Team Members
- Ted Radovich, PhD
- Jane Chung-Do, DrPH, MPH
- Ilima Ho-Lastimosa, MSW
Research Project Description
Before Western colonization, Native Hawaiians were documented as being healthy people with a robust food system. Shaped by island geography, Native Hawaiians practiced the ahupua’a system, which is a wedge-shaped area of land running from the mountain to the sea, following the natural boundaries of the watershed. Each ahupua’a contained the resources for food, including fish, salt, vegetables, fruit, and other plants. With Western colonization came the privatization of land, mass plantations, and militarization that obliterated this traditional and sustainable food system.
Today, Native Hawaiians are 130% more likely to die from diabetes and 68% more likely to die from heart disease compared to the State average. Native Hawaiians also tend to live in rural communities, which tend to have less healthy food outlets. Currently, the team is working on a pilot study to develop an intervention that merges modern technology of aquaponics to restore Native Hawaiian traditional food practices and systems. Aquaponics combines hydroponics and aquaculture to create a contained, sustainable, food production system that mimics the traditional Native Hawaiian ahupu’a system.
This research project proposes, through a delayed randomized control trial, to expand and refine the initial intervention of using aquaponics and to evaluate whether learning and maintaining backyard aquaponics systems promotes health and reduces obesity risks among Native Hawaiian families. The findings from this study will be useful to Native Hawaiian organizations, practitioners, and policymakers in Hawai‘i and beyond to formulate policies and programming to eliminate the disproportionate impact of social determinants of health and chronic disease on Native Hawaiians and other indigenous peoples.
Team Members
Ted Radovich, PhD
Ted Radovich is principle investigator of the sustainable and organic farming systems laboratory at the University of Hawai’i, Mānoa. He investigates links between ecological farming practices, yield, and crop quality. Ted coordinates multiple programs, including the Waimānalo Learning Center, featuring 4 acres of certified organic land and an aquaponics facility.
Jane Chung-Do, DrPH, MPH
Jane Chung-Do is an Associate Professor with the University of Hawai‘i Office of Public Health Studies in the Social and Behavior Health Sciences specialization. Her research interests focus on enhancing youth and family wellness in rural and minority communities through culturally-based programming and community-based participatory research.
Ilima Ho-Lastimosa, MSW
Ilima Ho-Lastimosa is a believer of Wholistic Health and Wellness. She is a practitioner of Traditional Hawaiian and Chinese Medicine. She is the community coordinator at the Waimanalo Learning Center, Director of Operations at Godʻs Country Waimanalo, and brings hands-on learning opportunities to the community.