Bachelor of Science in Public Health

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É«É«À²'s Bachelor of Science in Public Health will prepare you to focus on primary prevention of population health issues in community settings, like what was experienced with the COVID-19 public health pandemic, the current opioid crisis, or other issues like gun violence, substance use disorder, disease prevention, environmental health issues, and many other health-related issues.

Support structure

Our program utilizes a cohort model, where you go through the entire program with same group. You'll find yourself instantly part of a team with a built-in support network. Our classes are small, which means you'll get plenty of one-on-one interaction with your faculty and advisors.

Career preparation

The curriculum is built on and fits national health education certification standards. You will be prepared to sit for the exam during your senior year.

Public health is a growing field that addresses health at a population level. It's different from clinical medicine that focuses on individual patients or clients.

Public health looks at groups of people to understand widespread health issues and develop interventions to improve  health.

The É«É«À² Bachelor of Science in Public Health has recently been identified by  as being one of the top 25 undergraduate public health programs in the country, and only one of two Michigan-based universities being recognized on the list.

Curriculum

You must complete 81 credit hours in the public health program: 51 core credits, 12 cognate credits and 18 credits in an emphasis area. The BSPH curriculum sequencing chart illustrates your pathway through these requirements. É«É«À² also works closely with most community colleges in Michigan, providing a clear public health transfer path directly from community college to É«É«À². Here is one example. 

 

    Curriculum Sequence    

 

Real-world experience

Real-world experience is built into the public health curriculum at É«É«À². Our majors have worked in public health departments and non-profit agencies while in school, so by the time you graduate, you’ll have hundreds of hours of practical public health experience on your resume.

Because of that real-world experience, our graduates often compete with MPH grads in today’s job market.

Recently, seven of our public health students were welcomed to share communication plans that address current public health topics with epidemiologist, Kim Kutzko, at the Kalamazoo County Health & Community Services Department. To read more about what the students did in this great opportunity, please follow the link: Bridging academia and public health: A semester of collaboration | É«É«À² Michigan University.

Professional development

The bachelor’s degree in public health at É«É«À² is focused on your professional development. Because our cohorts are small, we are able to find and provide funding opportunities to support your professional growth. We believe that part of that process involves presenting your research at state and national conferences.

This kind of engagement is often reserved for students in master’s degree programs. At É«É«À² it’s available for you.

Here's one example

International perspective

É«É«À²â€™s B.S. in Public Health will take you places. Our faculty have lived, taught or worked in different countries around the world, from Europe to Africa to Central America.

Knowing how public health works around the world helps us teach an international perspective on public health here at É«É«À². We offer several study abroad opportunities so that you can see firsthand how public health concepts play out globally. One such travel abroad opportunity is a 3-week immersion into exploring public health and healthcare systems in South Africa taught by one of our public health professors.

Study abroad at CHHS

Presidential Scholar Recipient

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Logan West is a senior in É«É«À²â€™s Bachelor of Science in Public Health program. Her academic interests include maternal & child health, nutrition/food security, and public policy. She has devoted much of her undergraduate work to child nutrition-related research and projects. She has attended É«É«À² for four years and has experienced the benefits of the community firsthand through her position as a Student Ambassador for the College of Health & Human Services.

She intends to pursue a career in health policy to support creating healthy communities that can be sustained for future generations and to advocate for health equity.

This annual event honors É«É«À² Michigan University's outstanding undergraduate students. The Presidential Scholars are chosen by the faculty on the basis of academic and/or artistic excellence in their major programs, as well as their overall promise of success.