The 2024 John P. Wyatt, M.D., Environment and Health Symposium was held Thursday, April 4 on the University of Kentucky campus at the J. David Rosenberg College of Law Grand Courtroom. The Wyatt symposium honors the legacy of Dr. John P. Wyatt and his pioneering environmental clinical research on air pollution and lung pathology. Multiple universities and agencies from across the state gathered to present research and practice focused on the environment and its impact on health in Kentucky.
ProclamationMayor Proclaims April as Environment and Health Month in Lexington
“Lexington is a regional hub for both health care and agriculture in the Commonwealth thanks to the many pioneering leaders like Dr. John P. Wyatt,” said Mayor Linda Gorton. “Today, we are committed to educating a new generation of leaders, raising awareness about environmental public health issues, and ensuring a healthy environment for many years to come.”
“I am thrilled that Mayor Gorton has declared April as Environment and Health month,” said symposium organizer Erin Haynes, Dr.P.H., the Kurt W. Deuschle Professor of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health and director of the UK Center for the Environment. “This is momentous as it acknowledges the alignment of the ongoing commitment of the Wyatt family in sponsoring the symposium and celebrating the significant contributions of those who positively impact the public’s health through environmental research and advocacy.”
The annual symposium is made possible by the generous support of the John P. Wyatt family and most notably a gift from his son, Philip Wyatt. Dr. John P. Wyatt was one of the first physicians who connected air pollution with lung disease and was the director of the UK Tobacco and Health Research Institute from 1974 until 1980.
2024 Awardee
The 2024 John P. Wyatt, M.D. Environment and Health Award was presented to Dr. Arthur Frank in recognition of outstanding contributions to environment and health.
“Dr. Frank is an exemplary public health champion who has dedicated his career to research and advocacy on occupational and environmental issues including lung diseases, such as asbestosis, an entirely preventable disease," said symposium organizer Erin Haynes, the Kurt W. Deuschle Professor of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health and director of the UK Center for the Environment. “He has achieved international acclaim in the area of pulmonary occupational safety and health. As the first chair of Preventive Medicine and Environmental Health in the UK College of Medicine and initiator of the Master of Science in Public Health, Dr. Frank is one of the founder fathers of the College of Public Health. It is a tremendous honor to recognize his accomplishments as we celebrate our college’s 20th anniversary.”
Frank said, “It is a true pleasure to return to the University of Kentucky and I am honored to be the Wyatt keynote speaker this year. The discipline of Public Health has contributed greatly to the betterment of mankind and progress has been made in protecting the health and well-being of workers and those with environmental exposures. Work still needs to be done, but training and educating new public health practitioners will assist in continuing progress as the solutions of unfinished problems continue to be addressed.”
Panel
The symposium included a panel of committed leaders focusing on significant public health issues that impact many Kentuckians.
MODERATOR: LUZ HUNTINGTON-MOSKOS, PHD, RN, CPN Associate professor, School of Nursing, University of Louisville "Kentucky Youth Addressing pfas in the water we share"
Luz Huntington-Moskos, PhD, RN, CPN, is an Associate Professor and Director of the Community Engagement Core for the Center for Integrative Environmental Health Sciences at the University of Louisville. She received her Ph.D. in Nursing from The University of Alabama, Birmingham in 2013 and completed postdoctoral work at the University of Kentucky BREATHE program in 2014. Dr. Huntington-Moskosis a 2021-2024 Betty Irene Moore Fellow and her program of research is focused on the intersection between adolescent health, environmental health and health disparities. She is working to develop report-back strategies geared towards adolescents, with the goal of building environmental health literacy and promoting positive health behavior change. She has a long-standing interest in promoting adolescent health, which she first developed during her work as high school science teacher in the Peace Corps (Malawi 1994-1996). Her scholarly work has been published in peer-reviewed journals such as Preventing Chronic Disease, Journal of Adolescent Health and Public Health Nursing.
PANELIST: THOMAS C. TUCKER, PHD, MPH Professor, College of Public Health, University of Kentucky “REDUCING THE BURDEN OF CANCER IN KENTUCKY”
This presentation will focus on the major cancers (Lung and colorectal cancer) that impact Kentuckians, the impressive progress we have made reducing the burden of these cancers, and the environmental exposures that continue to drive high incidence rates of these cancers.
Thomas C. Tucker, PhD, MPH, was the founding chair of the Department of Epidemiology at the University of Kentucky’s College of Public Health and is currently a Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health. He is also the Senior Director for Cancer Surveillance at the University of Kentucky's Markey Cancer Center. For more than 20 years he served as the Markey Cancer Center's Associate Director for Cancer Prevention and Control, Director of the Kentucky Cancer Registry, Principal Investigator for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Program of Cancer Registries (NPCR), and Principal Investigator for the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) program in Kentucky. He is an internationally recognized population scientist with more than 45 years of experience in cancer surveillance and cancer control research. Dr. Tucker was elected as one of two North American Representatives to serve on the International Association of Cancer Registries' Board of Directors and he is a member of the working group for CONCORD-2, an international study of cancer survival in 71 countries. He is a past President of the North American Association of Central Cancer Registries (NAACCR) and in 2002 he received NAACCR’s highest honor, the CalumMuir Award, for lifetime contributions to the science of cancer surveillance. His research is focused on disparities in the burden of lung, colorectal, breast and cervical cancer with an emphasis on rural and Appalachian populations. More recently he has been engaged in research using the population-based cancer registry as a Virtual Tissue Repository.
PANELIST: CHERYL WITT, PHD, RN Senior Agricultural Extension Specialist, The Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food and Environment “ADDRESSING THE TOTAL WORKER HEALTH OF FARMERS”
Dr. Witt is an Ag Extension Specialist Senior at the Martin-Gatton College of Agriculture, Food, and Environment; otherwise known as the Ag Nurse. She uses her 30-year plus nursing experience and love for farm families to pursue her research interest of improving the health and safety of farmers and farm families. Dr. Witt, along with the Kentucky Department of Agriculture, initiated a collaborative group of key stakeholders from across the state to address the levels of stress, depressive symptoms, and suicide among our farmers as well as to promote the physical health and safety in our farmers. She uses outreach, research, collaboration, education and mainly a boots-on-the-ground approach to provide the farmers and farm families what they need where they need it.
Poster Session
Poster abstracts focusing on the environment and its impact on health were submitted by students, graduate students, faculty, staff, interns, and postdoctoral participants. See the photo gallery below for winners and poster participants.
Thursday, April 4, 2024 UK Rosenberg College of Law Grand Courtroom 620 S Limestone, Lexington, KY
9:00 AM On-site Registration & Breakfast
9:00-10:00 AM Poster Session
10:00 AM Welcome
10:20 AMPresentation of John P. Wyatt, MD Award
10:30 AM Keynote Speaker: Arthur Frank, MD, PhD Professor and Chair Emeritus, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health at the Dornsife School of Public Health at Drexel University and Professor of Medicine Keynote: “Minerals, Plants, and Policy - Public Health in Action” Coal and Asbestos, Agriculture Work, and Policy Implications and Legal Activities
11:30 AM On-site Lunch Provided
12:00 PM Presentation of Poster Session People’s Choice Award
Panel: Public Health in Action Luz Huntington-Moskos, PhD, RN, CPN University of Louisville, Associate Professor and Director of the Community Engagement Core for the Center for Integrative Environmental Health Sciences “Kentucky Youth Addressing PFAS in the Water We Share”
Thomas C. Tucker, PhD, MPH University of Kentucky, Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health, and Senior Director for Cancer Surveillance at the Markey Cancer Center “Reducing the Burden of Cancer in Kentucky”
Cheryl Witt, PhD, RN University of Kentucky, Assistant Professor in the College of Nursing “Addressing the Total Worker Health of Farmers”
1:00-2:00 PM Facilitated Discussion withKeynote Speaker and Panelists