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Momentum Builds Around Valley Fever Research With Funding Boosts

Kerry Klein
/
Valley Public Radio
The Valley Fever Institute, formed in 2015, received $3 million from the 2018 state budget and is slated to unveil a newly built clinic for valley fever patients in spring 2020.

 

Researchers have been trying to understand valley fever for decades, but the playing field remained small until recently. 

“When I started in valley fever research just six or seven years ago, the field was largely full of professors and senior clinicians and really didn’t have many of the junior faculty and students as part of the group,” said Katrina Hoyer, an assistant professor at the University of California, Merced. “I think they really wanted people, there just wasn’t much funding.”

Hoyer is an immunologist studying the human body’s response to valley fever, which results from breathing fungal spores and is common in California’s Central Valley. After embarking in 2013 on what she thought would be a one-time collaboration to study the disease, she got hooked, and now runs a cocci-centric lab with contributions from graduate and undergraduate students.

Where Hoyer really sees change, however, is in interest from other researchers. In October, she was tasked with hosting UC Merced’s first-ever Valley Fever Summit. Unsure of what kind of attendance to expect, she watched as more than 100 scientists, public health officials and disease survivors poured in from around the state or watched the live stream. 

“I was really happy about it,” she said, particularly about seeing so many of the junior researchers she thought the field had been lacking. “I’ve seen an increase in the numbers of people that are attending (conferences like this), and also a huge increase in the diversity of scientists that are attending the conferences.”

Hoyer and many others attribute these changes to former California Gov. Jerry Brown, who in his 2018-2019 budget allocated $8 million toward combating the disease. Of that sum, the state public health department received $2 million, and the remaining $6 million was split evenly between the University of California system and the newly formed Valley Fever Institute at Kern Medical in Bakersfield. 

Brown’s nod to cocci was thanks in part to Bakersfield Assemblymen Rudy Salas and Vince Fong, who have introduced many valley fever-related state laws and long fought for state funding for the disease.

According to the UC Office of the President, the $3 million the UCs received has been largely distributed among two collaborative projects: The bigger one, shared among six campuses, will investigate fundamental gaps in valley fever knowledge; and a second collaboration between three campuses and the Valley Fever Institute will study the immune systems of patients with a severe form of the disease.

Even though $3 million is a mere drop in the bucket for major research institutions like the UCs, Hoyer said anything that promotes collaboration is valuable. Dr. Manish Butte, a pediatric immunologist at UCLA, agreed. 

“There's going to be a wealth of knowledge developed in the next few years thanks to this funding which I hope will blow open some of the myths about this disease,” he said. 

At the Valley Fever Institute, the majority of the $3 million has gone toward constructing a brick-and-mortar clinic for cocci patients, set to open later this year, as well as other research programs and education for both patients and medical providers. With its $2 million, the California Department of Public Health has been tasked with completing an awareness campaign by June, which includes developing social media messages about the disease.

Dr. Paul Krogstad, an infectious disease specialist at UCLA, thinks the sea change began even earlier than 2018. “I really think that the turning point was the (2013) conference held in Bakersfield” organized by Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-Bakersfield, he said. Attended by the heads of both the Centers for Disease Control and the National Institutes of Health, the symposium has been credited by many for elevating the disease to a national platform.

Late last year, McCarthy also helped to secure $2 million from the 2020 federal budget for the branch of the CDC dedicated to fungal diseases. Additionally, the NIH in 2018 posted a funding opportunity for new valley-fever related research proposals, which are still being awarded.

In 2018, Governor Jerry Brown Allocated $8 million to Cocci Research And Awareness. How Has It Been Spent?

$3 million to the University of California system:

  • $2,200,000: Project titled “Investigating fundamental gaps in Valley Fever knowledge,” a collaboration of 11 investigators across six UC campuses: San Francisco, Berkeley, Davis, Merced, Riverside and San Diego

  • $650,000: Project titled “The Immune Dysregulation of Disseminated Coccidioidomycosis," a collaboration of six investigators across three UC campuses (LA, San Diego and San Francisco) and the Valley Fever Institute at Kern Medical

  • $150,000: Miscellaneous research needs, including October 2019 Valley Fever Summit at UC Merced

​$3 million to the Valley Fever Institute at Kern Medical:

  • $2,600,000: Patient care, including construction of a brick-and-mortar Valley Fever Institute clinic (to be unveiled later in 2020), as well as diagnostic equipment and patient amenities

  •  $282,000: A variety of valley fever-related research projects

  • $118,000: Education, including a video to provide continuing medical education to providers in endemic areas

$2 million to the California Department of Public Health:

  • $2,000,000: A valley fever-awareness campaign to be finished by June 2020. Includes evaluating awareness in different groups, as well as developing public messages for social media and other formats to address key awareness gaps

 

This project results from an innovative reporting venture — the Center for Health Journalism Collaborative — that currently involves The Bakersfield Californian, Radio Bilingüe in Fresno, Valley Public Radio in Fresno and Bakersfield, Vida en el Valle in Fresno, Hanford Sentinel, the Voice of OC in Santa Ana, the Arizona Daily Star in Tucson, La Estrella de Tucsón and CenterforHealthJournalism.org.

The collaborative is an initiative of the Center for Health Journalism at the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

You can read more of this series and the collaborative's previous work here:http://www.centerforhealthjournalism.org/valleyfever

Kerry Klein is an award-winning reporter whose coverage of public health, air pollution, drinking water access and wildfires in the San Joaquin Valley has been featured on NPR, KQED, Science Friday and Kaiser Health News. Her work has earned numerous regional Edward R. Murrow and Golden Mike Awards and has been recognized by the Association of Health Care Journalists and Society of Environmental Journalists. Her podcast Escape From Mammoth Pool was named a podcast “listeners couldn’t get enough of in 2021” by the radio aggregator NPR One.
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