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Spring 2022 Class Schedule

Spring 2022 class Schedule

Core Courses

 

Spring 2022 core courses
Course Title Instructor Day/Time
GBL_HLTH 301  Introduction to International Public Health Sullivan TuTh 11:00am-12:20pm
GBL_HLTH 302 Global Bioethics Rodriguez TuTh 12:30-1:50pm
GBL_HLTH 302 Global Bioethics Reyes MW 2:00-3:20pm
GBL_HLTH 310 Supervised Global Health Research: Maternal Health in London (for accepted applicants only) Rodriguez TuTh 11:00am-12:20pm
GBL_HLTH 320 Qualitative Research Methods in Global Health Hoominfar MW 9:30-10:50am
GBL_HLTH 322 The Social Determinants of Health Mitchell TuTh 9:30-10:50am
GBL_HLTH 390-0-21 Special Topics in Global Health: Literary Genres + Health: A TBR Readalong Reyes TuTh 12:30-1:50pm
GBL_HLTH 390 Special Topics in Global Health: Biocultural Perspectives on Water Insecurity Young TuTh 11:00am-12:50pm
GBL_HLTH 390 Special Topics in Global Health: Healthcare Under Socialism and Postsocialism Djordjevic W 2:00-4:50pm
GBL_HLTH 390 Special Topics in Global Health: (Re)mixing Qualitative Methods Mitchell TuTh 11:00am-12:50pm
GBL_HLTH 390 Special Topics in Global Health: Hazards, Disasters, and Society Hoominfar MW 3:30-4:50pm

  

 

Spring 2022 elective courses
Course Title Instructor Day/Time
ASIAN_AM 360-0-1 Asian American Sexualities Raymond San Diego TuTh 2:00-3:20pm
ANTHRO 309 Human Osteology Erin Waxembaum Dennison F 11:00am-1:00pm
ANTHRO 312 Human Population Biology Aaron Miller WF 4:00-5:20pm
ANTHRO 315 Medical Anthropology Rebecca Seligman TuTh 12:30-1:50pm
BMD_ENG 380 Medical Devices, Disease & Global Health Matthew Glucksberg MWF 1:00-1:50pm
BUS_INST 394-LK Professional Linkage Seminar: Lessons in Non-Profit Management Paul Sznewajs Th 2:00-4:50pm
CHEM 316 Medicinal Chemistry: The Organic Chemistry of Drug Design and Action Richard Silverman TuTh 11:00am-12:20pm
CFS 392 Field Studies in Public Health Jessica Ibrahim Puri M 6:30-8:30pm
CFS 397 Field Studies in Civic Engagement Elizabeth McCabe W 6:30-8:30pm
ECON 307 Economics of Medical Care Frank Limbrock MWF 12:30-1:50pm
ECON 326 The Economics of Developing Countries Lori Beaman

TuTh 12:30-1:50pm & F 1:00-1:50pm

GNDR_ST 332 Gender, Sexuality, and Health: Disability Justice Sarah Brown MW 3:30-4:50pm
HISTORY 393-0-20 Approaches to History: Indigenous Health and Healing Tess Lanzarotta TuTh 12:30-1:50pm
GNDR_ST 332 / HUM 375-0-20 / SOCIOL 376-0-20 Gender, Sexuality, and Health: Race/Gender/Sex & Science Steven Epstein TuTh 3:30-4:50pm
GNDR_ST 332-0-21 Gender, Sexuality, and Health: Reproductive Health/Justice/Politics Amy Partridge TuTh 11:00am-12:20pm
HUM 220 / SOCIOL 220 Health, Biomedicine, Culture, and Society Steven Epstein TuTh 9:30-10:50am
PHIL 269 Bioethics Lendell Horne TuTh 11:00am-12:20pm
PHIL 361 Topics in Philosophy of Medicine Lendell Horne TuTh 2:00-3:20pm
SOCIOL 355 Medical Sociology: Sociology of Medicine Carol Heimer TuTh 2:00-3:20pm
SPANISH 205 Spanish for Professions: Health Care Maria Teresa Villaneuva MWF 9:00-9:50am

 

 

Spring 2022 course descriptions

GBL_HLTH 301: Introduction to International Public Health

This course introduces students to pressing disease and health care problems worldwide and examines efforts currently underway to address them. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, the course identifies the main actors, institutions, practices and forms of knowledge production characteristic of what we call "global health" today, and explores the environmental, social, political and economic factors that shape patterns and experiences of illness and healthcare across societies. We will scrutinize the value systems that underpin specific paradigms in the policy and science of global health and place present-day developments in historical perspective. We will focus on social determinants of health, settler colonialism, colonialism, health and human rights, global health ethics, ecological determinants of health, and an overview of public health disciplines. 

GBL_HLTH 302: Global Bioethics

Global health is a popular field of work and study for Americans, with an increasing number of medical trainees and practitioners, as well as people without medical training, going abroad to volunteer in areas where there are few health care practitioners or resources. In addition, college undergraduates, as well as medical trainees and practitioners, are going abroad in increasing numbers to conduct research in areas with few healthcare resources. But all of these endeavors, though often entered into with the best of intentions, are beset with ethical questions, concerns, and dilemmas, and can have unintended consequences. In this course, students will explore and consider these ethical challenges. In so doing, students will examine core global bioethical concerns – such as structural violence – and core global bioethical codes, guidelines, and principals – such as beneficence and solidarity – so they will be able to ethically assess global health practices in a way that places an emphasis on the central goal of global health: reducing health inequities and disparities. With an emphasis on the ethical responsibility to reduce disparities, we consider some of the most pressing global bioethical issues of our time: equity, fairness, and climate change. Particular attention is given to the ethics of research during a pandemic and access to vaccines and therapies for Covid-19. 
Fulfills Area V (Ethics and Values) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 320: Qualitative Research Methods in Global Health

This course is designed to provide global health students with the tools they will need in order to design, revise, conduct, and write up current and future qualitative research projects relating to global health topics. This course is experientially driven, allowing students opportunities to actually "do" research, while providing careful mentoring and engaging in in-depth discussions about ethical and methodological issues associated with qualitative approaches and with working with living humans. Students will learn methods such as: writing research proposals, research ethics, writing ethnographic field notes, doing qualitative interviews and focus groups, analyzing and writing up data.
Fulfills Area III (Social and Behavioral Sciences) distribution requirement

GBL_HLTH 322: The Social Determinants of Health

The human body is embedded into a health framework that can produce hypervisibility, invisibility, or both. This upper-level course examines the role of social markers of difference, including race, class, gender, sexuality, age, and religion, in current debates and challenges in the theory and practice of global health. We will explore recent illness experiences, therapeutic and self-care interventions, and health practices and behaviors in socio-cultural and historical context through case studies in the U.S., Brazil, and South Africa. The purpose of this course is to introduce students to key concepts such as embodiment, medicalization, structural violence, social determinants of health, biopolitics, health equity, and an ethic of care. Central questions of the course include: How do categories of "Othering" determine disease and health in individuals and collectives? How is medical science and care influenced by economic and political institutions, and by patient trust? How do social and economic inclusion/exclusion control access to health treatment, self-care, and care of loved ones This course focuses on the linkages between society and health inequalities in the U.S., U.S. territories, Brazil, and Africa. It offers a forum to explore how social standings (mis)inform policies. This course utilizes historical accounts, contemporary ethnographies, Twitter threads of health experiences, public health literature, media reports, TedTalks, and films to bring to life the "why's" of health differences.

GBL_HLTH 390: Special Topics in Global Health: Literary Genres + Health: A TBR Readalong

When I was a student my “To Be Read” list was always really long and often forgotten. As I have re-established my love of reading for fun I see how literary genres influence and challenge our understanding of well-being/health. Fiction, non-fiction, poems, memoirs, novels, young adult fiction, science fiction, mysteries, fantasy, fairy tales, horror, children’s literature, magical realism, and so many other genres influence popular understanding of various health issues. They give us insight into how other folks imagine and understanding situations we may or may not find ourselves in. The best text allow us to empathize with the characters or authors, to consider what we would do if we were them. When I was thinking up this course, books that came to mind included “The Cancer Journals,” “The Fault in Our Stars,” “Being Mortal,” “The Bell Jar,” “The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down,” “The Marrow Thieves,” “Radium Girls,” “My Sister’s Keeper,” “Call the Midwife,” “Invisible,” “The Beauty of Breaking,” “Medical Apartheid,” “What the Eyes Don’t See,” “And the Band Played On,” and “Bad Blood.” Our course will consider some of these and other genres noted above.  
You’ll be asked to propose a book to read/listen to and a list of various text will also be provided if you need guidance in choosing a text. We will consider issues like how these text influence the norms about health and well-being. In this course we will use ungrading but will require 2 assignment submissions in order to pass the course. Beatriz will help you access books that aren’t easily available or affordable. 

 

GBL_HLTH 390: Special Topics in Global Health: Biocultural Perspectives on Water Insecurity

The first objective of this course is to introduce students to the many ways that water impacts humans around the world. We will discuss what the international recommendations for safely managed water are and the health and social consequences of water insecurity. The second objective is to explore why there is such variety in water insecurity worldwide. Influences on access to water will be broadly considered; we will draw on literature in global health, ethnography, the life sciences, and public policy. These discussions will be guided by the socio-ecological framework, in which dimensions ranging from the individual to the geopolitical are considered. The third objective is to develop critical thinking and writing abilities to reflect on the multi-dimensional causes and consequences of water insecurity and the appropriateness of potential solutions. This will be accomplished through carefully reading the articles and book chapters we have lovingly selected, writing weekly reflection pieces, preparing a short in-class presentation on recent events in the media, and contributing to discussions and case studies of water insecurity.

GBL_HLTH 390: Special Topics in Global Health: (Re)mixing Qualitative Methods

In this upper-level course exploring approaches to meld traditional data collection methods with alternative techniques, students will review decolonizing ways that Black/African American individuals have used to reveal their truths and construct and reconstruct images of themselves. Students will explore how these same processes can be applied in public health data collection to be inclusive and validate the methods and ways of knowing that have assisted underserved, underheard, and underrepresented communities in advocating for justice to survive. Course readings will consist of text that provides a critical lens to view qualitative data collection methods through and will include studies in historical and traumatic violence that underscore how people living in Black bodies work to survive by Joy DeGruy and the negotiating processes that Black individuals use to exercise agency and evaluate systemic oppressions that impede how they navigate life as articulated by authors such as Patricia Hill Collins, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Richard Delgado, and Jean Stefancic.

GBL_HLTH 390: Special Topics in Global Health: Healthcare Under Socialism and Postsocialism

This course introduces students to ideas and concepts of health care and social protection during socialism and post-socialism in Eastern and Southeastern Europe. The course will explore systems based on the principle of "health for all" and their transformation during the so-called post-socialist transition from state-planned to market-oriented economies. Taking an interdisciplinary approach, we will examine the complex relationship between socialist heritage and the influence of neoliberal policies on health care systems in former socialist states, with a special emphasis on the former Yugoslavia. Key course topics include: socialist governance and health care policy; the politics of post-socialist “transition”; the neoliberalization of health care and social protection policies; patients and their rights in the new order; informal economies and clientelism; and challenges in access to healthcare for marginalized social groups. Additionally, we will discuss the complex relationship between socialist legacy and neoliberal transformation regarding the response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the former socialist states. Throughout the course, students will be encouraged to think critically about the political, economic, ethical, and cultural complexities of health care under socialism and the neoliberal transition.

GBL_HLTH 390: Special Topics in Global Health: Hazards, Disasters, and Society

This course examines how socioeconomic and environmental factors work together to cause hazards and disasters in human society. In this course we learn the main concepts about disaster such as preparedness, vulnerability, resilience, response, mitigation, etc. We learn that a disaster does not have the same effect on everyone (all groups of people), and factors of social inequality such as race, ethnicity, class, and gender, make people more vulnerable to impacts of disasters. Also, this course, with an interdisciplinary perspective, analyzes disasters in the global North and South. This is a discussion-intensive course for advanced undergrad students. The classes are the student-centered with an emphasis on collaborative learning. The class meetings will consist of lecture, discussion, presentations, teamwork, activities, video/audio materials and projects. 

 

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