Outstanding Community Engagement Awards – UofL News Fri, 17 Apr 2026 13:44:53 +0000 en-US hourly 1 Q&A: UofL researcher raising awareness of occupational cancer to firefighters /post/uofltoday/qa-uofl-researcher-raising-awareness-of-occupational-cancer-to-firefighters/ Mon, 25 Mar 2024 20:45:31 +0000 /?p=60301 Firefighters take risks everyday, and many of the risks they face are not visible. James Cripps, who was a firefighter for nearly a decade before becoming a manufacturing administrator at the UofL Health , hopes to eliminate some of those risks. Cripps was awarded one of the  on March 22 for teaching firefighters throughout Kentucky about occupational cancer and mitigation strategies.

As of 2016, 70% of the line-of-duty deaths for career firefighters were caused by UofL News caught up with Cripps to learn more about the classes he is teaching throughout Kentucky. 

UofL News: What made you want to raise awareness of occupational cancer?

James Cripps: When I was working as a career firefighter, another firefighter that came in as a high school student had gotten hired and been with our fire department for many years. After turning about 35, he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer and then died pretty quickly thereafter. The prevalence of cancer in firefighters is higher than your general population, but this is one of the first ones that really personally touched me and the department that I was working with at the time.

I talked to the chief at the time — his name is Dave Goldsmith. He spurred me along to get this started because he thought my combination of being a firefighter and knowledge of cancer biology and how cancer works in the body would provide a good resource for firefighters.

UofL News:  What should the general public know about occupational cancer?

Cripps: There are lots of different occupations that have higher risks of cancer than the general population, but I solely focus on firefighters. It is something that’s only recently been focused on in the past 10-plus years. Really, it comes about because of our increased use of petroleum-based materials — things that are derived from oil-based products of plastics and synthetics. Some of those are what they call “forever chemicals,” which are types of chemicals that get in your body and they’re there forever. These are the types of chemicals that penetrate the gear that firefighters wear, get inside their bodies, and really cause a lot of this havoc. It’s where we’re seeing increased rates of cancer, and firefighters dying earlier from very uncommon cancers.

UofL News:  What topics do you cover in your trainings to firefighters?

Cripps: First of all, I explain to them what causes cancer, so they understand how these toxins cause cancer, and then we have mitigation strategies. So, we talk about different things, pretty much everything from what you would consider a decontamination procedure, which is something normally done when you’re exposed to hazardous materials. We also talk about limiting exposures by use of different types of new products or new types of gear that helps prevent a lot of these particles and toxins from getting to the firefighters themselves, and just some alterations of standard things that have always been done in the fire service.

Fire services is a lot like many professions, where we tend to do the same thing over and over, because that’s the way it’s always been done. Now, a lot of firefighters are seeing, a lot of younger firefighters are seeing that people are changing the way they’re doing things. Much of it is just changing behaviors.

UofL News: What are some of the best ways to prevent occupational cancer?

Cripps: Awareness in general is probably the number one thing that helps. Being aware reinforces that they do the necessary mitigation strategies like decontamination after the fire where they try to remove as much contaminants from their skin as possible and wear the proper protective gear during the fire.

We also talk about making sure you’re having regular checkups with your doctor. I often suggest firefighters get a physical every six months. That way, if there’s any changes in bloodwork, it increases the chance of catching any type of potential issues that might be arising.

UofL News: What does it mean to you to receive the Outstanding Community Engagement award?

Cripps: It’s a huge honor. The thing that really pushes me even more is that it gives me another opportunity to let people know of this problem because it’s not a widely known issue in the firefighter space, in general.

UofL student Nkechinyere Okorie, UofL Associate Professor of Social Work Jennifer Middleton and community engagement partner Redeemer Lutheran Church also received for their work throughout Louisville.

Any fire departments who are interested in a prevention training, can contact Cripps at james.cripps@louisville.edu or through the Colon Cancer Prevention Project

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American Council on ֱ leader to keynote 8th Annual UofL Engaged Scholarship Symposium /post/uofltoday/american-council-on-education-leader-to-keynote-8th-annual-uofl-engaged-scholarship-symposium/ Fri, 10 Mar 2023 21:19:06 +0000 /?p=58204
  • Advance registration required by March 21 for free event
  • Symposium theme: “Making a Difference through University-Community Collaborations”
  • Outstanding Community Engagement Awards also to be presented
  • Providing information on ways community and university partners can connect and collaborate will be the focus of the 8th Annual Engaged Scholarship Symposium at the University of Louisville.

    Sponsored by , the event will be held Friday, March 24, from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. in Chao Auditorium, Ekstrom Library, 2215 S. Third St. Admission is free and lunch will be provided. The event is open to the public with .

    head shot of Marisol Morales
    Marisol Morales is the keynote speaker for the 2023 Engaged Scholarship Symposium

    Keynoting the event will be Marisol Morales, executive director of the Carnegie Elective Classifications for the American Council on ֱ (ACE). Her presentation will address “More AMOR Please: Accountability and Organizational Results (AMOR) for Community Engagement Practitioners and Leaders.”

    Managed by ACE, the elective classification program is sponsored by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The Carnegie Foundation’s Elective Classification for Community Engagement is a way for colleges and universities to develop and gain recognition for institutionalized community engagement. Campuses must apply for the classification, and UofL is one of only 79 universities in the United States to earn recognition by the Carnegie Foundation as both a Research 1 and a Community Engaged university.

    UofL also will present its Outstanding Community Engagement Award. The award recognizes outstanding community engagement service such as volunteerism, outreach, partnerships, curricular engagement, and community-based research. Four awards will be presented to a faculty member, a staff member, a student group and a community partner. 

    The symposium’s concurrent sessions will help community partners such as individuals, organizations, associations, non-profits and governmental agencies learn more about connecting with university programs, groups, faculty, staff and students to collaborate on shared initiatives.

    Among the 24 concurrent sessions will be: “Raising Hope Kentucky: A Nursing and Agriculture Collaboration to Address Farmer Mental Health,” “The Resilient Families Project @ Wayside’s Hotel Louisville – Back-Pocket Strategies for Building Resilience, Mindfulness & Happiness in At-Risk Adults,” “School-Based Depression Prevention: Considering Sociocultural Factors,” “Bridging the Gap to Access to Quality ֱ for Healthcare Providers in Latin America,” “Navigating the Road to Ignite Excellence in a Post-Pandemic World” and “Emerging Generations Z & A: The Youth Development Phenomenon.”

    Some of the concurrent session presenters are recipients of the Office of Community Engagment Gheens Foundation Mini Grants, and several other grant recipients also will attend. The mini grants provide funding for a variety of projects in collaboration with underrepresented communities such as west and south Louisville, the immigrant and refugee community, rural communities and the international community.

    The mini grant recipients, all from UofL, are:

    Nicole Adams, College of ֱ & Human Development

    Becky Antle, Kent School of Social Work

    Stephanie Boone, School of Public Health & Information Sciences

    Fannie M. Cox, Libraries

    Sarah Emery, College of Arts & Sciences

    La-Tisha Frazier, School of Medicine

    Melanie Gast, College of Arts & Sciences

    William Scott Gunter, College of Arts & Sciences

    Lora D. Haynes, College of Arts & Sciences

    Alexandra Howard, Libraries

    David Johnson, School of Public Health & Information Sciences

    Kendria Kelly-Taylor, School of Public Health & Information Sciences

    Kristi King, College of ֱ & Human Development

    Angel Okorie & Nile Rowe, Engage Lead Serve Board

    Nina Vasavada Panchal, School of Medicine

    Patrick Possel, College of ֱ & Human Development

    Shelby Pumphrey, College of Arts & Sciences

    Cara Snyder, College of Arts & Sciences

    Geneva Stark, College of ֱ & Human Development

    Tammi Alvey Thomas, School of Public Health & Information Sciences

    Ashley Triplett, Digital Transformation Center

    Randy Whetstone Jr., College of ֱ & Human Development

    Jamie Lynn Young, School of Medicine

     

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