Appropriate for First Year students.

TimeDaysLocationInstructorGERCreditOPUS Class NumberSyllabus (Tentative)
12:50pm-1:40pm
MWF
White Hall 208
Peter Brown. HSC. 413464 TBA.

January 13, 2010- April 26, 2010

Crosslisted: GHCS102-000.

Semester Details: This introductory lecture-based course draws on perspectives from anthropology, social epidemiology, and related social and health sciences to provide the broadest framework for understanding current global health challenges and their solutions. Over the semester, we will learn about past, current and future global health issues. And, we will explore diverse theoretical perspectives as to why some people and populations are healthier than others. The course will emphasize the interconnections between health problems in developed and developing countries and the need for an interdisciplinary approach to understand and mitigate threats to health. Students will be introduced to basic concepts and methods in epidemiology and population health. The ultimate goal of the course is for students to gain an evidence-based understanding of the threats to human health and interventions that may counter these threats. Special emphasis is placed on the importance of population demography. At the end of the course students should have a basic understanding of the methods used to assess population health, understand the current and future distribution of health, and be able to discuss why some populations are healthier than others and what can be done to reduce heath disparities. Specific topics to be covered include infectious diseases, diseases of under and over nutrition, mental health, reproductive health, refugee and immigrant health, and human rights.

Required Textbooks, Articles, and Resources

  1. Collier, P.. 2007. The Bottom Billion: Why the Poorest Countries are Failing and what can be Done About it.
  2. Dettwyler, K.A.. 1994. Dancing Skeletons: Life and Death in West Africa.
  3. Devereux, S.. Seasons of Hunger: Fighting Cycles of Quiet Starvation Among the World's Rural Poor.
  4. Smillie, Ian. Freedom from Want.

The schedule of courses on O.P.U.S. is the official listing of courses, including days and times they meet and the General Education Requirements they satisfy. Students should use course descriptions as general guidelines. Course requirements, grading details, book lists, and syllabi are subject to change.