Hoer_john Hopkins Bloomberg School Of Public Health

external link: http://ocw.jhsph.edu/

Lecture Topics Covered:

external link: http://ocw.jhsph.edu/topics.cfm

Evaluating Therapies in Observational Studies: HAART to Heart Lessons from HIV/AIDS

This lecture addresses the evaluation challenges posed by observational studies, paying particular attention to the cardiovascular implications raised by recent HAART research.

The Art of Science Advice to Policy Makers: Lessons from the U.S. National Academies In this installment of the Bloomberg Leadership Series, Dr. Fineberg shares the personal experiences and professional insights that have informed his leadership style and his approach to formulating sound and persuasive policy recommendations.

Adolescent Health and Development Uses lectures, readings, discussion and panels of guest speakers to explore a variety of aspects of adolescence and adolescent health.

Baltimore Food Systems: A Case Study of Urban Food Environments This seminar-style course challenges students to look closely at the environment of Baltimore City's complex food systems and to consider what it would take to improve these systems to assure access for all to nutritious, adequate, affordable and sustainably produced food.

Bioinformatics and Computational Biology Solutions Using R and Bioconductor Covers the basics of R software and the key capabilities of the Bioconductor project, including importation and preprocessing of high-throughput data from microarrays and other platforms.

Biological Agents of Water and Foodborne Bioterrorism Examines the various biological agents that terrorists could use against food or water supplies.

Biostatistics for Medical Product Regulation Provides a broad understanding of the application of biostatistics in a regulatory context.

Biostatistics Lecture Series Addresses topics that commonly arise from the day-to-day collaboration between researchers in public health and Biostatistics at the School.

Case Studies in Terrorism Response Presents three illustrative case studies to reinforce basic concepts and principles of terrorism preparedness and response, as well as to identify some specific practical considerations.

Concepts in Economic Evaluation Describes how economic theory is linked to economic evaluation techniques like cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analysis and to introduce students to many concepts that are specific to economic evaluation.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Confronting the Burden of Injuries Guides students interested in working on injury control in areas with little or no tradition in injury prevention from a public health perspective.

Critical Analysis of Popular Diets and Dietary Supplements Provides the knowledge one needs to critically appraise a weight control diet or dietary supplement and choose the best plan for success.

Culture, Politics, and Community: Living Public Health in Nigeria In this lecture, Professor Brieger discusses some of the lessons he learned during his 26-year experience working in Nigeria and his subsequent work with a wider variety of African nations, focusing on on tropical diseases and their associated social, cultural, and behavioral aspects.

Dean's Lecture Series: 2007-2008 In these presentations, the lecturers address challenging public health issues of the day and report on lessons learned from their own research and experience in the field.

Dissertation Workshop The workshop is intended for Doctoral students in the health and social sciences who are at the stage of developing a research proposal.

Entertainment Education for Behavior Change This course examines and teaches ways in which education can be subtly but effectively worked into both new and time-honored genres of entertainment to foster positive behavior change and life improvement in both developing countries and local environments.

Environmental Health Examines health issues, scientific understanding of causes and possible future approaches to control the major environmental health problems in industrialized and developing countries.

Epidemiology of Infectious Diseases Introduces the basic methods for infectious disease epidemiology and case studies of important disease syndromes and entities.

Essentials of Probability and Statistical Inference IV Introduces the theory and application of modern, computationally-based methods for exploring and drawing inferences from data.

Ethical Issues in Public Health Focuses on ethical theory and current ethical issues in public health and health policy, including resource allocation, the use of summary measures of health, the right to health care and conflicts between autonomy and health promotion efforts.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Ethics of Human Subject Research Introduces students to the ethics of human subject research, including ethical theory and principles are introduced and followed by a brief history of research ethics.

Family Planning Policies and Programs Introduces issues and programmatic strategies related to the development, organization and management of family planning programs, especially those in developing countries.

Food and Nutrition Policy Familiarizes and engages the student with the process of developing policies.

Food Production, Public Health, and the Environment Provides an understanding of the complex and challenging public health issue of food security and in a world where one billion people are under-nourished while another billion are overweight.

Fundamentals of Epidemiology I Fundamentals of Epidemiology I is the first half of a course that introduces the basic concepts of epidemiology and biostatistics as applied to public health problems.

Fundamentals of Epidemiology II Fundamentals of Epidemiology I and II introduce the basic concepts of epidemiology and biostatistics as applied to public health problems.

Fundamentals of Oncology for Public Health Practitioners Lectures by current practitioners of cancer prevention control in clinical oncology cover the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention/screening measures used for cancers such as lung, breast, prostate, colon/rectal, etc.

Fundamentals of Program Evaluation Fundamentals of Program Evaluation familiarizes students in different types of program evaluation, including needs assessment, formative research, process evaluation, monitoring of outputs and outcomes, impact assessment, and cost analysis.

Global Tobacco Control Presents the health and economic burden of tobacco use worldwide and highlights practical approaches to tobacco prevention, control, surveillance and evaluation.

Health Across the Life Span: Frameworks, Contexts, and Measurements Introduces and examines the basic prinicples which guide growth and development and the health of individuals across the lifespan, from the prenatal period through senescence.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Health Issues for Aging Populations Introduces the study of aging, its implications for individuals, families, and society, and the background for health policy related to older persons.

History of Public Health Examines the historical experience of health and illness from a population perspective.

How Risky is Breathing? Statistical Methods in Air Pollution Risk Estimation This lecture explores the statistical methods used for assessing the health effects of air pollution. Dr. Dominici uses examples from her own national-level research.

Impact of Pandemic Influenza on Public Health Examines the path of the avian influenza and examines how it could impact world health.

Improving Understanding and Collaboration Among First Responders This unique training addresses the institutional culture of five responder groups: law enforcement, EMS, fire, public health, and private security in an attempt at fostering understanding among these groups.

International Nutrition Presents major nutritional problems that influence the health, survival and developmental capacity of populations in developing societies.

Introduction to Biostatistics ntroduction to Biostatistics provides an introduction to selected important topics in biostatistical concepts and reasoning.

Introduction to Demographic Methods This course introduces the basic techniques of demographic analysis. Students will become familiar with the sources of data available for demographic research. Population composition and change measures will be presented.

Introduction to Health Policy Introduces the material covered in the Department of Health Policy and Management. Focuses on four substantive areas that form the analytic basis for many of the issues in Health Policy and Management.

Introduction to Mental Health and Disaster Preparedness Introduces the topics of disaster mental health services, mental health surge capacity, and psychiatric first aid.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Introduction to Methods for Health Service Research and Evaluation Introduction to Methods for Health Services Research and Evaluation provides an introduction to basic methods for undertaking research and program evaluation within health services organizations and systems.

Introduction to the Ethics of Human Subjects Research Introduces students to ethics concepts as they apply to questions and challenges in conducting human subject research.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Faculty Interviews Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Faculty Interviews

Malariology Presents issues related to malaria as a major public health problem.

Managed Care and Health Insurance Presents an overview of major issues related to the design, function, management, regulation, and evaluation of health insurance and managed care plans.

Managing Long-Term Care Services for Aging Populations This course will consider long-term service delivery programs designed to meet the special needs of seniors.

Masculinity, Sexual Behavior and Health Reading seminar focusing on male adolescent health and sexual issues and explores the meaning of masculinity and the impact of masculine beliefs on men's health and health care use.

Methods in Biostatistics I Presents fundamental concepts in applied probability, exploratory data analysis, and statistical inference, focusing on probability and analysis of one and two samples.

Methods in Biostatistics II Presents fundamental concepts in applied probability, exploratory data analysis, and statistical inference, focusing on probability and analysis of one and two samples.

MPH Capstone Honors Recipients 2008 MPH candidates are required to prepare capstone projects to complete their degree program. Each year, special honors were given to ten students for the best overall capstone projects. Presentations from three of the ten 2008 honors recipients are posted.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) MPH Capstone Honors Recipients 2009 MPH candidates are required to prepare capstone projects to complete their degree program.

Occupational Health and Vulnerable Worker Populations Discusses occupational health program considerations, (including all levels of prevention), for vulnerable populations, using examples such as the health needs of women workers, shift workers, aging workers, families of workers, and workers with chronic diseases and impairments.

Personal Preparedness Planning For Public Health Workers Public health workers need to understand and implement basic concepts of personal preparedness planning so that they can function effectively as public health emergency responders in a post-9/11 world.

Pharmaceuticals Management for Underserved Populations Students will be guided to analyze problems and develop strategies based on real world drug management issues including regulations, manufacture, procurement, distribution, safety, policy, financing and the unique aspects of international pharmaceutical trade, the role of the World Trade Organization - Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (WTO-TRIPS), government, non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and individuals/programs in the selection and use of pharmaceutical products.

Population Change and Public Health This course introduces the basic elements of population studies, including: population size, composition, and distribution, and the causes and consequences of changes in these characteristics.

Preventing Infant Mortality and Promoting the Health of Women, Infants, and Children This course focuses on the historical problems and interventions associated with infant mortality.

Principles of Drug Development Presents principles underlying preclinical and clinical development of new therapeutic drugs and procedures.

Principles of Human Nutrition Provides an integrated overview of the physiological requirements and functions of protein, energy and the major vitamins and minerals that are determinants of health and diseases in human populations.

Principles of Industrial Hygiene Principles of Industrial Hygiene provides an introduction to the field of industrial hygiene and to occupational health in general.

Principles of Population Change Provides students with a basic understanding of the science of demography and health implications of major population issues in the contemporary world.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Problem Solving for Immunization Programs This material will cover immunization basics and survey the public health, sociological, and economic literature, identifying and analyzing common problems using a standard problem-solving approach.

Problems in the Design of Epidemiologic Studies (Grant Writing) Students participate in the preparation of a research protocol for a study in a human population.

Psychiatric Epidemiology Psychiatric Epidemiology reviews descriptive and analytic epidemiology for major mental disorders of childhood, adulthood, and late adult life.

Public Health Biology Offers an integrative molecular and biological perspective on public health problems. Explores population biology and ecological principles underlying public health and reviews molecular biology in relation to public health biology.

Public Health Practice 101 A series of presentations developed to introduce health department employees to the basic terms and concepts that they are likely to encounter in the field.

Public Health Toxicology This course examines basic concepts of environmental toxicology, including distribution, cellular penetration, metabolic conversion, and elimination of toxic agents, as well as the fundamental laws governing the interaction of foreign chemicals with biological systems.

Qualitative Data Analysis This course emphasizes the analysis of ethnographic and other forms of qualitative data in public health research.

Radiation Terror 101 Introduces you to general radiation principles, radiation safety and protection, and the basic types of radiological terror, and also provides practical guidance on acute response techniques and general countermeasures.

Refugee Health Care Refugee Health Care addresses the provision of basic health requirements for refugees and the coordination of care among the agencies concerned with them.

Reproductive and Perinatal Epidemiology This course focuses on current research, controversial issues, and methodological problems in the epidemiology of reproductive and perinatal health.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Sexual Health, HIV/STI, and Human Rights Sexual Health, HIV/STI, and Human Rights

Social and Behavioral Aspects of Public Health The course is designed to help students develop basic literacy regarding social concepts and processes that influence health status and public health interventions.

Social and Behavioral Foundations of Primary Health Care Aims at providing you with the knowledge and skills needed to diagnose (understand) community, individual, and organizational behaviors and change processes in developing countries and in cross-cultural settings as a foundation for planning culturally appropriate primary health care (PHC) in the context of the ecological model of health behavior.

Social and Economic Aspects of Human Fertility Analyzes the correlates of fertility levels in societies and childbearing among individuals and couples. Examines classical theories of fertility change at the societal level and contemporary critiques of these theories.

Statistical Methods for Sample Surveys Presents construction of sampling frames, area sampling, methods of estimation, stratified sampling, subsampling, and sampling methods for surveys of human populations. Students use STATA or another comparable package to implement designs and analyses of survey data.

Statistical Reasoning I Statistical Reasoning in Public Health provides an introduction to selected important topics in biostatistical concepts and reasoning through lectures, exercises, and bulletin board discussions.

Statistical Reasoning II Statistical Reasoning in Public Health II provides an introduction to selected important topics in biostatistical concepts and reasoning through lectures, exercises, and bulletin board discussions.

Statistics for Laboratory Scientists I This course introduces the basic concepts and methods of statistics with applications in the experimental biological sciences.

Statistics for Laboratory Scientists II This course introduces the basic concepts and methods of statistics with applications in the experimental biological sciences.

Statistics for Psychosocial Research: Structural Models Presents quantitative approaches to theory construction in the context of multiple response variables, with models for both continuous and categorical data.

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health OpenCourseWare (OCW) Content Listing (continued) Statistics in Psychosocial Research: Measurement Presents quantitative approaches to measurement in the psychological and social sciences.

STI Prevention: Using Epidemiology to Inform Policy and Program Considers features of sexually transmitted diseases relevant to their control, reviewing the natural history of the infections and laboratory diagnoses.

The Impact of Primary Care on Population Health This lecture summarizes Professor Leiyu Shi's recent work on primary care, the definition of primary care, and his research rationale and framework. It includes a close look at international primary care studies, US primary care studies, Metropolitan Statistical Area analyses, county-level studies, multi-level studies, meta-analyses, and US health center studies.

Training Methods and Continuing Education for Health Workers This course in Training Methods and Continuing Education for Health Workers identifies the role of training and continuing education as an important component of health service and personnel management.

Tropical Environmental Health During this class we will be discussing some of the problems arising from poor facilities in many developing countries.

Understanding Cost-Effectiveness Analysis in Health Care The primary objective of this content is to prepare students to read and interpret cost-effectiveness studies.

Urban Health in Developing Countries Explores the emerging public health issues associated with rapid growth of urban population in developing countries, with a particular focus on the urban poor.

Water Sanitation Needs in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies Presents a historical overview of the influence of water and sanitation on human health; types of water and sanitation facilities and equipment presently available and particularly suited to refugee populations displaced by war, famine, drought, and economic turmoil; and methodologies for assessing and quantifying water and sanitation needs.

Web 2.0: Risks for STI/HIV - Opportunities for Prevention is lecture explores the risks and prevention opportunities presented by the emergence of social networking and internet dating sites. Presented by the Department of Population, Family, and Reproductive Health