Displaying the Offices Category

Sunshine ERC provides students cross-discipline collaboration

| Academic & Student Affairs, Centers and Institutes, COPH Office of Research, Featured News, Monday Letter, OSHA, Our People, Our Research

First published on May 8, 2020 in observance of the COPH’s 35th anniversary celebration. The Sunshine Education and Research Center (Sunshine ERC) located in the USF College of Public Health is one of 18 National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) education and research centers across the nation that […]

From undergrad to doctoral level, COPH Delta Omega student presenters score big at APHA

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Doctoral Programs, Featured News, Masters Programs, Monday Letter, Our Accolades, Our Research, Students, Undergraduate Programs

Three USF College of Public Health (COPH) students presented research abstracts at the Delta-Omega-sponsored Student Poster Session at the annual American Public Health Association’s (APHA) Meeting and Expo held in Atlanta in November. Delta Omega is a national honorary society for public health students with more than 20,000 members. Each year, […]

COPH health administration students take part in IPE event to improve the way physicians provide care

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Featured News, Masters Programs, Monday Letter, Our People, Our Research, Students, Take Note!

USF College of Public Health (COPH) master’s students concentrating in either healthcare administration or health care organizations and management recently had the opportunity to participate in an interprofessional education (IPE) event held in conjunction with the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine (MCOM). The session was organized in November by […]

Food insecurity affects Black and Hispanic students disproportionately—but for surprisingly different reasons

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Doctoral Programs, Featured News, Health Equity, Monday Letter, Our Research, Students

Food insecurity affects up to 50% of college students, with African American and Hispanic/Latino students experiencing it 1.5 times more often than their non-Hispanic White and Asian counterparts. That puts them at greater risk for not just health problems, but also depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation, stress and poorer academic performance. […]

How removing water vegetation improves health, economy of community

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Doctoral Programs, Featured News, Global Health and Infectious Diseases Research, Monday Letter, Our People, Our Research, Our World

Schistosomiasis is a parasitic disease caused by snail-transmitted flatworms. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the disease—which can cause scarring and inflammation of the liver, intestines and bladder, leading to anemia, malnutrition and learning difficulties, particularly in children—affects some 200 million people worldwide. The disease is most […]

Using “communicative resilience” to prevent suicides in LGBTQ+ communities

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Doctoral Programs, Featured News, Health and Safety, Monday Letter, Offices, Our People, Our Research, Students

LGBTQ+ youth are four times more likely to attempt suicide than their same-age heterosexual or cisgender peers, and experts say it’s not their sexual orientation or gender identity that ups their suicide risk but the isolation and stigma they feel because of discrimination against it. Kelli Agrawal, a USF College […]

COPH PhD student presents first-of-its-kind research on red tide exposure and pregnancy outcomes

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Doctoral Programs, Epidemiology, Featured News, Our Research, Students

Rain Freeman, a USF College of Public Health (COPH) PhD student concentrating in epidemiology, recently presented research about the effects of red tide on preterm birth at the International Society of Exposure Science (ISES) conference held in Chicago in August. She conducted the research, “Florida Red Tides and Preterm Birth,” […]

When it comes to modifying human embryos, are proponents downplaying the risks?

| Academic & Student Affairs, COPH Office of Research, Featured News, Monday Letter, Our Research, Students

While most countries prohibit the modification of human embryos using technologies like mitochondrial replacement therapy (MRT) and human germline genome editing, scientists and policymakers are increasingly calling for more relaxed restrictions. These technologies alter one’s germline (the cells that pass on genetic material), providing, proponents say, a way of eliminating […]