Kimberly Page, PhD, MPH, professor in the Department of Internal
Medicine, always felt that her roots in New Mexico would one day call
her home.
When she was a child, her father – a native New Mexican and UNM
graduate – moved her family from the U.S. to South America for his job
in the petroleum industry. Growing up, she learned Spanish, English and
Portuguese, as well as cultural flexibility.
Back in the States, she pursued an MPH and PhD in epidemiology from
the University of California, Berkeley, and a position at the Center for
AIDS Prevention Studies at the University of California, San Francisco.
Epidemiology – the study of disease through its natural history,
cause and distribution – embodies an aspect of science that Page feels
is sometimes overlooked.
“The creative part of science is sometimes also not just your great
discoveries,” she says, “but also how can we find better ways to get
information.” And in Page’s field, the collection of information is
everything. She is constantly searching for new techniques and tools
from other fields that could advance her research.
Page studied HIV patients in San Francisco in 1990 to calculate their
risk of contracting a newly discovered blood-borne virus, hepatitis C,
which was damaging patients’ livers, sometime leading to liver cancer.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 3.5
million people currently live with chronic hepatitis C infection in the
U.S.
The virus is difficult to detect until two months after patients have
been exposed, so Page and her team innovated methods to detect the
virus earlier in injected drug users.
"We have put ourselves – nationally and internationally – on the map
with our knowledge of acute hepatitis infection and natural history
thereafter," she says. Page has collaborated with anthropologists and
immunologists in her search for patterns in large data sets. “My work
has been very, very multidisciplinary and trans-disciplinary,” she says.
Her familiarity with different cultures helped as she began research
collaborations across the globe, including Australia, Canada, Brazil,
Cambodia and Thailand. She has trained scientists around the world to
bring aid to rural communities outside the focal points of society. “I
love going out in the field and meeting the people,” she says.
With her successful career and world travels in tow, Page felt she
was being called back to New Mexico. In 2014, she arrived at UNM to head
the Division of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Preventive Medicine.
“Every time I came here, I was like, ‘I really belong here,’” she explains. “I really felt that when I got here.”
Page and her team collaborate with fellow UNM researchers and
physicians as they work with high-risk populations, such as young people
injecting drugs, across the state. Her research has already informed
public policy in Albuquerque, changing the way those at risk of
developing or have developed hepatitis C are being treated – and cured.
"We're not requiring you to become abstinent in order to get
treatment which may save your life,” she explains. “We save your life,
and then maybe you want to take the next (step)."
Page’s successes in the four years since moving to back New Mexico
all seem to lead back to her roots. “I'm just back home, you know,” she
says. “That dirt's in my DNA."
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