Difference between revisions of "Mailman School of Public Health"

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Officially, the '''Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health'''.
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{{Infobox school
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|Name=Mailman School of Public Health
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|Image=CUShield.png
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|Established=[[1922]] (Institute), [[1945]] (School)
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|Dean=[[Linda Fried]]
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|Degrees=[[MPH]], [[MS]], [[DrPH]], [[PhD]]
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|Enrollment=823 students (2005)
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|Website=[http://mailman.hs.columbia.edu/ mailman.hs.columbia.edu]
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}}
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The '''Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health (MSPH)''' offers education in six tracks of public health: Environmental Health, Sociomedical Sciences, Biostatistics, Health Policy and Management, Epidemiology and Population and Family Health. Specialties within these tracks include Forced Migration and Health, Global Health, and Health Promotion. It's located in the 20-story [[Allan Rosenfeld Building]] on the [[Medical Center]] campus, and is the only accredited school of public health in New York City. It has the second-highest research revenue of any Columbia school, on which it supports itself independently. There also instances of MSPH supporting student groups on campus, as it does for the [[Barnard Columbia Undergraduate Public Health Society]].
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Lately, the Mailman School has been spiced up by the presence of [[Jeffrey Sachs]] on the faculty list and [[Chelsea Clinton]] and [[Christy Turlington]] in the student body.
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==History==
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The school's founding was sparked by a 1909 [[College of Physicians and Surgeons]] call for a "new public health" that would integrate the medical and social sciences. In [[1922]], Joseph DeLamar belatedly answered the request with a $9 million bequest to start the DeLamar Institute of Public Health. The Institute evolved into the School of Public Health by [[1945]].
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In [[1939]], the school agreed to share a building with [[New York City]]'s Public Health Department on 168th St., beginning a period of cooperation between the school and the city government.
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In [[1992]], it became financially independent of the [[Faculty of Medicine]], and was bolstered by a $33 million gift from Joseph L. Mailman in [[1999]]. The independent [[Faculty of Public Health]] was founded in [[2000]], further distancing the school from the [[Medical Center]] core.
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== Departments==
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# [[Biostatistics Department]]
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# [[Environmental Health Sciences Department]]
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# [[Epidemiology Department]]
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# [[Health Policy and Management Department]]
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# [[Population and Family Health Department]]
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# [[Sociomedical Sciences Department]]
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==External links==
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*[http://www.mailman.columbia.edu/ Mailman School website]
  
 
{{Schools}}
 
{{Schools}}
  
[[Category: Schools]]
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[[Category:Mailman School of Public Health]]
[[Category:Columbia University Medical Center]]
 

Latest revision as of 07:31, 17 December 2013

Mailman School of Public Health
CUShield.png
Established 1922 (Institute), 1945 (School)
President {{{President}}}
Dean Linda Fried
Degrees MPH, MS, DrPH, PhD
Enrollment 823 students (2005)
Website mailman.hs.columbia.edu

The Joseph L. Mailman School of Public Health (MSPH) offers education in six tracks of public health: Environmental Health, Sociomedical Sciences, Biostatistics, Health Policy and Management, Epidemiology and Population and Family Health. Specialties within these tracks include Forced Migration and Health, Global Health, and Health Promotion. It's located in the 20-story Allan Rosenfeld Building on the Medical Center campus, and is the only accredited school of public health in New York City. It has the second-highest research revenue of any Columbia school, on which it supports itself independently. There also instances of MSPH supporting student groups on campus, as it does for the Barnard Columbia Undergraduate Public Health Society.

Lately, the Mailman School has been spiced up by the presence of Jeffrey Sachs on the faculty list and Chelsea Clinton and Christy Turlington in the student body.

History

The school's founding was sparked by a 1909 College of Physicians and Surgeons call for a "new public health" that would integrate the medical and social sciences. In 1922, Joseph DeLamar belatedly answered the request with a $9 million bequest to start the DeLamar Institute of Public Health. The Institute evolved into the School of Public Health by 1945.

In 1939, the school agreed to share a building with New York City's Public Health Department on 168th St., beginning a period of cooperation between the school and the city government.

In 1992, it became financially independent of the Faculty of Medicine, and was bolstered by a $33 million gift from Joseph L. Mailman in 1999. The independent Faculty of Public Health was founded in 2000, further distancing the school from the Medical Center core.

Departments

  1. Biostatistics Department
  2. Environmental Health Sciences Department
  3. Epidemiology Department
  4. Health Policy and Management Department
  5. Population and Family Health Department
  6. Sociomedical Sciences Department

External links

Columbia University Schools
Architecture, Planning and PreservationArtsArts and Sciences (Graduate School)BusinessColumbia CollegeDentistryContinuing EducationEngineeringGeneral StudiesInternational and Public AffairsJournalismLawMedicineNursingPublic HealthSocial Work
Affiliated Institutions
BarnardJewish Theological SeminaryTeachers CollegeUnion Theological Seminary
Defunct Schools
PharmacyLibrary Service