The Fulbright Fellowship for faculty is awarded to 400-800 U.S. citizens annually. This year, one of those awards went to Ithaca College’s associate professor and associate chair of the Department of Health Sciences and Public Health, Kari Brossard Stoos.
The Fulbright Program was established in 1946 for the purpose of educational and cultural exchange across the globe to promote peaceful relations and expanded learning. Fulbright scholars advance disciplines, make groundbreaking discoveries, and enrich human life.
Brossard Stoos’s scholarship supports research in the field of public health, specifically through One Health, a collaborative, trans-disciplinary approach to health that recognizes that the health of people, animals, plants, and their shared environment is interdependent.
What this looks like is conducting research over four months at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada, as part of an international team studying the presence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the microbiomes of domestic animals, wildlife, and humans.