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There are 3 modules in this course
The Health Protection course is the fourth instalment of the wider Foundations of Public Health Practice specialisation from Imperial College London's Global Master of Public Health (MPH). The scope and content of this course has been developed from the ground up by a combined team of academics and practitioners drawing on decades of real-world public health experience as well as deep academic knowledge. Through short video lectures, practitioner interviews and a wide range of interactive activities, learners will be immersed in the world of public health practice.
Designed for those new to the discipline, over three modules (intended for three weeks of learning), learners will become familiar with the scope, principles and nuances of health protection in the context of public health practice. Beginning with the basics of Water, Sanitation and Health (WASH) based interventions, the course will introduce learners to the science and principles of practical microbiology, before examining vaccines, incident management and the threat posed by a wide range of manmade and natural environmental threats. By the end of this course, learners will be familiar and conversant with core health protection principles and approaches, and confident in discussing health protection issues when they move into practice.
This fourth course, "Health Protection", part of the wider Foundations of Public Health Practice specialisation, is designed to introduce learners to the area of operational and strategic health protection. This first module, entitled "Water, sanitation and infectious diseases" introduces learners to WASH-based initiatives before, in the second lesson, bringing learners up to speed on basic microbiology and the science that underpins communicable disease control.
Meet the Team (Optional): Richard Pinder•3 minutes
Meet the Team (Optional): Samantha Alvarez Madrazo•4 minutes
Meet the Team (Optional): Lisa Danquah•3 minutes
Meet the Team (Optional): Helen Skirrow•3 minutes
Introduction to the course•3 minutes
An introduction to Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH)•4 minutes
WASH: The right to clean water•4 minutes
WASH: Working towards universal sanitation•3 minutes
WASH: Hygiene and hand washing•4 minutes
SHEWA-B: WASH in Bangladesh•5 minutes
Unintended consequences: Hepatitis C in Egypt•5 minutes
Practitioner interview: Working in WASH•6 minutes
12 readings•Total 92 minutes
About Imperial College London & the FPHP Team•5 minutes
How to be successful in this course•5 minutes
Grading policy•5 minutes
Glossary•5 minutes
The importance of water and sanitation•15 minutes
Conclusions on WASH•10 minutes
Vectors, pathogens and microbiology•10 minutes
Waterborne and foodborne diseases•10 minutes
The terminology of infection•5 minutes
Transmission and infection in communicable disease•10 minutes
Intervention opportunities•10 minutes
Conclusion•2 minutes
2 assignments•Total 30 minutes
Pathogens and disease•15 minutes
Dynamics and control of infectious diseases•15 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 25 minutes
Nice to meet you!•10 minutes
Applying the evidence•15 minutes
Module Two: Vaccines and management of communicable disease
Module 2•3 hours to complete
Module details
This fourth course, "Health Protection", part of the wider Foundations of Public Health Practice specialisation, is designed to introduce learners to the area of operational and strategic health protection. This second module, entitled "Vaccines and communicable disease control" will cover the science and practice of vaccines. In the first lesson learners are introduced to the evidence-base and impact that vaccines have had on morbidity globally. Some of the main global players are also introduced before discussion of the ethical implications of mandatory vaccination (building on learning from the first course of this specialisation "The Public Health Approach"). Bringing all of the learning on this course together, the second lesson introduces communicable disease control and the management of health protection incidents.
Health protection outbreak scenario: Introduction•1 minute
Health protection outbreak scenario: Conclusion•3 minutes
Vulnerability in communicable disease•5 minutes
Conclusion to the module•2 minutes
10 readings•Total 88 minutes
Welcome to the module•3 minutes
Vaccinology and key terminology•5 minutes
The global impact of vaccinations•15 minutes
The MMR controversy and the anti-vaccination movement•10 minutes
Conclusions on vaccination•5 minutes
Defining and detecting outbreaks•10 minutes
Notification of infectious disease and case definitions•10 minutes
Public health actions•10 minutes
Outbreak response to norovirus•10 minutes
An overview of incident mangement•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
Health protection in practice•30 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 15 minutes
Mandatory vaccines for school?•15 minutes
1 plugin•Total 15 minutes
Health Protection Outbreak Scenario•15 minutes
Module Three: Environmental hazards and strategic health protection threats
Module 3•3 hours to complete
Module details
This fourth course, "Health Protection", part of the wider Foundations of Public Health Practice specialisation, is designed to introduce learners to the area of operational and strategic health protection. This third module, entitled "Environmental hazards and strategic health protection threats" examines the non-communicable disease elements of health protection - with an introduction to CBRN and exploration of the public health approach in the context of major incidents and health emergencies. In the first lesson learners are introduced to the emerging public health topic of air quality: with specific exploration of the collision of circumstances leading to London's Ultra Low Emission Zone. The second lesson moves into CBRN with a case study of the Fukushima Daiichi radiological incident of 2011.
Imperial College London is a world top ten university with an international reputation for excellence in science, engineering, medicine and business. located in the heart of London. Imperial is a multidisciplinary space for education, research, translation and commercialisation, harnessing science and innovation to tackle global challenges.
Imperial students benefit from a world-leading, inclusive educational experience, rooted in the College’s world-leading research. Our online courses are designed to promote interactivity, learning and the development of core skills, through the use of cutting-edge digital technology.
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DM
5·
Reviewed on Apr 18, 2021
another good course with good content and some familiar tools, like PESTEL analysis, applied to the topic
J
JS
5·
Reviewed on May 27, 2020
Excellent course for present situation. Helped to develop skills.
T
TB
5·
Reviewed on May 20, 2020
Excellent course for working professional as a part of continuous education process. I strongly suggest professionals to take the courses offered on this self-learning platform.
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What will I get if I subscribe to this Specialization?
When you enroll in the course, you get access to all of the courses in the Specialization, and you earn a certificate when you complete the work. Your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.
Is financial aid available?
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