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EPID Course Descriptions

EPID 511    R. Leonard Vance, PhD, JD, CIH

Industrial Hygiene: Hazard Identification and Evaluation
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Basic concepts include identification and evaluation of toxic substances and physical agents in the workplace and in the environment, health effects of chemicals, epidemiology, toxicology, biological monitoring, dermatosis, air sampling and regulatory aspects. Spring semester

 

EPID 512  R. Leonard Vance, PhD, JD, CIH

Industrial Hygiene: Methods of Hazard Control
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Describes methods of control of occupational and environmental hazards including engineering controls, work practices, administrative controls, personal protective equipment, respiratory protection through the use of respirators and ventilation systems. Ergonomic hazards, noise, hot and cold environments, and radiation also will be addressed. Summer semester

 

EPID 521   R. Leonard Vance, PhD, JD, CIH

Regulation of Toxic Substances
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. This course introduces the student to the administrative law and policy issues. This course examines the Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, Resources Conservation & Recovery (RCRA), Federal Facility Compliance Act, Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation & Liability Act (CERCLA-Superfund), Toxic Torts; Real Estate Issues; Recovery of Money Damages; Criminal Law, Occupational & Mine Safety & Health Acts (OSHA/MSHA), Workman's Compensation; Occupational Disease; Victim Compensation, Safe Drinking Water Act; Pollution Prevention Act, Food Drug & Cosmetic Act, RCRA & Superfund Regulations & Case Law; State Hazwaste/Superfund Programs, Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, & Rodenticide Act (FIFRA); Lead Based Paint Poisoning Prevention Act, Radiation Law & Regulation; Transportation, Marine Sanctuaries Act; International Environmental Law. Spring semester

 

EPID 533 Paula Horvatich, PhD

Contemporary Issues in Addiction Prevention and Treatment
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. This course is required for students in the Addiction Studies track of the MPH Program. It will cover important contemporary issues regarding substance addiction, including such items as current theories of prevention interventions, the economics, of addiction treatment, addiction in adolescents, and evidence-based practices for prevention and treatment. Students will hear from a variety of professionals working in the addiction field. Spring semester

 

EPID 541       Mohammad A. Karim, PhD

Principles of Waste Management
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Design and operation of waste treatment, storage, disposal and control processes will be covered. Design tanks, landfills, and incinerators will be discussed in detail. Data acquisition and interpretation methods needed for process control and monitoring will be examined. Spring semester

 

EPID 555    James Cisek, MD, MPH

Bioterrorism and Public Health Preparedness
Semester course; 2 lecture hours. 2 credits. This graduate-level course examines public health, legal, medical and surgical issues related to terrorism examining biological, chemical and radiation agents and the prevention and response efforts of local, state and federal systems and agencies. Understanding of medical terminology or knowledge in public health field preferred. Summer semester

 

EPID 571    Saba Masho, MD, MPH, DrPH  

Principles of Epidemiology
Semester course; 3 lecture. 3 credits. Prerequisite: BIOS 543. The course offers the theoretical foundations, concepts and principles of epidemiological research methods utilized to examine the distribution and determinants of diseases or other health problems. It entails the understanding of measures of disease frequency and association, descriptive and analytic studies, community surveys, sampling, bias, confounding, surveillance, outbreak investigation, screening and research proposal writing. Furthermore, the course provides basic foundations for data analysis and its translation into health care planning, management and policy formulation. Fall semester.

 

EPID 583     R. Leonard Vance, PhD, JD, CIH

Industrial Ventilation
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Principles of design and evaluation of local exhaust systems. Principles of airflow, characteristics of pressure losses, and selection of air cleaners and air moving.

 

EPID 600 C.M.G. Buttery, MD, MPH      
EPID 600 On-Line (summer only)
Link for International Students - American Public Health Systems

Introduction to Public Health
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Describes the public health system in the United States. Explores the disease prevention and philosophy and foundations of public health management, economics, law, ethics and education. Examines the use of epidemiology and statistics to determine personal, environmental, and occupational health problems. Fall semester (classroom) Summer semester (on-line)

 

EPID 602   C.M.G. Buttery, MD, MPH  

Public Health Organization and Management
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. This course addresses management and organizational issues in regards to public health agencies. Students will learn about the different models for structuring public health agencies, personnel management issues, evidence-based public health program planning, financing and budgeting issues.
Fall semester

 

EPID 603   Jack O. Lanier, MHA, DrPH, FACHE

Public Health Policy and Politics
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Provides an understanding of the public health policy development process, the influence of politics and special interest groups on this process, and current governmental policies for the provision of major public health services. The legislative process is a major focus of the course. Spring semester

 

EPID 604   R. Leonard Vance, PhD, JD, CIH

Principles of Occupational and Environmental Health
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Basic principles of occupational and environmental health are presented, with emphasis on biological, chemical, and physical factors that influence human health. Current workplace and public health safety and regulatory issues are emphasized. Fall semester


EPID 605    James May, MD  

Epidemiology of Health Behaviors
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisites: BIOS 543 and EPID 571. Provides an overview of the epidemiology of specific health-related behaviors, the relationships between these behaviors and health outcomes, and available evidence for the effectiveness and appropriateness of various approaches to modification of these behaviors. This material will be covered in the contexts of theories of health-related behavior and of methodological issues concerning the assessment of these behaviors and their relationships to outcomes of interest. The applicability of this material to underserved populations will be emphasized. The course format, as far as possible, will be that of an interactive seminar. Spring semester


EPID 606    Tilahun Adera, MPH, PhD

Epidemiologic Methods II
Semester course; 3 lectures. 3 credits. Prerequisites: BIOS 543 and EPID 571. This course focuses on examining the design, conduct and analysis of major epidemiologic studies and the methods to deal with the problems of bias, confounding, and effect modification; using multivariate modeling techniques focusing on applications of logistic regression and Cox proportional hazards models to answer relevant research questions; solving meta-analytic problems using fixed and random effects models; understanding specific research areas of disease screening and exposure assessment; writing a research paper based on literature review and data analyses of a large data set demonstrating application of essential epidemiologic and biostatistical principles. Spring semester

 

EPID 607     Margaret McLellan, MS, RD, CDE

Methods of Nutritional Epidemiology
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. This course focuses on methods of measuring exposures to dietary factors for epidemiological investigations of diet-disease relationships and risk assessment. An introductory course in basic epidemiology is a prerequisite. Students learn to select the most appropriate method(s) of collecting and analyzing food intake and to evaluate the adequacy of dietary assessment methods used in published epidemiological studies. Spring semester

 

EPID 608    Charles O’Keeffe, MBA

Politics and Policy Planning for Addiction
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. This course is designed to provide students of differing backgrounds with an understanding of the process by which national addiction health policy is formed and reformed using controlled pharmaceutical products development examples. The course will examine competing interests of the three branches of government as that policy is formed and the interplay of those interests during the process.
Spring semester


EPID 610     Shelley Harris, PhD

Environmental and Occupational Epidemiology
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisites: BIOS 543 and EPID 571. This course is designed to provide students with an overview of the principles, methods and content of environmental and occupational epidemiology with a focus on designing, conducting, and interpreting studies on the effects of chemical and physical agents. Students will critique published occupational and environmental epidemiology studies, learn how to evaluate the potential for cause-effect relationships, and become familiar with the role of epidemiology in human health risk assessment. Each session will include a seminar component where exercises are completed and/or published papers will be critiqued and discussed. Summer semester

 

EPID 615     Jack O. Lanier, MHA, DrPH, FACHE

Public Health Issues and Interventions in Communities of Color
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. This course is an overview of many critical psychological, social, cultural, demographic, biological, and other factors that influence lifestyle and disease susceptibility among minority status ethnic groups and other medically underserved populations in the United States. A lecture/discussion seminar format will be used, along with readings, student presentations and guest lecturers working in the field, to: (1) improve the students' understanding of the underpinnings of health status differences across communities; and (2) provide students with tools that can be used in developing effective interventions to address the misdistribution of health risk behavior and disease burden. Fall semester

 

EPID 616    Staff

Public Health Education
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Provides the student with an examination of theory and practice of public health education. This examination represents an overview of selected topics that are congruent to the Responsibilities and Competencies for Entry-Level Health Educators. Specifically, course content will be centered around assessing individual and community needs for health education programs, coordinating provision of health education services, acting as a resource person in health education, and communicating health and health education needs, concerns, and resources. Spring semester

 

EPID 617 Staff

International Health
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. The overall objective of the MPH course in International Health is to draw on the knowledge, skills, and experiences from a variety of disciplines to define, critically assess, and identify global health issues to target for prevention efforts. Students who take this course will be exposed to international health professionals who will share information relative to the broad arena of worldwide health issues. Fall semester

 

EPID 618     Rene S. Cabral-Daniels, JD, MPH

Public Health Law
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Provides the student with the structure of the legal system and statutes and regulations governing state and local health departments. This course examines the federal public health laws, medical malpractice, privacy and confidentiality issues, mental health laws, abortion and sterilization, patients rights, emergency medical care law, human experimentation, rights of the terminally ill, AIDS law, occupational and environmental health law, and health planning and reimbursement law.
Summer semester

 

EPID 619    Aleta L. Meyer, PhD

Intentional Injury
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Examines the number, distribution, and impact of intentional injuries in the United States, as well as some of the crucial psychological, social, cultural, demographic, economic, biological, and other factors associated with their cause, control, and prevention. Through lectures and dialogue, expert panels, student presentations, reading, and other assignments, students are expected to become acquainted with theory and research findings from the behavioral sciences, behavioral epidemiology, public health, and other sources that are likely to contribute to: (1) a greater comprehension of the magnitude and complexities of violence and intentional injuries in American life and (2) advancements in our capacity to successfully confront this epidemic with public health and related measures. Fall semester Summer semester

 

EPID 620 Resa M. Jones, PhD, MPH

Cancer Epidemiology

Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: EPID 571. Covers general principles of carcinogenesis and the genetics of cancer; domestic and international patterns in cancer incidence and mortality; cancer surveillance and screening, and their relation to cancer prevention; epidemiologic characteristics and risk factors for cancers to the lung, breast, prostate, gastrointestinal tract, pancreas, bladder, endometrium, ovary, cervix and skin, as well as cancer in children and young adults; and the public health implications of cancer. Additional focus on critical evaluation of different methodological approaches used in cancer research and potential biases inherent given study designs.

 

EPID 621 John Marr, MD, MPH, FACP

Infectious Disease Epidemiology
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisite: EPID 571. This course will discuss the origins of epidemiology and how epidemiology methods are continually applied to the study of communicable diseases. Several infectious diseases will be studied in depth to show the progression toward characterization of the natural history of the diseases and how policies regarding prevention have been defined. Smallpox, HIV/AIDS, the hepatitis family of agents and a vector-borne disease will be studied. In addition, the topic of antibiotic resistance will be covered in depth. How the epidemiology of an infectious agent relates to bioterrorism also will be discussed. Summer semester

 

EPID 622 Derek Chapman, MS, PhD

Sp. Topics: Maternal and Child Health

Semester course, 3 lecture hours, 3 credits. Prerequisite EPID 571. This course will expose students to current issues in maternal and child health (MCH). Students will learn about key MCH topics including family planning, low birth weight, infant mortality, birth defects, injury prevention, and international MCH issues. Students will be able to describe how epidemiology methods are used to determine risk and protective factors for women and children and describe how these data guide public health policy and program planning efforts.
Fall semester

 

EPID 642 Shelley Harris, PhD

Advanced Epidemiological Protocol Design
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 3 credits. Prerequisites: EPID 571, EPID 606, BIOS 553 and BIOS 554 Develops skills needed to design and describe in written format a valid and appropriate epidemiology study to address specific hypotheses. Hypotheses and possible design methods will be discussed in class and subsequently students will present (both orally and in written form) a research design to include a critical review of the literature and hypotheses to be tested. The proposal must address sample size and power, exposure definition, methods for accurate exposure assessment, prevention of measurement errors, and statistical methods proposed for analysis. Doctoral students only. Spring semester

 

EPID 690 Staff

Journal Club
Semester course; 1 lecture hour. 1 credit. Talks given by students and faculty describing and critiquing recent published research or review articles. Graded as "S," "U" or "F." Doctoral students only. Spring and fall semester

 

EPID 691  Staff

MPH Program Research Project
Semester course; 9 clinical hours. 1-6 credits. Each student will complete a research project that demonstrates the application of the knowledge acquired in the MPH Program. The student will answer one or more relevant research questions. The final product is a scholarly written report of publishable quality. A proposal must be submitted for approval and credits are assigned commensurate with the complexity of the project. Arrangements are made directly with the faculty adviser. Graded as "S," "U" or "F." Offered every semester

 

EPID 692  Staff

Public Health Internship
Semester course; internship, 1-6 credits. Students will spend 180 hours in a planned, supervised experience with a community agency. Such agencies might include a local or state health department or other public health agency. Arrangements are made directly with the faculty adviser. Graded as "S," "U" or "F."

 

EPID 693 Dr. Gonzalo Bearman

Contemporary Issues and Controversies in Public Health
Semester course; 2 credits. On-line course through Blackboard.


EPID 693 Staff

Sp. Topics: Research
Semester course; 3 lecture hours. 1-6 variable credits. This course provides the opportunity for students to explore a special topic of interest under the direction of a faculty member. A proposal must be submitted for this approval and credits are assigned commensurate with the complexity of the project. Arrangements are made directly with the appropriate faculty member and department chair.

 

EPID 693 Staff

Sp. Topics: Independent Study
Semester course; research 1-6 variable credits. This course provides the opportunity for students to explore a special topic of interest under the direction of a faculty member. A proposal must be submitted for this approval and credits are assigned commensurate with the complexity of the project. Arrangements are made directly with the appropriate faculty member and department chair.

 

EPID 693 Paula Inserra, PhD, RD

Sp. Topics: Principles of Human Nutrition
Semester course, 3 lecture hours, 3 credits. This is a graduate level course designed to provide students with an introduction to the basic principles of nutrition science. It is recommended for graduate students who have not had prior nutrition courses. Subjects include: an introduction to the basic nutrients with special emphasis on their food sources, and functions, and metabolism in the human body. Other topics include food selection and diet planning for optimal health, dietary assessment, evaluation of nutritional information, and the relationship between diet and health. Additional topics may be covered according to student interests. Summer semester

 

EPID 693  Cunlin Wang, PhD

Sp. Topics: Fundamentals of Data Collection, Management and Analysis
Semester course, 3 lecture hours, 3 credits. This is a course for students/ professionals in public health, nurses and physicians who are interested in conducting population-based public health research. Complementary with another department course ?Principles of Epidemiology?, this course will focus on principles and application issues related with data collection, sampling strategies, data management and data analysis based on various public health study designs. This course will also introduce students to the major statistical analysis program s : SAS . Using existing dataset, students will be able to form the research questions, manipulate the dataset, conduct the analysis, interpret and present results to address practical public health issues. Fall semester

 

EPID 693  John Marr, MD, MPH, FACP

Sp. Topics: History of Public Health
Semester course, 1 lecture hour, 1 credit. Sessions will discuss the origins of medical practices and the evolution of scientific thinking that eventually transformed itself in what today we know as public health. Beginning with primitive practices and paleo-medicine and ancient Old World cultures and civilizations, the students will become acquainted with the major influences and individuals who set the stage for the advent of public health practices in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Fall semester

 

EPID 693  May Kennedy, PhD, MPH

Sp. Topics: Health Communications
Semester course, 3 lecture hours, 3 credits. Topics covered in the course include:  history and theories of health communication, social marketing and media advocacy, audience research and segmentation, entertainment education, e-health, provider/patient communication, technology transfer to service providers, media relations and media monitoring, emergency risk communication, and evaluating communication campaigns.
Spring semester

EPID 697

Directed Research in Epidemiology
Semester course; 1-15 credits. Research leading to the PhD degree. Graded as "S," "U" or "F." Doctoral students only.

* For all non-EPID course descriptions, see the Graduate and Professional Programs Bulletins at: http://www.pubinfo.vcu.edu/faculty/gpbulletin/

 

 


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School of Medicine
Department of Epidemiology & Community Health
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Richmond, Virginia 23298-0212
Phone: (804) 828-9785
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Updated:04/25/2006