The University of Kentucky Superfund Research Center (UKSRC), funded by the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), integrates multidisciplinary research, training, and stakeholder engagement around a common theme: reducing health risks posed by environmental contaminants in communities. We investigate the impact of persistent halogenated organics (e.g. PCBs, PCE, TCE, and PFAS), aim to reduce the toxic effects of these chemicals, and seek to promote health equity in communities. UKSRC uses an intervention and prevention paradigm that fosters healthy lifestyles (i.e., healthful nutrition and increased physical activity) to reduce the disease risks associated with exposure to Superfund pollutants and designs engineered solutions to reduce exposures through innovative sensing, remediation and fate and transport science.
UKSRC leverages the expertise of prominent and promising scholars who bring diverse disciplinary perspectives to the challenges that are central to our goals. It is deeply committed to achieving research excellence and to improving science, policy decision-making, and to working in partnership with our community stakeholders to promote health and well-being of the people living in the Commonwealth of Kentucky and beyond.
December 10, 2024
One University of Kentucky scientist, renowned for his research on membranes for filtering and producing clean water has been named a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors (NAI). DB has served as an investigator in the University of Kentucky Superfund Research Center (UKSRC) for over 20 years. UKSRC, located in the Pigman College of Engineering, is funded by the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS). The NIEHS Superfund Research Program integrates multidisciplinary research, training and community engagement to improve overall health in communities impacted by environmental pollution.
September 11, 2024
The University of Kentucky Superfund Research Center (UKSRC) and the University of Kentucky Department of Civil Engineering partnered with Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (Greece) to host the 20th anniversary Central and Eastern European Conference on Health and the Environment (CEECHE). This year’s theme, “Seeking Solutions for Environmental Exposures and Disease Risks”, brought approximately 100 researchers from 16 countries together from July 15 to 19, 2024, to focus on developing solution-oriented research and collaborations to grapple with common, yet increasingly complex, challenges associated with legacy and emerging pollution.
September 11, 2024
A UKSRC team of researchers led by Dr. Yekaterina Zaytseva is studying perfluorooctanesulfonic acid (PFOS) exposure on gastrointestinal (GI) pathology. The GI tract is directly exposed to environmental pollutants via contaminated drinking water, food and other sources.