By Juliana Restivo

CE requirement deadlines

December 15th, 2016 in GH Announcements

The deadline to complete the CE requirement is upon us, and news of CE completions are coming in.

Please Note:
1. The deadline for the final version of your CE is Friday, December 16 at 5pm. This is the date for receiving final approval from your CE advisor, not the day you submit a final draft to your advisor.

2. Once you have your CE advisor approval, you must submit the following via this online form:

  • a. a final version of your CE, (and a completed cover page)
  • b. the email confirming approval from your CE advisor
  • c. a copy of your CV

3. Once the above is complete, I can notify the SPH Registrar that you have completed the GH CE requirement.

Not yet finished?
Students have up to 2 semesters to complete the CE. If you have not completed the CE by the end of the semester in which it is started, you must register for GH951 (a zero credit one-time CE extension) in the subsequent semester to continue working on the CE. You should also meet with your CE advisor to update the timeline and scope of work. For more information on CE incompletes, see the CE Process & Policies.

Have additional questions or concerns? Please contact Joe Anzalone

StAMP Launch and Alumni Network Express

December 1st, 2016 in BUSPH Events

You are invited to the 2016 StAMP Launch & Alumni Networking Express event!

This event brings BUSPH alumni together with current students for "speed networking" to discuss public health career pathways, make connections, and learn about our Student and Alumni Mentoring Program (StAMP).

Do not miss this great opportunity for a night of networking, socializing, and public health engagement!
Friday, December 2 | 5:00 - 8:00 pm | Hiebert Lounge

Doors open at 5:00 pm with special remarks from Dean Galea at 5:30 pm.

Professional attire recommended.

* Special Note about Global Health alums who will be in attendance:

Dianne Perlmutter, Health Services, ’97, SSW’73 – Senior Program Consultant, JSI Inc.
Jamie Gaynes, Maternal & Child Health, ’14 – Government Relations Specialist, Boston Children’s Hospital
Bram Brooks, Epidemiology and Global Health, ’07, ’16 (DrPH) – Research and Metrics Advisor, Pathfinder International
Fei Huang, Biostatistics and Epidemiology, ’16 – Manager, Global Health Economics and Outcome Research, Philips Healthcare
Katherine Lee, Epidemiology and Global Health, ’12 – Epidemiology Research Associate, Quintiles (Previously Monitoring & Evaluation Specialist, Grassroots Soccer)
Kathryn Spielman, Biostatistics and Global Health, ’14 – Data Analyst, Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy
Zachery Gersten, Global Health, ’14 – Project Coordinator, Tufts University Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy
Sylvia Baedorf Kassis, Global Health, ’08 – Senior Clinical Research Project/Program Manager, Massachusetts General Hospital
Fiat Vongpunsawad, Global Health, ’11 – Director of Client Analytics, Eliza Corporation

The event schedule will be:

Hiebert Lounge, 14th Floor

MED Instructional Building
72 E. Concord Street
Boston, MA

Friday, December 2, 2016

5:00       Doors Open

5:30       Remarks from Dean Galea/StAMP Launch Presentation (come with any questions on the online platform/process for our CampusTap vendor, and feel free to update your profile)

6:00       General Student/Alumni Networking

6:30       Alumni Network Express (structured speed-networking at round tables with students and alumni table facilitators set in three 15-minute sessions)

7:30       Additional Networking

8:00       Event Concludes

Please feel free to bring your business cards for further networking! 

Water: New Directions Through Arts and Science – The Alliance for the Arts in Research Universities (a2ru) Emerging Creatives Student Summits:

December 1st, 2016 in Outside Announcements

The Alliance for the Arts in Research Universities (a2ru) Emerging Creatives Student Summits bring together students who have an interest in the arts, crossing disciplinary boundaries, and developing collaborative projects. Each year, 100 undergraduate and graduate students attend the summit from a2ru partner universities across the country, along with 20 administrators, faculty, and staff. These summits have a strong project-based component with activities such as panel discussions with special guests, keynote speakers, site visits or field trips, performances and exhibitions, networking opportunities, and “bootcamp” or skill-building experiences built in throughout.

The 2017 a2ru Student Summit will be hosted by the University of Florida, February 8-11, 2017, in Gainesville, FL. This year’s theme is WATER: New Directions Through Arts and Science. No community on this planet is without it’s water-based challenges. Water-centric grand challenges are many, ranging from access and social justice issues in local and global contexts, to environmental degradation, to toxicological challenges, to saltwater incursion into freshwater, to sea level rise. Uniquely situated less than two hours from the Gulf Coast and from the Atlantic Ocean in an area known for its numerous freshwater springs, the University of Florida has great strength in local, regional, national, and international research and creative activity when it comes to these and other water-centric grand challenges. This summit will feature panels and working group leadership from distinguished professor in the life sciences and the arts at the University of Florida, as well as leading artists and water scholars from around the country. Join us this coming February 8-11 to advance your own creative work or research through interdisciplinary collaboration with your peers at leading institutions across the U.S. Undergraduate and graduate students in any and all fields are welcome, particularly those that care about and have a deep interest in water and the environment. We especially encourage student research teams from biology, ecology, and related fields, as well as artists/designers, to apply.

There is no fee to attend this summit and a limited number of student travel grants are available.

STUDENT APPLICATION – deadline to apply is Friday, December 9, 2016

For more info: http://a2ru.org/events/2017-emerging-creatives-student-summit/ 

From Sustainable Mushroom Cultivation to Malaria: Challenges of direct international development work

December 1st, 2016 in GH Events

RSVP Here! peace-corps-liz-doyle-copy-flyer

House & Pet Sitter Wanted

December 1st, 2016 in Jobs

A DGH professor who lives in Jamaica Plain is looking for someone to stay at her house while she travels and take care of her dogs and cat.  It is a single-family house with a yard and garden, 10 minutes’ walk from Forest Hills Station on the Orange Line.  There are two dogs (an older husky and a younger border collie/lab mix) and one moderately elderly cat.  All are extremely friendly.  Responsibilities include daily animal care (food, walks for the dogs, cleanup, providing a lap for the cat) and minimal house upkeep (bringing in the mail, etc.).  Experience caring for dogs and personal references required.  $40/day.  Dates currently needed are December 25-January 1 (flexible). If interested, please contact Sydney Rosen, sbrosen@bu.edu.

CAMTech and GE Sustainable Healthcare Solutions announce The First Mile Innovation Challenge

December 1st, 2016 in Fellowships

The First Mile Innovation Challenge

CAMTech and GE Sustainable Healthcare Solutions announce The First Mile Innovation Challenge to crowdsource innovative technologies/solutions that directly address clinical or community hardships in global primary care.  These innovations should impact communities and individuals in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) with a focus on:

Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
Cardiac Health
Safe Surgery

Winners of the First Mile Innovation Challenge will receive $25,000 USD in funding, in addition to introductions to GE’s new five.eight Accelerator and resources provided through the CAMTech Innovation Platform.

Competitive submissions will demonstrate how the proposed technology/solution addresses an existing primary care health challenge and why current solutions are inadequate. Submissions will also outline how the innovation can be applied in clinical settings through a sustainable commercialization and business model.

Visit the Opportunities page on the CAMTech Innovation Platform (CIP) to learn more and apply! Applications are due January 10, 2017.

This initiative follows the First Mile Discovery Challenge, which crowdsourced the most pressing, unmet clinical needs in global primary care.  Click here to learn more about the winning challenges on the CIP.

Highlights of The Lancet Commission Report: Essential Medicines for Universal Health Coverage

November 21st, 2016 in BUSPH Events, GH Events

Refreshments & snacks will be served. Please RSVP! 

Join SPH Dean Sandro Galea and Department of Global Health Chair Pat Hibberd in discussing: Highlights of The Lancet Commission Report: Essential Medicines for Universal Health Coverage.

lancet-commission-report-event-copy-1

Co-Chair of the Commission providing an overview of the report:

Veronika Wirtz, Boston University School of Public Health

Commissioners presenting are:

Michael Reich, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health
Anita Wagner, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute
Dennis Ross-Degnan, Harvard Medical School, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute

Wednesday November 30th, 2016 1:00-2:00pm
Boston University Medical Campus 72 East Concord Street L311

The Lancet Commission Report will be available online November 8th. For more information go to: /lancet-commission-essential-medicines-policies/ 

NAPA-OT field school Summer program in Guatemala

November 17th, 2016 in Practicums/Internships

Message from a recent GH MPH alum:

For the past 5 years, I have worked with the NAPA-OT Field School in Guatemala, which is a 4-week summer program that brings together students and practitioners in public health, occupational therapy, and medical anthropology to conduct research on local health issues identified by our in-country partners. The program's director, Rachel Hall-Clifford, is also a graduate of BUSPH. 

Knowing the level of scholarship in the program, we'd welcome applications from BUSPH applicants!

Sincerely,
Stephanie Roche

Spend 4 weeks with anthropologists and occupational therapy clinician-scholars in: Cultural Complexities of Midwifery Pediatrics, Interrelationships of Play, Nutrition & Early Child Development, Short-term Medical Missions: Critical Humanitarianism

The NAPA-OT Field School promotes critical scholarship and rigorous methodol- ogies to support social and occupational justice with international NGO, gov- ernmental, and community partners. Students from anthropology, occupational therapy, and public health work together in clinical and community settings gaining skill in research, observation, communication, and transdisciplinary collaboration. Seminars emphasize critical theories in applied medical anthro- pology, approaches to social and occupational justice, and experiential learn- ing. Students also study Spanish one-on-one with individual instructors at their own level and pace. Living in a home stay increases language fluency and un- derstanding of Guatemalan culture. Occupational therapy students may fulfill a portion of their Level II professional degree requirements with approval from their graduate program.

TO LEARN MORE AND TO APPLY, VISIT US AT:

WWW.NAPAOTGUATEMALA.ORG

Applications accepted on a rolling basis through February 1, 2017

Data Management Intern position available at BMC Data Management Intern position available at BMC with TB Research group

November 17th, 2016 in Jobs, Practicums/Internships

There are a few openings in our office for Data Management Interns, here in the TB CDRC/TBRU/RePORT-India Data Coordinating Center. Our Handshake application is available here https://app.joinhandshake.com/jobs/519416

 The DCC interns work as part of the Data Coordinating Center team in performing Quality Assurance and other routine data management tasks for data transmitted from the international sites. The position is paid, and we are looking for about 16-20 hours per week of work. Summer hours can be increased, and scheduling is flexible around class time. There are opportunities for practicums as well, and the position is paid. Our only strict stipulation is candidate must be a current BUSPH student, who will be available to work until at least August 2017.

Please let me know if you have any questions!

Jane Pleskunas, MPH

Research Study Coordinator
TB & HCV Research Unit
Section of Infection Diseases
Boston Medical Center
617.414.2872 | jane.pleskunas@bmc.org

Sustainability & Health Journal Club: What is Planetary Health?

November 17th, 2016 in Outside BU Events

Sustainability & Health Journal Club: What is Planetary Health?

Thursday, November 17, 4:00-5:00pm

Room 429, Harvard University Center for the Environment

4th floor, Harvard Museum of Natural History, 26 Oxford Street, Cambrige

 

Join the Sustainability & Health Student Forum at the Harvard Chan School as it holds its inaugural Journal Club session that will explore the emerging field of “Planetary Health” – the health of human civilization and the state of the natural systems on which it depends. The guest resource speaker is Professor Samuel Myers, Director of the Planetary Health Alliance and member of the Rockefeller Foundation-The Lancet Commission on Planetary Health. The paper that will be discussed is entitled “Human health impacts of ecosystem alteration" by Prof. Myers et al. Please confirm your attendance here. Invite your friends and colleagues, everyone is welcome!