Public Health (PH)
101.
Introduction to Population Health.
(3)
Introduction to Population Health provides a population perspective on the multi-level (ecologic) determinants of health, disease and injury; the programs, policies and services that protect and promote health and prevent disease; and the analytic tools used by population health professionals.
Meets New Mexico General Education Curriculum Area 4: Social and Behavioral Sciences.
102.
Global Health Challenges and Responses.
(3)
Global health is concerned with developing theories and methods to understand the roots of social, economic, political and environmental determinants of health, with a focus on the nature of health inequalities across the world.
Meets New Mexico General Education Curriculum Area 4: Social and Behavioral Sciences.
201.
Population Health Biology.
(3)
Introduction to biological disease basis, including cellular, physiological, genetic, immunologic, and environmental determinants. Pathologic mechanisms and host susceptibility for infectious and non-infectious diseases of population health importance including disease prevention/control delivered in a team-based format.
Prerequisite: BIOL 1110 or BIOL 1140 or BIOL 2110C or BIOL 2210 or BIOL 2305.
221.
Population Health: Introduction to Social, Cultural, Behavioral Theory.
(3)
Examine and apply social, cultural, and behavioral theories and models that inform and strengthen population health practice. Theories are used to diagnose health and social problems and plan interventions to improve the public's health.
Prerequisite: 101 and 102.
230.
Introduction to Environmental and Occupational Health.
(3)
Environmental and occupational health and safety; including regulatory processes, compliance, pollution prevention, drinking water, wastewater management, solid/hazardous waste, air quality, food protection, zoonotic and vector-borne disease control, radiation, injury prevention.
Prerequisite: 101 and 102.
240.
Health Systems, Services and Policies.
(3)
Increase the analytical capacity and critical thinking in regards to the US health system, services and related policies. Reinforce the students¿ sense of social responsibility and further their understanding of population health approaches.
Prerequisite: 101 and 102.
241.
Fundamentals of Health Care Finance.
(3)
Introduction to health care finance for Population Health students. The course will introduce basic concepts of health care finance: access, affordability, quality, and portability.
Prerequisite: 101 and 102.
260.
Special Topics.
(1-3 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
Topics in population health that are not covered in the existing curriculum that are mutually agreed upon by students and faculty. May be repeated for credit provided the subject matter varies.
310.
Population Health Research Methods.
(3)
Foundational understanding of scientific paradigms, approaches, methods and designs on population health research; definitions of health research problems at population, community, social group, system and service levels; and ethical procedures.
Prerequisite: 201 and 221 and 230 and 240 and 241 and 311.
311.
Essentials of Epidemiology: The Language of Population Health.
(3)
Introduction to analytic tools and methods used to quantify population health problems. Epidemiologists monitor, quantify and map disease, and critically assess the impact of medical treatments and population health interventions.
Prerequisite: MATH 1350.
350.
Health Data Systems.
(3)
Introduces population health data systems in clinical and public health settings including electronic health records, data standards, legal aspects of health information, coding, and reimbursement. Big healthcare data sources will be explored.
Prerequisite: 201 and 221 and 230 and 240 and 241 and 311.
360.
Population Health Management.
(3)
Examine policies and interventions regarding population health outcomes. Methods to predict patient risk and engagement. Quality and safety strategies and benchmarks, and information technology for use in population health management decision support.
Prerequisite: 221 and 311.
375.
Population Health Field Experience.
(1-3 to a maximum of 3 Δ)
This course helps students strengthen professional population health skills in settings other than those in which they are employed and would benefit from working with or shadowing a professional in a community or clinical setting.
Offered on a CR/NC basis only.
Prerequisite: 101 and 102.
420.
Population Health Evidenced-Based Practices.
(3)
Introduces students to core concepts in population-based primary and secondary prevention strategies for population health issues. Students will critically examine evidence-based guidelines used to informed population health interventions.
Prerequisite: 221.
421.
Assessment and Planning.
(3)
Describe and apply assessment and planning processes to determine priorities for population health interventions. Provide overview of planning and development of population health interventions from a systems perspective, with attention to evidence-based, theoretical, and ethical approaches.
Prerequisite: 420.
422.
Program Evaluation.
(3)
Describe and apply the implementation/management and evaluation processes for population health interventions. Provides an overview of the implementation and evaluation of population health interventions from a systems perspective.
Prerequisite: 421.
460.
Special Topics in Population Health.
(1-3 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
Variable topics in population health provides students to work with faculty on topics that are not part of the curriculum.
475.
Population Health Capstone.
(6)
Provides an opportunity to earn credit hours (1-class, 5-field) through an experiential population health issue in a clinical or public health venue. This facilitates integration of classroom learning and practical experience during the Capstone.
Offered on a CR/NC basis only.
Prerequisite: 421.
493.
Population Health Independent Study.
(1-6 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
Students work individually with faculty members on projects with individual supervision.
Prerequisite: 101 and 102.
Restriction: permission of advisor.
501.
Determinants and Equity in Public Health.
(4)
Concepts of public health related to determinants of health; cultural, social and political concepts of disease; disease prevention; health promotion, including individual behavior change and community based intervention; health policy.
Restriction: admitted to M.P.H. Public Health.
502.
Epidemiology and Biostatistics I.
(4)
Provides an overview of the methods of epidemiologic research. Designed to provide students with the capability of understanding epidemiologic measures of disease occurrence, interpreting the findings of epidemiologic studies and integrating the results of epidemiologic research into public health practice.
Prerequisite: MATH 1350 with a grade of "B" or better.
Co-requisite: 538.
503.
Epidemiology and Biostatistics II.
(3, may be repeated twice Δ)
Provides a good understanding of the principles and methods involved in the design, conduct, analysis and interpretation of epidemiologic research.
Prerequisite: 502 with a grade of "B" or better and 538 with a grade of "B" or better.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
506.
Environmental-Occupational Health.
(2)
Applies the public health perspective to environmental and occupational disease. Students will learn to apply the ecologic principles of agent, host and environment to diseases associated with exposures to the physical environment and chemical contaminants.
Prerequisite: 501.
507.
Health Care Systems.
(3)
Provides an overview of how health care is delivered in the United States. A wide variety of delivery and payment methods are examined. In addition, the U.S. health care delivery systems will be compared to Native American, U.S. Mexican Border, Canadian and Cuban systems. Core option for students admitted any year; required for students year 2000 and later.
510.
Public Health and Health Care Management.
(3)
This course will examine the history and organization of the U.S. Healthcare System and will focus on the core functions in public health healthcare management. The role and elements of professionalism and ethics will be integrated throughout the course.
513.
Public Health Seminar.
(0-1 to a maximum of 3 Δ)
A graduate seminar and journal club focusing on a wide range of PH topics. Speakers present original research. Journal club guides students to critically assess literature. Two semesters required for credit.
Prerequisite: 502.
524.
Social Epidemiology.
(2)
Social Epidemiology provides students with principles and methods of design, conduct analysis, and interpretation of epidemiologic research using a social epidemiology approach.
Prerequisite: 502 with a grade of "B" or better.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
528.
Infectious Disease Epidemiology.
(2)
Learn basic epidemiological principles of infectious diseases. Learn and understand the multiple factors associated with spread of infectious agents within populations and development, application and evaluation of control measures to stop or prevent transmission.
Prerequisite: 502.
531.
Perinatal Epidemiology.
(2)
Review of a wide range of topics central to perinatal epidemiology. Highlighted topics will include conception and early fetal loss, design issues in studies of adverse reproductive outcomes and epidemiologic aspects and public health approaches to prevention of congenital malformation.
Prerequisite: 502.
533.
Public Health Research Methods.
(3)
Quantitative, qualitative and mixed methods of applying and understanding the scientific inquiry used in health and social sciences research. Identify health-related problems and formulate questions that can be translated into sound research designs.
534.
Epidemiology Data Analysis.
(3)
Students will learn how to conduct a careful epidemiologic data analysis. The focus of the course is developing the practical and critical thinking skills to conduct an epidemiologic data analysis. This course is required for epidemiology concentration students.
Prerequisite: 537 and 539.
537.
Advanced Epidemiology Methods.
(3, may be repeated once Δ)
This course is designed to provide students with a greater depth of knowledge of the principles and methods central to the design, conduct, analysis, and interpretation of epidemiologic work.
Prerequisite: 502 and 538.
Restriction: permission of advisor.
538.
Epidemiology and Biostatistics Lab [Epidemiology and Biostatistics Workshop].
(2 [1])
Covers basic statistical methods including statistical summaries and inference. Methods of summarizing data include graphical displays and numerical summaries. Statistical inference includes hypothesis testing and confidence intervals. Methods for continuous and categorical data are studied.
Prerequisite: MATH 1220 with a grade of "B" or better.
Co-requisite: 502
539.
Advanced Biostatistics.
(3)
Covers basic models used in the statistical analysis of studies in the medical sciences and public health field, with an emphasis on epidemiology. Linear regression, analysis of variance, logistic regression, and survival models are studied.
Prerequisite: 502 and 538.
552.
Interventions for Health Equity.
(3, may be repeated twice Δ)
An exploration of rational health planning methods. Methods will be applied in the development of a health program plan within a social context where public health planning actually occurs. Involves the development of a realistic program plan addressing a health-related problem and writing a proposal for funding.
554.
Health Policy, Politics and Social Equity.
(3)
Provides students with understanding of factors within and outside of health care system. Reviews social policy in addressing coverage of uninsured, improving population health and reducing social inequities. Examination of frameworks and politics of policy programs.
555.
Public Health Evaluation Methods.
(3)
Introduces students to the language and theory of program evaluation to undertake their own evaluation design: how to pose evaluation research questions; data collection methodologies available to them; how to make decisions about appropriate data collection methods for different types of evaluation objectives.
556.
Community Participatory-Based Research.
(2-3)
Presents historical background, underlying assumptions, principles and steps for conducting CBPR. Introduces indigenous and decolonizing theories and methodologies of CBPR. Develops perspective on roles of culture, race, gender, and power in academic-community research partnerships.
560.
Special Topics in Public Health.
(1-6 to a maximum of 30 Δ)
564.
Public Health and Health Care Communication.
(3)
Communication for health and social change is a process of public/private communication through which people define who they are, what they need, and how to get what they need in order to improve their lives.
579.
New Mexico Border Health: U.S. - Mexico Border Migration and Latino Health.
(2)
Gives students applied understanding of public health disparities, equity challenges, and assets in the U.S.-Mexico border region. Community-based learning via site visit to border region with Web-CT enhanced instruction.
582.
Global Indigenous Health.
(3)
Course integrates physical, cultural, social, political, intellectual and emotional wellbeing of Indigenous populations globally. It examines health as a collective and individual inter-generational continuum that links to health status, practices, data, equity, policy and systems.
583.
Advanced Topics in Health Sector and Globalization.
(3, may be repeated once Δ)
The course will follow a seminar format to analyze the U.S. health sector reform debate and legislation submitted to Congress while using other country experiences to highlight similarities and differences/pros and cons.
Restriction: permission of advisor.
593.
Independent Studies.
(1-3, no limit Δ)
Students work individually with faculty members on projects with individual supervision.
595.
Introduction to Public Health Integrative Experience.
(1)
Introduction and preparation for PH 597 Public Health Integrative Experience. Students will evaluate and define the public health status and needs of a community. Preparation for construction and evaluation of interventions in PH 597.
Restriction: admitted to M.P.H. Public Health.
596.
Professional Paper.
(1-3 to a maximum of 3 Δ)
The professional paper allows the student to engage in analyzing or solving a real public health problem.
597.
Public Health Integrative Experience.
(2)
One of three options for Culminating Experience. Students will conduct a computer-based systematic review of the epidemiologic and health intervention literature, perform epi data analysis and apply other planning and evaluation techniques to develop a prevention plan for a New Mexico population.
Restriction: admitted to M.P.H. Public Health.
598.
Public Health Practicum.
(1-6 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
Individually arranged field experience to develop and refine professional public health skills.
Offered on a CR/NC basis only.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
599.
Master's Thesis.
(1-6 to a maximum of 6 Δ)
Offered on a CR/NC basis only.
Restriction: permission of instructor.
699.
Doctoral Dissertation.
(3-12, no limit Δ)
Faculty-supervised investigative study that results in the development and writing of a doctoral dissertation
Offered on a CR/NC basis only.