Department of Public Health
Faculty
Valerie Leiter, Professor and Chair of Public Health and Director of the Bachelor's Program in Public Health
Leigh Haynes, Associate Professor of Practice and Director of the Master of Public Health Program
Kristen Brewer, Assistant Professor
Edima Ottoho, Associate Professor of Practice
Dawna M. Thomas, Professor
Dolores Wolongevicz, Associate Professor of Practice and Director of the Health Professions Education Program
Overview
This department provides a unique and challenging educational experience for students who wish to combine an interdisciplinary liberal arts education with a specialty focus on public health. The major provides conceptual foundations and empirical bases for analyzing the interplay between science, society, and health, and prepares students for a variety of public health careers. Undergraduate majors also have the option to pursue accelerated programs toward graduate students in public health or nutrition. The minor provides students with an opportunity to augment their specialty education with this broad perspective. There is a rising demand for public health professionals, due to increased global concerns regarding infectious and chronic disease epidemiology, food and water safety, sanitation, and environmental health issues as well as health inequities. Public health professionals have excellent employment prospects, as researchers, community health workers, and health program managers.
Learning Outcomes
The Public Health department has identified the following essential public health domains as learning outcomes for our undergraduate majors. The program addresses:
- The history and philosophy of public health as well as its core values, concepts and functions across the globe and in society
- The basic concepts, methods, and tools of public health data collection, use and analysis and why evidence-based approaches are an essential part of public health practice
- The concepts of population health, and the basic processes, approaches and interventions that identify and address the major health-related needs and concerns of populations
- The underlying science of human health and disease including opportunities for promoting and protecting health across the life course
- The cultural, socioeconomic, behavioral, biological, environmental and other factors that impact human health and contribute to health disparities
- The fundamental concepts and features of project implementation, including planning, assessment and evaluation
- The fundamental characteristics and organizational structures of the U.S. health system as well as to the differences between systems in other countries
- The basic concepts of legal, ethical, economic, and regulatory dimensions of health care and public health policy and the roles, influences, and responsibilities of the different agencies and branches of government
- The basic concepts of public health-specific communication, including technical and professional writing and the use of mass media and electronic technology
- The concepts and applications of basic statistics
- The foundations of biological and life sciences
Departmental Honors
A graduating senior in the department of Public Health can earn Department Honors based on either one of the following criteria:
- A cumulative GPA of 3.7 or above and successfully completed a thesis
- A cumulative GPA of 3.7 or above and undertaken significant engagement with service to public health, beyond the required credit-bearing service-learning courses and internships