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Rollins School of Public Health


Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia



Overview

Rollins School of Public Health Is One of the Top 10 Schools of Public Health in the Nation

If "Location, Location, Location" is the key factor in the real estate business, what does the location of the Rollins School of Public Health (RSPH) in Atlanta have to do with its presence on the "U.S. News & World Report" list of Top 10 Schools of Public Health? Quite a bit, actually. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the country's premier disease prevention and control agency, is located in Atlanta. Other notable health-related organizations in Atlanta include the Carter Center, which also provides RSPH students with practicum opportunities in international health intervention programs; the international headquarters of CARE and the national headquarters of the American Cancer Society, both of which share research activities with Rollins; and the Task Force for Global Health, previously the Task Force of Child Survival and Development.

RSPH offers more than twenty concentrations in its Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) and Master of Science in Public Health (M.S.P.H.) programs. Five graduate programs lead to doctoral degrees, and dual degrees can be earned in conjunction with Emory's business, medical, nursing, and law schools. A Career M.P.H. is available through distance learning, and other programs afford even further flexibility.

RSPH students represent a wide range of backgrounds, experiences, and interests. Many are mid-career professionals coming from all fifty states and more than forty countries They are met by more than 160 full-time doctoral-level faculty members and more than 200 adjunct faculty members from the six academic departments within Rollins (behavioral sciences and health education, biostatistics, environmental and occupational health, epidemiology, health policy and management, and global health) that received $387.5 million in research funding awards in fiscal year 2008.

The "Public Health Capital of the World," Atlanta, Georgia, Is The Home of Rollins School of Public Health

If "Location, Location, Location" is the key factor in the real estate business, what does the location of the Rollins School of Public Health (RSPH) in Atlanta have to do with its presence on the "U.S. News & World Report" list of Top 10 Schools of Public Health? Quite a bit, actually. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the country's premier disease prevention and control agency, is located in Atlanta. Other notable health-related organizations in Atlanta include the Carter Center, which also provides RSPH students with practicum opportunities in international health intervention programs; the international headquarters of CARE and the national headquarters of the American Cancer Society, both of which share research activities with Rollins; and the Task Force for Global Health, previously the Task Force of Child Survival and Development.

RSPH offers more than twenty concentrations in its Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) and Master of Science in Public Health (M.S.P.H.) programs. Five graduate programs lead to doctoral degrees, and dual degrees can be earned in conjunction with Emory's business, medical, nursing, and law schools. A Career M.P.H. is available through distance learning, and other programs afford even further flexibility.

RSPH students represent a wide range of backgrounds, experiences, and interests. Many are mid-career professionals coming from all fifty states and more than forty countries They are met by more than 160 full-time doctoral-level faculty members and more than 200 adjunct faculty members from the six academic departments within Rollins (behavioral sciences and health education, biostatistics, environmental and occupational health, epidemiology, health policy and management, and global health) that received $387.5 million in research funding awards in fiscal year 2008.

The "Public Health Capital of the World," Atlanta, Georgia, Is The Home of Rollins School of Public Health

Rollins School of Public Health is practically next door to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the country's premier health agency related to disease prevention and control. In addition to being neighbors with the CDC, Rollins is within hailing distance of the American Cancer Society's national headquarters, and it is only a short drive from RSPH to numerous other public health-related institutions in Atlanta: CARE USA, the Morehouse School of Medicine, the Georgia Division of Public Health, the Carter Center, the Arthritis Foundation, and numerous state and regional health agencies.

About 100 CDC scientists "go next door" to RSPH to share their experience and expertise with Rollins students in their classrooms and labs. The two institutions are intrinsically linked through a constant flow of people, knowledge, and discoveries, and students at Rollins benefit from the knowledge carried to them by the CDC practitioners. In addition, RSPH students have use of the libraries at CDC, are given opportunities to work on research with CDC scientists, and often find paid internships at CDC. A healthy number of RSPH's new graduates even end up moving "next door" for their first jobs.

Rollins students have opportunities to gain experience with organizations like the American Red Cross, the Department of Health and Human Services, the National Cancer Institute, World Vision Canada, WHO, and UNICEF. There are also opportunities for RSPH students to work in local health agencies in locations as diverse as South Africa, Vanuatu, Cambodia, Mozambique, Guatemala, Japan, Jamaica, Ghana, Costa Rica, Nairobi, India, Mexico, Russia, Thailand, and Poland.

Atlanta was an important transportation and military supply hub during the Civil War, and now it is an important hub for public health around the world. For students interested in public health programs, it's hard to conceive of a better setting in which to learn how to deal with complex issues such as SARS, violence, environmental hazards, AIDS, and the re-emergence of infectious diseases. Rollins students conduct hands-on research, perform interdisciplinary work with national and international organizations, and collaborate with the world's leading public health agencies. When students want to dig more deeply into specific interests, they find that Rollins hosts more than twenty interdisciplinary centers, including those dealing with injury control, public health preparedness, biostatistics research and informatics, and global safe water. Rollins School of Public Health presents an amazing opportunity for learning how to identify, analyze, and address public health issues.

Students benefit from many types knowledge and experience shared with them while at Rollins. Because Rollins maintains partnerships with so many health agencies, RSPH students and faculty members can gain huge amounts of practical experience and perform hands-on research through those local, national, and international agencies and the opportunities they present. For example, more than 20 percent of Rollins's students work with federal agencies like the CDC while they are in school. Students also have opportunities to work side-by-side with world-renowned researchers in all core public health disciplines through paid assistantships and work-study positions. Real-world experience in public health is also available through practicums and summer research projects