for my team,” she said. “Working with them has taught me so much and has shown me the kind of physician I want to become.”

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Giving Day fuels future physician鈥檚 path to serve Hawaiʻi /news/2026/04/14/giving-day-jabsom-2026-pinnow/ Wed, 15 Apr 2026 01:24:39 +0000 /news/?p=232274 Emma Pinnow shares how donor support and ʻImi Hoʻ艒la helped her pursue medicine and serve Hawaiʻi.

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group of four people
Kyle Chinen (Hawaii News Now), Winona Lee (JABSOM), Emma Pinnow and Casey Lund (Hawaii News Now)

At the University of Hawaiʻi, Giving Day is a 24-hour fundraising event to support our 糖心Vlog官方 students and embrace the rich diversity and expansive reach of our university system.

At the (JABSOM), where more than 90% of students are awarded some form of scholarship, donors make a great impact in their journeys in medicine. For first-year medical student Emma Pinnow, that journey started with the ʻImi Hoʻ艒la Post Baccalaureate Program.

Read more 糖心Vlog官方 Giving Day stories

Ahead of a Giving Day appearance on Hawaiʻi News Now, JABSOM sat down with Pinnow.

Q: How did ʻImi Hoʻ艒la put you on a path to medicine?

I come from a family deeply rooted in Hawaiʻi鈥檚 public school system, so while education was always the priority, medicine was a brand-new endeavor for me. My dream was always to stay home, to be near family and learn to provide care specifically tailored to our people here in Hawaiʻi. ʻImi Hoʻ艒la, which means “those who seek to heal” in ʻ艑濒别濒辞 Hawaiʻi, was the bridge to that dream. It鈥檚 a rigorous 12-month journey, and completing it provided me with automatic admission to JABSOM. But more than just a seat in the class, it gave me the foundational competence and the unshakeable support system I needed.

I didn鈥檛 just gain knowledge, I gained a cohort, mentors and a community that believed in my potential when I was just starting out. What truly changed the trajectory for me was the generosity of our donors. I was fully prepared to take on a massive financial burden to pursue this path, but because of their support, my experience was tuition-free. This didn鈥檛 just save money, it gave me the gift of time and focus. Instead of juggling my studies with a job, I can dedicate 100% of my energy to the rigors of medical school. It only takes one group of people to believe in you to open a door. For me, that door was ʻImi Hoʻ艒la. It allowed me to show my potential and has put me on a path to serve the community that raised me.

Q: What are your goals in medicine?

I鈥檓 currently a little more than halfway through my first year, and honestly, it鈥檚 been very exciting. Every week I鈥檓 exposed to a new specialty or a different organ system, and I鈥檓 making it my goal to learn as much as I can and to lean into every opportunity to the fullest extent. While I haven’t settled on a specific specialty yet, I have settled on the where and the who. No matter what field I choose, I am committed to serving the people of Hawaiʻi. This is my home, and I truly can鈥檛 imagine being anywhere else.

Being Native Hawaiian, I am especially aware of the health disparities our community faces, particularly with cardiometabolic disease. One of my primary goals in medicine is to directly address these inequities. I want to take the education we receive here at JABSOM, which emphasizes culturally-competent care, and apply it in a way that resonates with our local population. Ultimately, my goal is to bridge the gap between high-level medical science and the unique cultural needs of our islands. Giving back to the community that raised me is my way of honoring where I come from.

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$61.2M in NIH funding advances 糖心Vlog官方 health research in FY2025 /news/2026/04/14/nih-impact-research-funding-fy2025/ Tue, 14 Apr 2026 23:41:39 +0000 /news/?p=232122 糖心Vlog官方 researchers NIH funding supporting health innovation, genomics and AI-driven nutrition research.

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buildings and ocean

The University of Hawaiʻi accounted for more than $61.2 million—92% of all federal biomedical research funding awarded in the state from the (NIH)—in fiscal year 2025.

Hawaiʻi received $66.7 million overall in NIH funding, according to a new report from . The investment supported 902 jobs and generated $188.7 million in economic activity statewide.

two scientists working in lab
Youping Deng and Lang Wu working in the lab.

NIH funding supports a wide range of research across 糖心Vlog官方, from improving disease detection and treatment to addressing health disparities and strengthening public health systems that serve island communities, reinforcing the university鈥檚 role in advancing health research and innovation in Hawaiʻi.

had the largest share, with 72 awards totaling $60.7 million, while the received two awards totaling $468,391. While overall funding remained strong, NIH鈥檚 shift to multi-year funding—which obligates the full grant value upfront—resulted in 5,564 fewer grants being funded in FY2025 compared to FY2024.

“Even in a highly competitive and uncertain federal funding environment, University of Hawaiʻi researchers continue to deliver work that improves lives here at home and beyond,” said Chad Walton, 糖心Vlog官方 interim vice president for research and innovation. “These investments fuel discoveries, support high-quality jobs and strengthen our local economy. Every dollar makes a difference for our communities.”

Research highlights

Recent awards reflect the diversity of NIH-funded research at 糖心Vlog官方:

  • $322,891 from the National Cancer Institute supports Shugeng Zhao Cao, professor at the at 糖心Vlog官方 Hilo. The project, Discovery of novel natural TEAD inhibitors for the chemoprevention of liver tumors, explores natural compounds from Hawaiian microorganisms to develop the first preventive therapy for liver cancer.
  • Shugeng Cao with lab team
    Shugeng Cao and lab team at 糖心Vlog官方 Hilo.
  • $2,039,744 from the National Human Genome Research Institute supports Lang Wu, associate professor at the at the 糖心Vlog官方 Cancer Center. The research advances genomic tools and approaches to better understand complex diseases and support precision health applications. (Related 糖心Vlog官方 News story)
  • $459,287 from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases supports Youping Deng, professor at the . The project, Hawaii Advanced Training in Artificial Intelligence for Precision Nutrition Science Research, strengthens training in the use of artificial intelligence for nutrition and metabolic health research. (Related 糖心Vlog官方 News story)
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New guidance on overlooked uterine condition affecting 1 in 3 women /news/2026/04/09/new-guidance-on-adenomyosis/ Thu, 09 Apr 2026 23:51:59 +0000 /news/?p=232022 Kimberly Kho provides new guidance to help physicians better diagnose and treat adenomyosi

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zalud and kho
JABSOM OBGYN Chair Ivica Zalud and Kimberly Kho

A University of Hawaiʻi at 惭腻苍辞补 physician is working to change how a common but often overlooked gynecologic condition is diagnosed and treated.

Kimberly Kho, who holds the nation鈥檚 first professorship in advanced gynecological surgery in the (JABSOM), recently authored a clinical expert series review on adenomyosis in . The publication places Kho among a select group of internationally recognized experts in women鈥檚 health.

“These articles are meant to synthesize the existing medical literature and turn it into meaningful clinical guidance,” Kho said. “The goal is that a physician could read it, deepen their understanding of the disease, and immediately apply what they learned in their practice on Monday morning.”

Adenomyosis occurs when tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows into the uterine muscle, causing severe menstrual bleeding, chronic pelvic pain and fertility challenges. Despite affecting roughly one in three women, the condition remains underdiagnosed and under-researched.

“It鈥檚 astonishing how common it is,” Kho said. “But if you look at the research funding for adenomyosis, which then correlates to our scientific understanding of the disease and specific therapies, it鈥檚 just a drop in the proverbial bucket compared to how much and how many this disease impacts.”

Advances in diagnosis, care

Kho鈥檚 review provides a practical roadmap for OBGYN physicians, covering disease mechanisms, diagnostic advances and modern treatment options. A major shift highlighted is the move toward noninvasive diagnosis using imaging tools such as ultrasound and MRI, rather than relying on hysterectomy for confirmation.

“Our paradigm for diagnosing has really evolved because our technologies have evolved. This allows us to name the condition and start treating it, rather than the alternative, which was often to write off the symptoms,” Kho said.

The review also challenges the idea that hysterectomy is the only effective treatment.

“There are many excellent uterine-preserving options,” Kho said. “Medical, interventional and surgical treatments can manage symptoms while preserving uterine function and future fertility.”

Kho hopes the publication will help establish clearer guidance for physicians worldwide while expanding access to advanced gynecologic care in Hawaiʻi.

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