Public Health
Degrees and Certificates
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Public Health, Bachelor of Science (BS) -
Public Health, Master of Public Health (MPH)
Courses
PHE2001: Introduction to Public Health
Credits 4.0PHE3001: Legal and Ethical Issues in Public Health
Credits 4.0PHE3025: Research Methods in Public Health
Credits 4.0PHE3040: Healthcare Law
Credits 4.0This course presents an overview of the legal issues facing the health care and public health industry. The course provides students with a basic working knowledge of health law with a comprehensive review of a wide variety of health care and public health legal issues.
PHE3050: Public Health Policy
Credits 4.0This course presents an overview of the public policy facing the health care industry. The course provides students with a basic working knowledge of health policy with a comprehensive review of a wide variety of policy making, policy analysis, economic, and insurance issues.
PHE3070: Medical and Public Health Informatics
Credits 4.0PHE4015: Introduction to Global Health
Credits 4.0PHE4030: Foundation of Health Communication
Credits 4.0PHE4055: Public Health Planning and Evaluation
Credits 4.0This course explores the basic concepts and theories relating to health program planning and program evaluation. Topics may include community health assessment, program theory, and program implementation and evaluation.
PHE4070: Management and Administration of Public Health Systems
Credits 4.0PHE4095: Special Topics in Public Health
Credits 4.0PHE4120: Health Disparities and Minority Health
Credits 4.0PHE4200: Capstone in Public Health
Credits 4.0PHE5000: Public Health Foundations
Credits 4.0This course introduces Public Health theories and practices. Students explore the evolution of contemporary Public Health systems and how those systems partner with healthcare systems. The course also explores and discusses Public Health principles, concepts, missions, current concerns, and values.
PHE5001: Social and Behavioral Aspects of Public Health
Credits 4.0The course provides an overview of social and behavioral issues related to public health practice. An examination of theories, concepts and models from various social and behavioral disciplines used in public health research and practice will be explored. Students will also gain an understanding of the areas of cultural competence, levels of prevention, and core competencies of public health throughout this course.
PHE5005: Introduction to Health Services and Research
Credits 4.0PHE5010: Environmental and Occupational Health
Credits 4.0This course is a study of the major environmental and occupational factors that contribute to the development of health problems in industrialized and developed countries.
PHE5015: Principles of Epidemiology
Credits 4.0This course is a study of epidemiological methods to evaluate the patterns and determinants of health and diseases in populations.
PHE5020: Biostatistical Methods
Credits 4.0This course provides a problem-based understanding and application of parametric statistical assessments in the area of public health practice, as well as exposure to more advanced methodologies such as ANOVA, linear and multiple regression methods, and categorical response variable analysis. Students will utilize statistical software to perform basic and advanced analyses.
PHE6201: Public Health Policy Research
Credits 4.0This course is an analysis of current research in health policy including the history of issues, arguments for various positions, and the development of frameworks to enable development of positions on the issues.
PHE6202: Program Planning and Evaluation
Credits 4.0This course provides a foundation for program planning and evaluation in public health. It provides basic planning principles, processes, and methods, and encourages a multi-disciplinary approach integrating the use of theory and practice.
PHE6203: Public Health Informatics
Credits 4.0PHE6206: Global Community Health
Credits 4.0In this course, students will analyze major health issues impacting communities worldwide, including communicable and non-communicable diseases, as well as the global burden of disease. Students will gain insight into the social, economic, and environmental determinants shaping health outcomes and health inequities across the globe. They will learn to design culturally sensitive disease prevention interventions at all levels of prevention. Additionally, students will compare the U.S. Public Health and healthcare systems with those in other international settings. In the realm of global health leadership, students will examine how leaders advocate for policies and programs that advance global health. The course also emphasizes the One Health approach, which acknowledges the interconnectedness of human, animal, and environmental health, and the impacts of climate change on all three.
PHE6210: Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Credits 4.0This course provides skills and strategies for the development and implementation of health promotion and health education programs in various environments. Emphasis will be placed on how identification of risk factors, lifestyle, and behavior changes can promote positive healthy behaviors and prevent disease among individuals, groups, and communities.
PHE6220: Evidence-based Public Health Practice
Credits 4.0Strategies will be presented for locating and utilizing scientific evidence to make programmatic and health policy decisions. Application of principles of scientific reasoning and systematic uses of data and information systems will be emphasized.
PHE6250: Case Studies in Public Health
Credits 4.0Ecological approaches frame how prevention, control, health promotion, protection and emergency measures protect the public's health. Current topics may include health disparity, cultural competence, genomics, workforce planning, credentialing, and media communication.
PHE6402: Public Health Law and Ethics
Credits 4.0The course explores the basic legal and ethical foundations of the public health legal system and examines the relationships among public health, the constitution, economics and human rights.
PHE6404: Grant and Contract Proposal Writing in Public Health
Credits 4.0This course examines the strategies and execution of grant and proposal writing as well as contract administration in the public health sectors. Topics may include research into funding sources, use of prospectus documents, preparation competitive proposals for grants and contracts, and peer review. Students will engage in all aspects of grant and proposal writing, including how to efficiently and effectively describe research and program design, outcomes, objectives and methodology, data management, evaluation, and budget development applied to the preparation of an actual proposal. Students will also examine the contract administrative responsibilities resulting from successful grants and contracts, including monitoring and reporting program and fiscal data.
PHE6980: Practicum in Public Health
Credits 4.0This course is a practical application of program knowledge, skills, and abilities to a real-world public health setting. The practicum involves placement of the student in a non-academic setting in the area where the student lives. The placement cannot be in the same department in which the student currently works and cannot assume the same role as the student currently works. Government agencies, community organizations, businesses, public health organizations, and social service agencies are all examples of the kinds of placements that would be appropriate. The student is expected to work with the agency/organization a minimum of twelve (12) hours a week for a minimum of 10 weeks and a minimum of 120 contact hours. In addition, the student is expected to maintain close contact with his/her faculty member as well as a preceptor from the agency/organization. The student is to write a report of his/her experience, describing the nature and operation of the placement setting, detailing his/her activities, responsibilities, and interactions with other individuals, and any public health insights gained from the experience. Where the student is given an issue or problem by the placement supervisor, its nature and outcome should also be included in the report, along with the methods used to address the issue or problem.