Two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, public health remains at the center of the global discourseābut ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė faculty and students have been engaged in the conversation far longer
Coming to ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė, Shanna Yeh ā22 wanted a career in health and thought being a nurse or doctor was the only way to achieve that. After a summer internship at the Saban Community Clinic in Los Angeles, where she worked in the operations department implementing new programs and looking for ways to enhance patient experience, she had an epiphany.
āThere are so many jobs in the realm of public health that tap into some of my different strengths,ā says Yeh, a biology major and public health minor from Gaithersburg, Md. After ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė, she hopes to find a job working in community health and eventually plans to pursue a master of public health (MPH) degree.
Yeh is one of 26 seniors expected to graduate this spring with a minor in public health, which Adjunct Assistant Professor Jessica Dirkes defines as āthe science of protecting and promoting the health of populations, people, and communities.ā Public health provides a framework to examine often divisive topics such as climate change and gun violence, she adds, and address those issues using research and evidence.
ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀėās public health minor came to be in the most liberal arts fashion, with faculty and students across multiple disciplines coming together to create a program they believed needed to be offered to students. The Urban and Environmental Policy Department introduced Public Health: Community and Environment to the curriculum during the 2001-02 academic year. The course was taught by Andrea Hricko, professor emerita of preventive medicine at USC Keck School of Medicineāa longtime friend of then-Urban and Environmental Policy Institute Director Robert Gottlieb, the Henry R. Luce Professor of Urban and Environmental Studies Emeritus.
About a decade ago, faculty members took action in response to growing interest from students in public health, and UEPI secured funding from the Kaiser Foundation to develop the minor under the leadership of adjunct faculty Heng Lam Foong, who served as program director at UEPI from 2009 to 2017. Along with Foong, Jessica Welty ā13, then a junior, was hired through the Kaiser grant to work on the development of the minor.
In putting together the curriculum, through research on public health minors across the country, ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė faculty framed the backbone of the minor with three core courses: Introduction to Public Health, Epidemiology, and Statistics. Additionally, they formulated a list of electives from multiple departments that students could take to fulfill their interests within the broad topic of public health. (This year, students can choose from 16 electives; five courses are required to complete the minor.)
Following its launch in December 2013, the public health minor was run by Bhavna Shamasunder, associate professor of urban and environmental policy, with the help of a pair of professors from the Biology and Kinesiology departments. To not only sustain but grow the minor, however, she knew more help was needed. With the backing of Wendy Sternberg, vice president of academic affairs and dean of the College, a full-time public health faculty position was approved, and Dirkes was hired in fall 2019 as Public Health Program coordinator and co-chair.
Prior to teaching and working in higher education, Dirkes practiced public health for 10 years, focusing mainly on HIV prevention and health education. A Ph.D. graduate of the University of Illinois at Chicago in public health and community health, she focuses her teaching on public health āas it applies to concepts of social justice so that we approach it as finding ways to effectively address health inequity.ā
Dirkesāwho teaches Introduction to Public Health, Epidemiology, and Womenās Healthāis excited that students from many different majors bring their own perspectives to the classroom, making for rich discussions. āPeople donāt exist in isolation,ā she says. In understanding the context for the decisions people make with regards to their own well-being, āPublic health can help us be more empathetic.ā
Much of the credit for developing the public health curriculum must go to Foong, who launched UEPIās Community Health Engagement program in 2011. With funding support from Kaiser Permanente, ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė was able to create and expand public health opportunities for students through course work, community engagement, and independent study.
Prior to joining the College, Foong worked for a pair of nonprofits on such public health issues as equitable access to healthy food, clean tap water, and neighborhood parks, as well as access to healthcare for individuals with limited proficiency in English. (Foong, who is currently program director of the Asian Pacific Islander Forward Movement, continues to teach at ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė as an adjunct instructor.)
Given Foongās background in community work and the focus of UEPI on community engagement, community health engagement was a key focus in shaping the minor. This focus came to fruition in January 2013 when Foong and Welty established the Public Health Practicum course (UEP 307), in which students intern with community partners and reflect on their experiences in class.
When connecting with community partners, āReciprocity was key,ā Foong notes. āWe wanted to be sure that having ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė interns would support the organization and then we identified the learning outcomes for the students. Many of these partners remain with us.ā
In the Public Health Practicum, Foong ensures that her students take an asset-based approach to community engagement: āWeāre not going in the communities to fixāweāre going there to learn and be a part of the solution.ā She believes this approach is one of the most important takeaways of the courseāone that students can only learn by stepping out of the classroom and into communities.
VerĆ³nica Ponce de LeĆ³n ā13 decided to pursue a career in public health after taking Foongās practicum course. Foong āreally helped me understand that the public health field is much broader than I expected,ā says the Downey resident, who majored in biology with a minor in urban and environmental policy.
During her Richter Research Abroad fellowship in Peru, Ponce de LeĆ³n discovered a passion for environmental health. Subsequently, she pursued an MPH with a concentration in occupational health at UC Berkeley. āČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė is a great place to explore the public health field,ā says Ponce de LeĆ³n, who has worked with UCLAās Labor Occupational Safety and Health Program since 2019. She recently started a new position managing a program to help domestic workers stay safe on the job and understand their rights.
After graduating from ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė with a biochemistry major and public health minor, Tyler Wilson ā16 completed a post baccalaureate premed program at UC San Diego in 2017. Now a fourth-year medical student at Drexel University in Philadelphia, he plans to specialize in emergency medicine after completing his M.D. He shares Ponce de LeĆ³nās enthusiasm for the practicum course and Foongās mentorship: āShe was really the reason I enjoyed the public health minor.ā
Wilson notes that his public health studies have taught him how to zoom out from only addressing the problem patients come in to be treated for and look at strategies to keep the patient healthy and out of hospitals. His community work at Foothill Unity Center and ChapCare Clinic through ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė made him cognizant of the barriers individuals in underserved communities can face in regards to healthcare and access. Instead of telling someone who can only afford fast food to eat less fried food, he understands the importance of pointing the patient to resources that give them access to more options. āWhat I learned in public health at ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė has made me a much better med student, and hopefully a much better physician in the future.ā
Collrane Frivold ā15ās passion for public health began in Madagascar. As a Richter Fellow following her sophomore year at ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė, she conducted research in the African island country on the storage and transport of malaria rapid diagnostic tests. āBefore this project, I didnāt really know what public health was,ā recalls Frivold, a biochemistry major from Seattle.
Frivold began taking public health courses before the establishment of the minor, fitting them in as her schedule permitted. In her masterās program at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, she encountered topics she had already studied as an undergrad, which helped her to keep up with the fast-paced masterās courses and dive deeper into the topics. (Johns Hopkins even used the same epidemiology textbook Frivold had studied at ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė.)
After working at PATH, a nonprofit global health organization, for three years, Frivold entered into the epidemiology Ph.D. program at the University of Washington. After completing her doctorate, she plans to bring together all of her professional and academic experiences to continue working on projects to improve immunization coverage and equity.
As one of the first ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė students to graduate with the public health minor, Frivold is heartened to see the programās growth. āIām glad to see that there are more courses,ā she says, āand that there are faculty who are dedicated to public health.ā
Two years into the countryās greatest public health crisis in 100 years, this is a unique time to be studying public healthāa fact that isnāt lost on Dirkes. āIf there's any silver lining to the pandemic, itās that it is definitely drawing people into the field who maybe wouldn't have thought of it before, who realize how much work there is to do, and how much talent we needā in combating future pandemics, she says.
As Shamasunder sees it, now is the perfect time for the College to support the continued growth of the public health minor, which would include funding more internship opportunities. āOne unique thing about ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀėās public health minor is that it started from a really strong sense of community engagement,ā she notes. And community engagement has been a crucial ingredient in setting students up for success after ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė.
One current student benefiting from the growth of the minor is Emily Kapins ā22, a psychology major and public health minor from Honolulu. Kapins spent last summer working on the Koreatown Youth and Community Centerās Project Break Free, a tobacco control project that seeks to implement comprehensive smoke- and tobacco-free policies at college campuses and trade schools in the L.A. area.
After ČÕ±¾ĪŽĀė, Kapins plans to pursue an MPH in social and behavioral science so that she can work on mental health in disadvantaged communities, an opportunity she admits she wouldnāt have thought of if it werenāt for her minor.
Reflecting on the timing of her public health studies, Kapins admits, āThe chances of learning about a pandemic, and then experiencing it, are very lowābut apparently not impossible.ā
Kia Mackey ā22 is a biology major and public health minor from Edmonds, Wash. She wrote āThe Excitement Is Backā in the Spring 2021 issue.
Top image: Collrane Frivold '15 presents at a manufacturing workshop co-hosted by PATH with the German packaging company Harro Hƶfliger.