Course Descriptions

On this page:

Required Courses

CHB 501 Study of Health Behavior

CHB 501 Study of Health Behavior

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

Designed to provide you with a graduate‐level overview of the role of the social and behavioral sciences in understanding and addressing public health problems. Three general topics are covered. First, we examine how psychological, social, and environmental factors influence people’s health and wellbeing. Second, we explore factors that influence health behavior, including individual, social, and environmental/community influences. Third, we explore how understanding behavior and social/environmental influences on health informs public health approaches to improving health and preventing disease. The course prepares public health students to satisfy MPH competencies in social and behavioral sciences.

Format: Seated and Online

CHB 507 Public Health Teams and Practice

CHB 507 Public Health Teams and Practice

2 Credits, Spring Semester

Prerequisite: None

This course provides students with the foundations needed for public health professionals to work with other health professionals, along with key qualitative analysis and cultural competence skills. This course will also provide students with communication and conflict resolution skills.

This course satisfies some of the requirements for IPCP Digital Badges #1 and #2.

Format: Online

EEH 501 Principles of Epidemiology

4 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

Introduction to the basic principles, methods, and uses of epidemiology. This course is a master’s/doctoral level course designed to introduce epidemiology, its methods and its role in public health. A major portion of the course will be devoted to an overview of fundamental epidemiologic methods used in public health research and practice. The student will be familiarized with basic measures used in describing disease frequency in populations. Descriptive and analytic approaches to the study of disease will be explored, and a perspective on the role of epidemiologic methods in health services planning and evaluation will be provided. Problem solving exercises will be used to provide students with an opportunity to tabulate data and apply subject matter developed during lectures and in reading assignments. At the end of the course students should have a general understanding of the uses and limitations of epidemiologic inquiry. This understanding should provide the basis for applying epidemiologic concepts in work-related settings and in other courses in the public health curriculum.

Format: seated

EEH 505 Application of Biostatistics to Epidemiology I

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

The course is for students in the public health sciences who seek to develop hands-on introductory data analysis skills. Students will learn basic methods for data organization and management as well as basic skills in data exploration and presentation. The course includes emphasis on the application and interpretation of commonly used introductory statistical tests in the computer laboratory using SAS software. Topics include descriptive statistics, hypothesis testing for means, proportions, elementary non-parametric techniques, t-tests, ANOVA, correlations, and linear regression.

Format: seated

EEH 520 Biological Basis of Public Health

3 Credits, Spring Semester

Prerequisite: None

Intended for students with little or no background in the biological sciences and health professions. The course provides a broad overview of public health topics related to human health and disease focusing on disease etiology with particular emphasis on parasitic and microbial infections plus a review of the anatomy, physiology, and pathology of selected major organ systems and associated diseases of public health importance.

Format: seated

EEH 530 Introduction to Health Care Organization

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

Introduces students to the historical development, structure, operation, and current and future directions of the major components of the American health care delivery and public health systems. It examines the ways in which health care services are organized and delivered, the influences that impact health care public policy decisions, factors that determine priorities in financing health care services and the relationship of health care costs to measurable benefits. The course enables students to assess the role of organized efforts to influence health policy formulation, and the contributions of medical technology, research findings, and societal values to the evolving U.S. health care delivery system. Class time is also devoted to exploring emerging policy, ethical and legal dilemmas resulting from medical and technological advances.

Format: seated and online

Note

Cross listed with MGH 631 and LAW 718

EEH 544 MPH Field Training

1-3 Credits, Fall/Winter/Spring/Summer Semesters

Prerequisite: None

Allows students to synthesize the knowledge and skills developed during the academic portion of their program in a practical application setting. Field training experiences vary depending upon the student’s interest and concentration area; experiences need to be approved by the MPH concentration director.

Learn more about MPH Field Training.

EEH 550 Environmental Health

3 Credits, Spring Semester

Prerequisite: None

Introductory course that explores the role of environmental factors in health with an emphasis on characterization, assessment, and control of environmental hazards. Topics include application of toxicologic and epidemiologic methods in assessing risk and setting exposure limits; the nature of and control of hazards associated with food, water, air, solid and liquid waste, occupation, and radiation; risk communication and management, environmental justice; and environmental laws. The course concludes by examining the impact of human activity, such as energy use and pollution, on the environment and how human-induced environmental change, in turn, impacts public health and that of the planet as a whole.

Format: seated and online

EEH 551 Advanced Environmental Health Sciences

3 Credits, Spring Semester

Prerequisites: EEH 501 and EEH 550

Advanced course designed to provide students with the latest knowledge and an in-depth discussion of how the environment interacts with human biological systems and potentiates various health effects over the life cycle. The course includes a detailed examination of environmental hazards, exposure assessment, human susceptibility, biological response pathways, application of biomarkers in environmental health studies and the disease burden of environmental exposure. The course focuses on three major environmental topics: air pollution, water pollution and food safety.

Format: seated

EEH 555 Exposure Assessment in Environment Health Research

3 Credits, Fall semester

Prerequisite: none

Provides a graduate-level overview of environmental exposure assessment. Exposure assessment is a key component of environmental health sciences. This class will examine a broad spectrum of environmental hazards (e.g., chemical, biological, and physical hazards) covering all major exposure media (air, water, soil, food, etc.). The course is intended to give students a basic knowledge of the design of environmental monitoring and modeling studies, the techniques and equipment used for sampling and analysis, the interpretation of data, and how to link exposure assessment with environmental health. The course builds on comprehensive training topics, including lectures on basic principles, fieldwork for monitoring, and data analysis, and modeling exercises in the computer lab. Students will be able to apply this knowledge to the assessment of exposure risk in a variety of environmental situations. The linkages among external concentrations, spatial and temporal parameters, exposure pathways (inhalation, ingestion, and dermal contact), internal dose, and biomarker expression are developed within the context of environmental exposure and risk assessment.

Format: seated

EEH 575 Epidemiologic Applications to Environmental Health

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisites: EEH 500, EEH 501

Provides epidemiology and environmental health students with a working knowledge of epidemiologic theory and practice applied to issues of environmental health. Case studies and specific environmental issues will be used to illustrate the application of epidemiologic theory to understand the role of environmental factors in the etiology of disease.

EEH 590 Leadership, Collaboration and Negotiation in Public Health

2 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

This course introduces students to public health issues from a practice-based perspective. Through presentations by public health leaders and practitioners, readings, group discussion and class activities, students practice integrating public concepts to better understand issues, and develop responses. Course content focuses on public health issues from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), American Public Health Association (APHA), World Health Organization (WHO), local and state health departments or other organizations.

This course partially satisfies the requirements for IPCP Digital Badge #1.

Format: online

EEH 630 MPH Culminating Project

3 Credits, Fall/Winter/Spring/Summer Semesters

Prerequisite: Permission of instructor

The purpose of the culminating projects is for MPH students to integrate core public health knowledge and skills. It will take the form of a paper prepared during the concluding semester of the student’s program.

PMY 626 Toxicology Principles and Practices

2 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

Information from the UB Graduate Academic Schedule.

An introduction to the basic principles and practice of toxicology, including dose-response and toxicokinetic analysis. We will also cover chemical mutagenesis and carcinogenesis, with an emphasis on understanding mechanisms for these responses. An overview of risk assessment will include quantitative aspects of cancer and non-cancer based risk assessments.

View a detailed course description for PMY 626 on the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology website.

Instructor: Olson

Format: seated

Elective Course Options

CIE 563 Air Pollution

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

This course surveys the sources, fates, effects and control of air pollution and air pollutants and covers industrial, agricultural and municipal contributions to acid rain, smog, and toxic air pollutants in fish and humans. LEC.

Instructor: Atkinson

CIE 569 Hazardous Waste Management

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

Waste management continues to be a major global challenge for environmental engineers and other stakeholders. Technical, regulatory and societal aspects of Hazardous and Solid Waste Management are addressed. Topics related to Hazardous Waste include: (1) evolution of current laws dealing with hazardous waste disposal and cleanup; (2) investigation and remediation contaminated sites; and (3) environmental fate and transport of hazardous chemicals. Solid Waste topics include (1) social, economic and political forces that influence the waste management industry; (2) current laws governing solid waste management; and (3) emerging concepts, including Integrated Solid Waste Management, Materials Management, and Life Cycle Analysis. For both focus areas, a strong emphasis is placed on communication of technical issues to the public.

Instructor: Rabideau

Note

Students are strongly recommended to contact course instructor discussing the suitability and waiving the prerequisite before the registration of the course.

EEH 521 Global Health

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

Provides an overview of compelling public health problems among the world’s poor. Topics addressed will include infectious diseases such as malaria, HIV/AIDS, and tuberculosis; the rise of tobacco-related disease; the role of water, hygiene, and sanitation in the prevention of disease; maternal and neonatal mortality; surveillance; and disaster response in the resource-poor setting. Students will gain practical experience in developing and presenting strategies for the implementation and evaluation of public health programs in the resource-poor setting.

EEH 547 MPH Field Training Elective

3 Credits, Fall/Winter/Spring/Summer Semesters

Prerequisite or Corequisite: EEH 544

This course is a field training experience that serves as an elective course, and must be taken concurrent with or after a student takes the required EEH 544 field training course. This elective experience allows students to synthesize the knowledge and skills developed during the academic portion of their program in a practical application setting. Field training experiences vary depending upon the student’s interest and concentration area; experiences need to be approved by the MPH concentration director.

GEO 506 Geographical Information Systems

4 Credits (3 Lecture, 1 Lab), Fall and Spring Semesters

Prerequisite: None

Introduction to the use of high-speed digital computers in geographic research. Topics include advanced programming, introductory machine architecture, large file handling and data base management systems, computer graphics and digitizing. Students are expected to complete a major applications programming project as part of the course requirement.

Instructor: Staff

URP 604 Community Food Systems Planning

3 Credits, Spring Semester

Prerequisite: None

The conditions of a broken food system have drawn the attention of disparate stakeholders including social justice advocates, public health professionals as well as those interested in the welfare of farmers. Planners and policy makers can play an important role in supporting community food systems that are economically and socially just, healthy, and environmentally sustainable for residents, farmers, and other food system stakeholders. In this seminar, students will learn to deploy planning skills to facilitate and strengthen community food systems. Students will critically assess a community’s food system and examine the ways in which a community’s food system can be strengthened using programs, policy, and planning tools.

Instructor: Raja

URP 605 Built Environment and Health

3 Credits, Fall Semester

Prerequisite: None

This graduate seminar focuses on the interactions between the built environment and human health including physical health, mental health, and social well-being. First shaped by socioeconomic, cultural, and political forces, the built environment then contributes to shaping the way people carry on activities related to everyday life, work, and play. People’s life styles therefore first contribute to form the built environment and then go on to be influenced by the built environment.

Students will develop a conceptual understanding of the environmental determinants of health, and the utility and limits of planning in promoting health. Topics to be explored include: historical connections between planning and public health, physical activity and the built environment, obesity and the food environment, safety and stress, environmental contribution to mental health, health impact assessment, and planning tools for healthy communities.

Students will discuss assigned readings each week. Discussions will be led and facilitated by peer discussants as well as the instructor. They will produce a 15-page paper and a short presentation on a topic of choice. Key objectives of this seminar are (1) to understand overall research trends; (2) to find the mechanisms by which the built environment has impacts on health behaviors/outcomes; (3) to become familiar with the literature covering, research methods, and current research gaps; and (4) to become familiar with approaches and methods to modify the built environment to enhance health.

Instructor: Raja

Note

This is a graduate-level seminar type course.