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Is modern urban life making us unhealthy? New grant will help Bristol scientists find out.

11 February 2020

Researchers at the University of Bristol are starting to look at how our health is affected by where we live from conception to adulthood and old age thanks to a new grant from the European Union.

LongITools is a collaborative project led by the University of Oulu in Finland, which has been awarded funding from the EU’s Horizon 2020 research and development programme. The University of Bristol will use its 810,000 Euro allocation to work with the city’s Children of the 90s health study to examine the effect of a lifetime’s environmental exposures such as air pollution, noise pollution and neighbourhoods on our health.

Researchers will use data about the environment which can be collected using “geocoding” – a process where important information about environmental exposures can be aligned to the study to enable the analysis of important health and wellbeing related questions.

Health outcomes will be investigated using data collected from blood samples, imaging and cardiovascular assessments from three generations of Children of the 90s participants to map and model how environmental factors might influence growth, body composition and diseases such as diabetes, heart disease and stroke. As part of the LongITools project, this data will be combined with data from other studies across Europe to both help this work and to leave a legacy for other researchers in the future.

They will also identify molecular signs of environmental exposures and the role of lifestyle factors such as diet and exercise. This ambitious project includes partners from 15 research institutions and three small and medium-sized enterprises across eight European countries with expertise in epidemiology, genetics, epigenetics, metabolomics, lifestyle, mathematics, economics, policy making and sensor technology.

Scientists hope to develop tools to predict the risk of disease depending on environmental exposures at any point across life.

Senior Research Associate in Epidemiology Ahmed Elhakeem led the grant bid for the University of Bristol and said:

“We’re very lucky in Bristol to have such a rich source of health, societal and environment information about our Children of the 90s participants.  This means that we can look at everything they have been exposed to from before they were born to adulthood and old age and use lots of different methods to calculate the risk of circulatory, cardiac and metabolic diseases.

"I hope that with better knowledge about how where we live affects our health, the LongITools project can influence environmental and health policies across the world.”

LongITools Project coordinator Professor Sylvain Sebert says “The economic and societal burden of non-communicable diseases rise steeply with age and have a huge bearing on healthcare costs. It also coincides with the alteration of the environment. We are therefore delighted that funding has been awarded and are excited at the prospect of developing research and delivering results that will not only identify preventive measures but will also play a role in addressing social health inequalities.”

The project is also one of nine projects in the newly created ‘European Human Exposome Network’ and the launch of this network will take place in Brussels on 11th February. To keep-up-to-date with the project’s progress please follow @longitools on Twitter.

Further information

About LongITools

Partners:

  • University of Oulu, Finland (Project Coordinator);
  • Ab.Acus, Italy;
  • Academic Medical Center, Netherlands;
  • Beta Technology Ltd, UK;
  • Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden;
  • CyNexo, Italy;
  • Erasmus Medical Center, Netherlands;
  • Imperial College London, UK;
  • National Institute for Health and Medical Research (INSERM), France;
  • University College London, UK;
  • University Medical Center Groningen, Netherlands;
  • University of Barcelona; Spain;
  • University of Bristol, UK;
  • University of Eastern Finland, Finland;
  • University of Oslo, Norway;
  • University of Rome Tor Vergata, Italy;
  • University of Surrey, UK;
  • University of Utrecht, Netherlands.

 

About the European Human Exposome Network

The European Human Exposome Network combines nine research projects funded under Horizon 2020, the EU Framework Programme for Research and Innovation. The Human Exposome is the study of how elements we are exposed to via our diet, lifestyle and the environment we live and work in, affect our health.

The launch event is an opportunity to learn more about the Exposome concept. The event is open to all interested participants and will be a unique opportunity to interact with leading European scientists and policy-makers in this area. To find our more or to register visit the website: https://ec.europa.eu/info/events/launch-event-european-human-exposome-network-2020_en

About Horizon 2020

Europe has a 10-year growth and jobs strategy called Europe 2020. It was launched in 2010 to create the conditions for smart, sustainable and inclusive growth. Five headline targets have been agreed for the European Union to achieve by the end of 2020, covering employment, research and development, climate/energy, education, and social inclusion and poverty reduction.

Europe has identified new engines to boost growth and jobs; these are addressed by seven ‘flagship initiatives’. Within each initiative both the European Union and national authorities have to coordinate their efforts, so they are mutually reinforcing. ‘Innovation Union’ is one such flagship initiative. ‘Innovation Union’ is the European Union strategy to create an innovation-friendly environment that makes it easier for great ideas to be turned into products and services that will bring our economy growth and jobs.

Horizon 2020 is the financial instrument implementing the Innovation Union and:

  • Has a budget of nearly €80 billion for the period 2014–2020 which makes it the biggest European Union Research and Development programme ever.
  • Is open to everyone.
  • Has three priorities (Industrial Leadership, Excellent Science and Societal Change); each of which has a number of sections with a different focus and each section has a detailed work programme.

http://ec.europa.eu/programmes/horizon2020/en/what-horizon-2020

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