The course, offered by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, presents an overview of major elements of global public health. Through a series of lectures and short discussions, the course provides students an introduction to key elements of the history, development, organization, technical content and socio-political context of major initiatives and programs. The course frames these specific global health initiatives in the context of the origins of International and Global Health, the research to program continuum, concluding with a review of major paradigm shifts in global health financing, technologies and leadership.
Saving Lives Millions at a Time: Global Disease Control Policies & Programs
Johns Hopkins University via Coursera
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Overview
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Syllabus
- What is Global Health? Eras of
Engagement in International Health
- Quantifying Global Burden of Disease:
Using Data to Prioritize Investment in Health
- Disease Eradication – Lessons from
Smallpox and Polio
- From Bench to Bedside – The Prioritization,
Development and Implementation of New Vaccines
- Maternal, Newborn and Child Health: The
RMNCH Continuum and Global Health
- Field Research to Policy – Moving evidence
into implementation
- Epidemiologic Transitions – from Infectious
to Chronic Disease
- Programs for behavior change: The Fight
against Global Tobacco
- Global “Environmental” Health - Climate change, Pathogens, Changing
Risk
- The Changing “Big Picture” of Global Health: Financing, Technology and
Leadership
Taught by
Alain Labrique