The University Senate of Michigan Technological University
Proposal 21-20
Proposal for Minor in Public Health
(Voting Units: Academic)
1. Date
29 January 2020
2. Proposer Contact Information
Kelly Kamm, Assistant Professor, Department of Kinesiology and Integrative Physiology
Email: kbkamm@mtu.edu
3. Introduction
The proposed minor in public health will be offered through the Department of Kinesiology
and Integrative Physiology (KIP). A minor in public health will introduce students
to public and population health principles and research methodologies. This will help
students preparing for careers in allied and professional health, graduate programs
in biology and physiology, as well as students in law, social sciences, policy, and
engineering integrate public health perspectives into their field.
4. Rationale
Human health is impacted by our individual biology as well as the natural, built,
and social environments in which we live, work, and play. Thus, the ability to be
health literate and able to integrate a health perspective is important in disciplines
beyond traditional health-related and clinical fields. In the past 15 years there
has been a growing recognition of the importance academia plays in teaching these
skills. In 2002, an Institute of Medicine report recognized the need to better educate
the public health workforce and partners that play key roles in the health of our
communities who are not in traditional public health positions.1 A subsequent report expanded that call for public health education, recommending
that “all undergraduates should have access to education in public health”. 2 This widespread need to understand population health and health impacts was further
highlighted when, in 2011, the U.S. federal government adopted a “Health in All Policies
(HiAP)” strategy. A HiAP approach recognizes the importance of considering health
across all fields in both the public and private sectors. The proposed public health
minor will introduce students to the growing field of public health and the need to
include a population health perspective in many of the university’s existing degrees.
Furthermore, the proposed minor is in line with other recent health education initiatives
implemented on campus (e.g. CMU-MTU Physical Therapy Partnership) to help address
the shortage of healthcare workers in medically underserved areas of the U.P.
Access to undergraduate training in public health is growing nationwide. In 1992, less than 800 students graduated with a baccalaureate in a public health field and by 2012 that number increased to nearly 6,500 students.3 The number of schools awarding these degrees has also seen immense growth, increasing nearly 4-fold in the last 20 years.3 Data showing the growth in minors in public health are not published, but it is likely similar and may be more impressive, given that a minor generally requires fewer institutional investments. The growing interest in health-related fields among Michigan Tech students, existing student populations in fields that are inherently health-related (such as engineering fields designing and building healthy and safe communities), and the University objective to advance our nation’s health all support development of a minor in public health at Michigan Tech.
KIP is particularly well suited to support public health education at Michigan Tech. As the science of human movement, kinesiology includes the science of exercise and physical activity, a critical component to improve and maintain health and well-being.45 The American Kinesiology Association states it is imperative to include “content that explores in detail the relationship between physical activity participation, health and well-being” in undergraduate kinesiology curricula.6 A minor in public health supports this trend and exposes students to professional and graduate opportunities for applied kinesiology in the context of community and population health.
The curriculum proposed for this minor are based on guidance from the Association of American Colleges and Universities and the Association for Prevention Teaching and Research.7 These guidelines for implementing undergraduate majors and minors recommend specific learning outcomes and encourages universities to offer interdisciplinary programs that focus on their strengths and existing resources.
5. Details
I. Title of Minor
Minor in Public Health
II. Catalog Description and Learning Objectives
Students completing a minor in public health will strengthen their understanding of
how individual, social, political, and environmental issues influence the health and
well-being of local, national, and global populations. This minor will introduce students
to the systematic public health approach to define and address health needs at a population
level and reduce health disparities within and between communities. Students will
learn how to address complex health problems and promote healthy behaviors by integrating
different disciplines into a public health system, reflecting the US public health
strategy of “Health in all Policies”.
This minor is expected to draw students from a variety of pre-health professional and health-related disciplines across the university. Additionally, many other disciplines not traditionally viewed as ‘health-related’ impact the health and well-being of our communities in their applications (e.g. water and sanitation systems in underserved communities; marketing healthy choices), thus these majors could be complemented by a public health minor.
Learning Objectives. Upon successful completion of the Public Heath minor, students will be able to:
- Apply a public health approach to identify and address complex health needs in populations.
- Assess the biologic, social, behavioral, cultural, political, and environmental factors that promote or inhibit health equity in populations.
- Apply ethical principles of research and public health to the design or evaluation of existing or proposed public health programs, policies, or interventions.
- Demonstrate the interdisciplinary nature of public health by examining the contributions of different disciplines (including the student’s chosen major field) to protect and improve the health of global or domestic populations.
III. List of courses
Students must complete 18 credit hours as detailed below, with at least 9 credit hours
at a level of 3000 or higher.
Required coursework. Students are required to take both courses listed in Table 1, and two of the courses listed in Table 2, for a total of 12-13 credit hours.
Elective coursework. Students select an additional 5-6 credit hours (total 18 credit hours) from Table 3 or additional courses from Table 2 (beyond the required selection). Courses listed are relevant to important domestic and global public health specialties such as health promotion and communication, health disparities, public health microbiology, environmental health, and health policy. Public health topic courses are organized to suggest relevance to specialties; students may take any combination of the courses listed. Other courses may be substituted for elective credits with the approval of the advisor for the minor. Substitution requests must be made in writing and clearly document the relevance of the proposed course to public health.
Table 1. Required Public Health Basics
Course ID | Title | Credits |
KIP 2600 | Introduction to Public Health | 3 |
KIP 4740 | Epidemiology | 3 |
Table 2. Required Public Health Topics
Course ID | Title | Credits |
Epidemiology/Biostatistics | ||
MA 3715 | Biostatistics | 3 |
MA 3740 | Statistical Programming and Analysis | 3 |
MA 4710 | Regression Analysis | 3 |
Public Health Biology | ||
BL 3230 | Medical Bacteriology | 4 |
KIP 3700 | Lifetime Fitness | 3 |
BL 4752 | Cancer Biology | 3 |
Health Promotion and Communication | ||
BL 3970 | Current Health Issues | 3 |
HU 4625 | Risk Communication | 3 |
MKT 3000 | Principles of Marketing | 3 |
Environmental Health | ||
FW 4010 | Public Health and the Environment | 3 |
CEE 3503 | Environmental Engineering | 3 |
Health disparities | ||
SS 3750 | Social Inequality | 3 |
KIP 4060/SS 4060 | Life-course Health in Global Populations | 3 |
Health Policies and Administration | ||
SAT 4424 | Population Health Management and Monitoring | 3 |
Table 3. Elective Public Health Topics
Course ID | Title | Credits |
Epidemiology/Biostatistics | ||
BE 2110 | Statistical Methods for Biomedical Engineering | 3 |
PSY 2720 | Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences | 4 |
MA 2720 | Statistics Methods | 4 |
Public Health Biology | ||
BL 2940 | Human Nutrition | 3 |
BL 3220 | Medical Mycology and Virology | 3 |
BL 3780 | Medical Parasitology Laboratory | 1 |
BL 4038 | Epigenetics | 3 |
BL 4070 | Environmental Toxicology | 3 |
Health Promotion and Communication | ||
KIP 3000 | Sports Psychology | 3 |
PSY 2200 | Behavior Modification | 3 |
PSY 2400 | Health Psychology | 3 |
PSY 2800 | Critical Thinking for Social and Behavioral Sciences | 3 |
PSY 4750 | Judgement and Decision Making | 3 |
Environmental Health | ||
CEE 4503 | Drinking Water Treatment Principles and Design | 3 |
CEE 4993 | Engineering with Developing Communities | 2 |
CEE 4502 | Wastewater Treatment Principles and Design | 3 |
CEE 4504 | Air Quality Engineering and Science | 3 |
SS 3300 | Environmental Problems | 3 |
Health Disparities | ||
HU 3261 | Topics in Communicating Across Cultures | 3 |
PSY 3070 | Cross-Cultural Psychology | 3 |
SS 2050 | Fundamentals of Geographic Information Systems and Technologies | 3 |
SS 3105 | Native American and Indigenous Communities | 3 |
Health Policies and Administration | ||
HU 4711 | Biomedical Research Ethics | 3 |
SS 3621 | Introduction to Public Policy and Public Management | 3 |
SS 3315 | Population and Environment | 3 |
IV. Prerequisites not listed in the minor
Course ID | Prerequisite(s) |
Epidemiology/Biostatistics | |
BE 2110 | MA 1135 or MA 1160 or MA 1161 |
PSY 2720 | MA 1031 or MA1032 or MA 1160 or MA 1161 or MA 1135 |
MA 2720 | MA 1020 or MA 1030 or ALEKS Math Placement (≥61) or CEEB Calculus BC (≥2) or CEEB Calculus AB Subscore (≥2) or ACT Mathematics (≥22) or SAT Math Section Score-M16 (≥540) |
MA 3715 | MA 1135 or MA 1160 or MA 1161 |
MA 3740 | MA 2710 or MA 2720 or MA 3710 or MA 3715 |
MA 4710 | MA 2710 or MA 2720 or MA 3710 or MA 3715 |
Public Health Biology | |
BL 3220 | BL 3210 |
BL3230 | BL 3210 |
BL 4752 | BL 3012 or BL 4370 or BE 2400 |
BL 3780 | BL 1710 and BL 2410 |
BL 4038 | BL 3300 or BL 4030 |
BL 4070 | BL 1020 or BL 1040 and CH 1150 and CH 1160 |
Health Promotion and Communication | |
BL 3970 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
HU 4625 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
KIP 3000 | PSY 2000 |
PSY 2200 | PSY 2000 |
PSY 2400 | PSY 2000 |
PSY 2800 | PSY 2000 |
PSY 4750 | PSY 2000 |
Environmental Health | |
CEE 3503 | MA 2160 and CH 1112 or (CH 1150 and CH 1151) |
CEE 4503 | ENVE 3501 or CEE 3501 or ENVE 3503 or CEE 3503 |
CEE 4993 | ENG 2120 or MEEM 2150 and CE 3620 or CEE 3620 |
CEE 4502 | ENVE 3501 or CEE 3501 or ENVE 3503 or CEE 3503 |
CEE 4504 | ENVE 3501 or ENVE 3503 or CEE 3501 or CEE 3503 |
SS 3300 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
SS 3300 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
Health Disparities | |
SS 3750 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
PSY 3070 | PSY 2000 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
SS 3105 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
Health Policies and Administration | |
SS 3621 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher |
SAT 4424 | SAT 4422 or BL 2010 or BL 3080 or EH 1500 or KIP 1500 or SAT 5121 |
HU 4711 | UN 1015 and UN 1025 |
SS 3315 | MA 1030 and MA 1031 or MA 1032 and UN 1015 and [UN 1025 or Modern Language 3000 or higher] |
6. Advising
Kelly Kamm, Assistant Professor in Kinesiology and Integrative Physiology, will advise
students who choose to enroll in this minor.
7. New Course Descriptions
Life-course Health in Global Populations (KIP 4060/SS 4060) is a proposed course included
in this proposal. The specialty field of a new faculty hire (Kelly Kamm) and existing
faculty allows for the development of this course. The course will be co-taught and
co-listed between KIP and Social Sciences. The course will be submitted to the binder
process in Fall 2020 and be offered beginning in 2021-2022 academic year. Life-course
Health in Global Populations will combine theories and methods from epidemiology,
public health, development, and geographic information science to understand spatial
and temporal determinants of health and their impact on the health of populations
in low- and middle- income countries.
8. Estimated Costs
No additional costs will be associated with the minor at this time. Except for the
new course described above, all required and elective courses are currently taught
on a regular basis and have existing capacity. If necessary, KIP will explore options
to increase enrollment capacity for key courses.
9. Learning resources
The university library resources are adequate for the needs of the proposed minor.
Current electronic journal subscriptions include key public health related journals.
No additional equipment is needed for the proposed minor.
10. Planned Implementation Date
Fall 2020
February 5, 2020