tailieunhanh - Public Health Education in the United States: Then and Now

Both arts and sciences and public health should share in fostering and developing an educated citizenry. Such citizens should be able to recognize the spectrum of global health challenges and exercise intellectual and practical skills in response. As LEAP recommends, well-educated citizens ought to be prepared to accept personal and social responsibility and demonstrate capacity to synthesize, integrate, and apply their learning. The fields of public health offer intrinsically interesting subjects of study while enabling students to address vital social issues and to do so with an awareness of world context. An integrative, intentionally designed study of. | 39 Public Health Reviews Vol. 33 No 1 39-65 Public Health Education in the United States Then and Now Linda Rosenstock MD MPH 1 Karen Helsing MHS 2 Barbara K. Rimer DrPH MPH3 ABSTRACT It was against a background of no formal career path for public health officers that in 1915 the seminal Welch-Rose Report1 outlined a system of public health education for the United States. The first schools of public health soon followed but growth was slow with only 12 schools by 1960. With organization and growing numbers accreditation became an expectation. As the mission of public health has grown and achieved new urgency schools have grown in number depth and breadth. By mid-2011 there were 46 accredited schools of public health with more in the pipeline. While each has a unique character they also must possess certain core characteristics to be accredited. Over time as schools developed and concepts of public health expanded so too did curricula and missions as well as types of people who were trained. In this review we provide a brief summary of US public health education with primary emphasis on professional public health schools. We also examine public health workforce needs and evaluate how education is evolving in the context of a growing maturity of the public health profession. We have not focused on programs not schools that offer public health degrees or on preventive medicine programs in schools of medicine since schools of public health confer the majority of master s and doctoral degrees. In the future there likely will be even more inter-professional education new disciplinary perspectives and changes in teaching and learning to meet the needs of millennial students. Key Words Public health practice education public health professional methods public health professional standards financing government public health manpower Recommended Citation Rosenstock L Helsing K Rimer BK. Public Health Education in the United States Then and Now. Public Health Reviews. 2011 .

crossorigin="anonymous">
Đã phát hiện trình chặn quảng cáo AdBlock
Trang web này phụ thuộc vào doanh thu từ số lần hiển thị quảng cáo để tồn tại. Vui lòng tắt trình chặn quảng cáo của bạn hoặc tạm dừng tính năng chặn quảng cáo cho trang web này.