Product Description
Columbia Univ., New York City, NY. Provides an overview of the past, present, and future of public health education, assessing its readiness to offer the training and education necessary to prepare for the 21st century. Discusses the role of public health, government agencies, and education in the health and well being for future generations…. More >>
Who Will Keep the Public Healthy?: Educating Public Health Professionals for the 21st Century
Tags: 21st, 21st century, Century, Educating, educating public health, educating public health professionals, future generations, future of public health, Health, health government agencies, Healthy, Keep, Professionals, Public, public health education, public health professionals
#1 by mstootsieroll on March 21, 2010 - 9:15 am
This text provides a comprehensive report by the Institute of Medicine of the new recommendations on the future of public health education. The committee was represented from various fields from academia, research, medicine, nursing to law, which provided a broad prospective of the many issues surrounding public health and the challenges its facing in the 21st century such as globalization, bioterrorism and issues related to ethics and the law to name a few. This report provides the reader with an overview of the history and current status of public health education. It provides institutions and organizations that are responsible for the education of public health professionals with specific framework and recommendations on how it can be strengthen, including gaps that need to be addressed. This text highlights the importance of having adequately trained and competent public health professionals for the future and protection of our nation’s public health. This reports goes further to recommend that “all medical students receive a basic public health training”, but also to incorporate training in public health to other fields such as lawyers who can have influence over policies that can have “profound effect upon the public health” and “the value of instructing future business leaders about the health consequences of their decisions.” There is also emphasis on academic and community collaboration, partnership with public health agencies, access to life long learning and transdisciplinary research. This is a timely assessment and report on issues that are critical to the future of public health. I highly suggest reading this text to anyone who has interest in public health.
Rating: 5 / 5