Public Health (B.S.)

Faculty

Dr. Nicole Betschman, Assistant Professor and Director of Health Services and Public Health Programs
Dr. Christopher Howard, Assistant Professor of Public Health

Faculty representing diverse disciplines in the School of Nursing and Health Professions, College of Arts and Sciences, and School of Professional and Graduate Studies also contribute to the Health Services and Public Health programs.

Description

Trinity’s Bachelor of Science in Public Health focuses on the study of the scientific principles of public health and the skills needed to promote disease prevention, health education, and health policy. With an emphasis on community health issues within the Washington, DC region, Trinity’s public health curriculum explores topics and core concepts in epidemiology, biostatistics, environmental health, public policy, and social and behavioral health. The public health program is designed to provide academic, experiential, and service-learning opportunities as well as training through internships and interprofessional collaboration. Public Health graduates can go on to pursue an advanced degree and work in any number of medical, science, social science, or public health fields.

Public Health Learning Outcomes:

  • Demonstrate effective communication skills, orally and in writing.
  • Describe and discuss essential services that public health programs provide to protect and improve the health of populations.
  • Use research tools and analytical methods to critically analyze, monitor and assess the health status of populations.
  • Interpret the impact of policies and legislation on individual and population health.
  • Understand cultural differences among populations and interact sensitively, effectively, and professionally with persons from diverse and culturally rich backgrounds.
  • Apply public health principles to a current public health-related issue.
  • Compare and contrast health challenges encountered in different regions across the globe and understand the variety of strategies employed to address them.
  • Distinguish microorganisms that cause the most common infectious diseases around the globe, as well as methods to identify these organisms and treat and/or prevent the disease.

Public Health Prerequisites/General Education Requirements

Pre-Health Profession students enter through the College of Arts and Sciences where they complete their general education and public health prerequisite courses. The required courses are listed in sequence below:

First Year, First Semester (16 credits)

  • CRS 101 Critical Reading and Writing Seminar I
  • PSYC 101 Introductory Psychology
  • HPNU 120 Medical Terminology
  • MATH 108 Finite Mathematics
  • BIOL 101 Introduction to Biology

 First Year, Second Semester (14 credits)

  • CRS 102 Critical Reading and Writing Seminar II
  • ENGL 107 College Composition
  • BIOL 121 Human Anatomy and Physiology I
  • CHEM 113 Chemistry for the Health Sciences

Sophomore Year, First Semester (17 credits)

  • BIOL 122 Human Anatomy and Physiology II
  • BIOL 130 Microbiology for the Health Professions
  • SNHP 201 Introduction to Public Health
  • COM 150 Critical Reasoning and Oral Argumentation or PHIL 150 Critical Reasoning and Oral Argumentation
  • SOCY 100 Introduction to Sociology

Sophomore Year, Second Semester (15 credits)

  • PHIL 251 Bioethics
  • MATH 110 Introduction to Statistics
  • Choose a Foreign Language I
  • General Education Courses:

Public Health Major Courses

After formal acceptance into the Bachelor of Science in Public Health, the major requirements are outlined below in recommended sequence:

Junior Year, First Semester (15 credits)

  • SNHP 301 Introduction to Epidemiology
  • SNHP 342 Health Care Finance
  • SNHP 220 Health Promotion, Policy and Politics
  • SNHP 330 Research and Evidence-Based Practice
  • Choose a Foreign Language II

Junior Year, Second Semester (15 credits)

  • SOCY 320 Sociology of Health and Illness (Medical Sociology)
  • SNHP 321 Health & Wellness Programming
  • SNHP 224 Health Care Systems and Global Health
  • General Education Course:
  • Elective

Senior Year, First Semester (15 credits)

  • SNHP 405 Informatics and Data Management
  • SNHP 491 Health Internship
  • Elective
  • Elective
  • Elective OR, one Master in Public Health Course:
    • SNHP 510 Theor Found of PH and HE

Senior Year, Second Semester (13 credits)

  • SNHP 499 Senior Health Seminar
  • Elective (2 credits)
  • Elective
  • Elective
    Elective OR, one Master in Public Health Course
    • SNHP 641 Public and Community Health

Recommended Electives

  • BADM 110 Foundations of Management
  • BADM 226 Organizational Behavior
  • BADM 236 Theories of Leadership
  • COM 201 Interpersonal Communication
  • COM 225 Intercultural Communication
  • ECON 101 Microeconomics I
  • ECON 102 Macroeconomics I
  • HPNU 200 Nutrition, Diet Therapy, and Health Promotion
  • SOWK 211 Introduction to Social Work
  • PEH 121 Nutrition & Wellness
  • PSYC 211 Social Psychology
  • PSYC 235 Psychology of Aging
  • PSYC 262 Psychology of Women
  • PSYC 343 Drugs and Human Behavior
  • PSYC 385 Ethnic & Cross Cultural-Psychology
  • SNHP 228 Patient Advocacy
  • SNHP 230 Community Health Workers in the U.S
  • SOCY 321 Inequality and Society
  • SOCY 361 The Black Family
  • SOCY 381 Understanding AIDS: Interdisciplinary Seminar

Minor Requirements

Students interested in a minor in Public Health will complete a total of 19 credits. Students pursuing a degree in Public Health may not minor in Health Services.

Required Core Courses (19 credits)
All of the following:

  • HPNU 120 Medical Terminology
  • SNHP 201 Introduction to Public Health
  • SNHP 224 Health Care Systems and Global Health
  • SNHP 228 Patient Advocacy
  • SNHP 301 Introduction to Epidemiology
  • SNHP 342 Health Care Finance
  • SOCY 320 Sociology of Health and Illness (Medical Sociology)

Accelerated Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) Degree Program

During the senior year, Public Health majors who have earned a minimum 3.0 GPA have the opportunity to enroll into one MPH course each semester.  This course will be counted as an elective for the undergraduate program, while also satisfying graduate curriculum requirements. Click here to learn more.

Program Policies

I. Application Process

Applying to the BS in Public Health is a 2-step process:

Step One: Apply to Trinity. Upon admission to Trinity, pre-health students complete their prerequisite coursework before applying for acceptance into the Public Health program.

Step Two: Apply to the Public Health program. Pre-health students apply for formal acceptance into the Public Health program when completing their last semester of prerequisite coursework.

Public Health program application deadlines:

  • Spring admission – October 1
  • Fall admission – February 1

Students wishing to apply to the public health program should contact their advisor or the Program Director.

A student’s application should contain the following:

  • Public Health Program Application (completed online by the student)
  • Pre-Public Health Curriculum Plan (from applicant’s academic advisor)
  • Transcripts (from all institutions where pre-requisite and general education/core curriculum courses have been taken)
  • Essay (students will be contacted via email with instruction on completing the essay after applications have been received)

II. Acceptance Criteria

Overall GPA of at least 2.75
Science GPA of at least 2.75
Personal Essay reflecting on how this degree will further the applicant’s personal and professional goals.

Pre-health students interested in Public Health should direct any questions about the process for formal acceptance into the Public Health program to their academic advisor in the Center for Student Success or the program director.

Students will be notified by the Director of the Public Health Program of the results of their application after all criteria for considering the application have been received and evaluated.

III. Transfer Policy

Students transferring to Trinity in or after Fall 2002 from another appropriately accredited institution of higher learning for a bachelor’s degree must earn a minimum of 45 of their final 60 credits through course work at Trinity, excluding credits for experiential learning. (See Transfer Policies)

Current Trinity students who were dismissed from clinical programs (nursing or OTA) may be permitted to transfer into the B.S. in Public Health. Interested students must meet with the Program Director and must present a satisfactory GPA before being admitted.

IV. Public Health Senior Assessment

Students are required to take SNHP 499 in their last semester prior to graduation. Students must take and pass SNHP 330 with at least a ‘C or better’ before registering for SNHP 499. Students must earn a C+ or above in Senior Seminar.

V. Internship

Students are required to obtain their own an internship placement which must be approved by the internship professor.  Students may not start any internship hours until the start of the semester in which they are enrolled in internship.  Students and their internship supervisor must sign a learning agreement prior to starting hours.  Internship placement sites may have additional health or safety requirements that students must meet prior to receiving access to the internship site.

NOTE: No student will be allowed to participate in internship experiences unless and until these requirements have been satisfied.

VI. Transportation

Students are required to provide their own transportation to and from internship placement sites. Trinity’s free shuttle service connects the Main campus with the Brookland Metro station.

VII. Advanced Placement:

Credits earned through AP examinations do not fulfill requirements of the Public Health major.

VIII. CLEP Policy:

Credits earned through CLEP examinations do not fulfill requirements of the Public Health major.

IX. Grades in Major Courses

A minimum of a 2.75 (“B-”) cumulative GPA average must be earned in the required courses for the major. A grade of C- may be counted toward fulfilling the requirements, at the discretion of the program faculty, if the overall average in the required courses is at least a 2.75. This policy applies to the required Public Health Service core courses except MATH 110 and PHIL 251. Students must earn an overall cumulative 2.0 GPA in all courses in order to graduate from Trinity.

X. Pass/No Pass

The pass/no pass grading option is not accepted for courses within the major. Students are required to earn a grade of “C” (2.0) or better in all courses counted to fulfill requirements for the major. A grade of C- may be counted toward fulfilling the requirements, at the discretion of the program faculty, if the overall average in the required courses is at least a 2.75. The pass/no pass grading option may apply to other courses that meet the degree requirement including MATH 110 and PHIL 251.

XI. TELL Policy:

Students applying for credit in experiential learning should consult with the program faculty.