Global Health ConcentrationThe Global Health Concentration prepares students to confront complex issues primarily impacting resource-poor populations around the world. Understanding and confronting global health issues often requires transdisciplinary approaches that integrate multiple sectors working together for creative solutions. Strategies focus on vulnerable groups such as pregnant and lactating women, infants, young children, adolescents, internally displaced persons, refugees, persons with disabilities and older adults. The concentration provides students with knowledge about major infectious and chronic diseases, as well as other health conditions. Students learn to deconstruct and analyze mainstream development discourse and develop a context-specific understanding of the root causes that lead to health outcomes. Students also create program and policy solutions to address global health problems. Graduates are prepared for careers in multilateral organizations, the United States federal government, and nongovernmental organizations based in the U.S. and abroad. Concentration Requirements: 15 Credits Global Health Transdisciplinary Problem Solving (TPS) course* Policy, Politics and Power in Global Health One elective course* MPH practicum (global health-focused) *Select from a list of pre-approved courses related to global health TPS course options include: TPS: Global Hunger & Undernutrition TPS: Implementing Public Health Interventions in Developing Countries (taught abroad) TPS: International Family Planning and Reproductive Health TPS: Protection of Women and Children in Humanitarian Settings Global Health-focused electives include: International Social Development Theory Global Anti-Poverty Interventions Development Practice in International Settings Global Burden of Disease International Child Welfare Practicum The MPH program requires 360 hours of practicum. Students in the Global Health concentration must complete their practicum experience in a low- or middle-income, international setting. Students who enter the concentration with at least 1 year of experience in a low- or middle-income, international setting may pursue their global health-focused practicum within a high-income setting (e.g., USAID in Washington, D.C.) that has been approved as a Core Affiliated Site. International Center for Child Health and Development (ICHAD) at the Brown School Maji Safi Group – Tanzania Vitendo4Africa E3 Nutrition Lab (Dr. Lora Iannotti) Concentration ChairAssociate Professor of Practice Jessica Levy investigates how to best measure and operationalize the ways in which gender dynamics influence global health and development. Currently, her work is based in Jordan on a project that aims to improve gender equality and family planning outcomes. Featured Graduate“The specialization equipped me with the conceptual frameworks I need to understand complex global health issues. Everything we learned about balancing theory with practice, prioritizing ethics, centering community perspectives, and thinking about global health issues in a transdisciplinary way is directly relevant to the work I’m doing right now.”—Aishwarya Nagar, MPH ’19, Research Associate, Iris Group, Inc.
Global Health ConcentrationThe Global Health Concentration prepares students to confront complex issues primarily impacting resource-poor populations around the world. Understanding and confronting global health issues often requires transdisciplinary approaches that integrate multiple sectors working together for creative solutions. Strategies focus on vulnerable groups such as pregnant and lactating women, infants, young children, adolescents, internally displaced persons, refugees, persons with disabilities and older adults. The concentration provides students with knowledge about major infectious and chronic diseases, as well as other health conditions. Students learn to deconstruct and analyze mainstream development discourse and develop a context-specific understanding of the root causes that lead to health outcomes. Students also create program and policy solutions to address global health problems. Graduates are prepared for careers in multilateral organizations, the United States federal government, and nongovernmental organizations based in the U.S. and abroad.
Concentration Requirements: 15 Credits Global Health Transdisciplinary Problem Solving (TPS) course* Policy, Politics and Power in Global Health One elective course* MPH practicum (global health-focused) *Select from a list of pre-approved courses related to global health TPS course options include: TPS: Global Hunger & Undernutrition TPS: Implementing Public Health Interventions in Developing Countries (taught abroad) TPS: International Family Planning and Reproductive Health TPS: Protection of Women and Children in Humanitarian Settings Global Health-focused electives include: International Social Development Theory Global Anti-Poverty Interventions Development Practice in International Settings Global Burden of Disease International Child Welfare Practicum The MPH program requires 360 hours of practicum. Students in the Global Health concentration must complete their practicum experience in a low- or middle-income, international setting. Students who enter the concentration with at least 1 year of experience in a low- or middle-income, international setting may pursue their global health-focused practicum within a high-income setting (e.g., USAID in Washington, D.C.) that has been approved as a Core Affiliated Site. International Center for Child Health and Development (ICHAD) at the Brown School Maji Safi Group – Tanzania Vitendo4Africa E3 Nutrition Lab (Dr. Lora Iannotti)