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USC Keck and SSI Launch new GeoHealth Track in Online Public Health Program

The University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine is proud to announce the launch of its GeoHealth track as part of the Master of Public Health online program. This specialty, the first of its kind, will begin accepting applications for the Fall 2014 term.

“We are particularly excited to be the pioneers in offering this specialized education opportunity to the public health community,” said Dr. Shubha Kumar, program director. “Public Health practitioners increasingly recognize the value Geographic Information Systems can add in developing effective frameworks for action in local, national, and regional contexts. The courses offered in the GeoHealth track along with practicum opportunities will allow students passionate about improving public health to make a unique and lasting impact in their communities and the world.”

Geographic information systems is one of the various areas of employment that students enrolled in USC’s Master of Public Health online program can now pursue. Dating back as early as the 1850s, the geospatial sciences helped create the foundation of public health. They continue to be of importance today, especially as technologies become more sophisticated and the data they deliver become more critical to research and decision making.

USC’s online Master of Public Health with a track in GeoHealth prepares students to better understand how geographic and social characteristics affect health and well-being. The program is built upon five foundation courses in public health, an elective and a practicum. These core courses focus on concepts such as health education and promotion, health services delivery in the U.S., biostatistics, epidemiology, environmental health and occupational health.

In addition to the foundation courses, students will complete four concentration courses through the top-ranked USC Spatial Sciences Institute. “The groundbreaking collaboration between the Keck School of Medicine and the Spatial Sciences Institute is what makes the GeoHealth specialization curriculum unique, robust, and dynamic,” said Dr. Mark Todd, associate provost for academic affairs. To develop their skills and knowledge as spatially-enabled public health leaders, students explore how different geographical contexts shape health outcomes, trends and inequalities. The courses are led by faculty members who teach geographic information science and technology (GIST) and cover topics in spatial thinking, spatial analysis, spatial modeling, remote sensing for GIS, cartography and visualization.

The GeoHealth track can be particularly valuable to individuals currently working or interested in working in government agencies at the local, state and federal levels, as well as research institutions and nonprofit organizations.

For more information about the curriculum or the program requirements of The University of Southern California’s online Master of Public Health with a specialization in GeoHealth, visit mphdegree.usc.edu.

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