Courses

The listing of a course description here does not guarantee a course’s being offered in a particular semester. Please refer to the published schedule of classes on the MyBU Student Portal for confirmation a class is actually being taught and for specific course meeting dates and times.

  • SPH EP 775: Social Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH PH 717 or SPH EP 714.
    The purpose of this course is to introduce students to the major social variables that affect population health, including socio-economic status, race/ethnicity, gender, neighborhood environment, corporate practices, and the criminal justice system. This course will cover the theoretical underpinnings of each construct, and will provide students with an in-depth discussion of the empirical research linking each to population health. Methods are introduced to operationalize each construct for the purpose of empirical application in epidemiology research.
  • SPH EP 784: The Epidemiology of Tuberculosis in the Developed and Developing World
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH PH 717 or SPH EP 714.
    This course is designed for those students who have an interest in the epidemiology and control of tuberculosis in the developed and developing world. The course will survey both the history of this storied disease as well as state of the art knowledge of tuberculosis (including molecular epidemiologic techniques) and will emphasize epidemiologic principles and methods including: estimation of the incidence of primary tuberculosis, estimation of the incidence of reactivation tuberculosis, study design, and sources of bias. The course will also give the student practice and feedback in the critical review of epidemiologic studies in this area.
  • SPH EP 790: Mental Health Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH PH 717; or SPH EP 714
    Mental Health Epidemiology is the study of the distribution and determinants of mental health disorders among populations. This course begins with an overview of the history and development of the field, also referred to as psychiatric epidemiology, using several classic studies. We will examine mental health and mental illness across the life span: child, adolescent, adult and older adult. Students will learn about the major risk factors for and etiologic models of mental disorders. This will include examination of social factors, biological factors, genetic factors and their interactions. Special attention will be paid to the unique methodological and analytical issues highlighted by mental health epidemiologic research, and recent changes to clinical and research classifications (e.g., DSM-V, RDoc). Based on the research covered in this course, students will be asked to consider the implications for public health programs and interventions.
  • SPH EP 800: Microbes and Methods: Selected Topics in Outbreak Investigation
    Graduate Prerequisites: BS723 or BS730 completed or concurrent.
    This course provides an overview of the important concepts fundamental to the understanding, design, and conduct of infectious disease outbreak investigations. The course will cover 1. The epidemiology and pathophysiology of selected infectious diseases. 2. Methodological issues related to investigating different types of outbreak. 3. Practical aspects of outbreak investigations (environmental analyses and communicating risk to the public). The course will primarily address common causes of outbreaks in this country (such as foodborne, respiratory, and hospital-based) but will touch on issues pertinent to outbreak investigations in the developing world. The course format consists of a series of lectures by faculty and guests, hands‐on experience with outbreak investigation data, directed readings from current literature, and student presentations on outbreaks of note.
  • SPH EP 813: Intermediate Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH PH 717 and SPH EP 714; Can't be taken together with SPH EP 770 for credit
    The purpose of this course is to further develop the methodologic concepts underlying the science of epidemiology. The material covered is intended to broaden and extend the student's understanding of the elements of study design, data analysis, and inference in epidemiologic research, including issues related to causation, bias, and confounding. The primary aims of the course are to provide working knowledge of the fundamentals of epidemiology as well as to serve as a foundation for more advanced study of epidemiologic methods. The course consists of lectures and workshop sessions. The workshop sessions are designed to reinforce the concepts/topics covered in the lectures.
  • SPH EP 816: A Guided Epidemiologic Study
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP 714 and SPH BS 723; or SPH BS 730 or SPH PH 760 or SPH BS 805 or SPH BS 835; AND consent of the instructor.
    This seminar course that starts during the second half of the Fall Semester (EP816) and continues through the first half of the Spring Semester (PH880) guides students through the development of a hypothesis-based study using a dataset that is currently available to the instructors. Through a combination of didactic lectures, workshops, written assignments, and oral presentations, students develop hypotheses, conduct literature reviews, perform data analyses, and write each section of a scientific manuscript. The final project requires the student to integrate all sections into a complete paper for journal submission. This course prepares students to write thesis proposals and manuscripts.
  • SPH EP 817: A Guided Epidemiology Study
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP 770 or SPH EP 813 or SPH EP 854; AND SPH BS 723; AND consent of the instructor.
    This is an upper-level , hands-on seminar course, which teaches a small group of students how to develop and conduct a hypothesis-based study, using datasets that are currently available to the instructors. Through a combination of workshops, written assignments, and oral presentations, students develop hypotheses, conduct literature reviews, perform data analyses, and write each section of a manuscript. The final project requires the student to integrate all sections into a complete paper for journal submission. This course prepares students to write thesis proposals and manuscripts.
  • SPH EP 820: Perspectives on Epidemiologic Studies
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP813 or consent of instructors
    This one-week intensive will address a set of epidemiologic issues on each day through a formal lecture, group discussion, small group exercises, and student presentations. A variety of methods will be covered, with an emphasis on what they are and how they fit into the 'real world.' Students who encounter these and methods in subsequent classes (or work) will have a better understanding of how they fit in public health.
  • SPH EP 850: Applications of Intermediate Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP 813 or SPH EP 770; and BS 723; or equivalent
    This course is designed for students interested in applying their knowledge of intermediate epidemiologic methods to the analysis of observational data. Topics include conceptualizing data analysis by defining an addressable research question, utilizing directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) for confounder selection, choosing appropriate exposure and outcome measurements and interpreting the results with respect to strengths, limitations, and biases. This hands-on course will put the concepts of intermediate epidemiology into application as the students perform a data analysis project from start to finish. Data analysis will be performed using SAS. Statistical theory will not be a focus of this course.
  • SPH EP 854: Advanced Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP 770 or SPH 813; AND SPH BS 723 or SPH BS 730.
    This course covers the theory and application of key principles and methods of epidemiologic research in depth. The topics include causal models, confounding, randomization, interaction, statistical analysis and inference, and causal inference. Special emphasis is given to the meaning and interpretation of p- values, confidence intervals, and likelihoods. Alternative approaches are identified for selecting and interpreting measures of disease frequency and measures of effect. Guidance is offered for determining objectives and strategies in study design and analysis, including for case-control research. Methods are presented for the assessment and control of confounding, misclassification bias, and selection bias. Strengths and weaknesses of standardization, pooling and modeling are reviewed.
  • SPH EP 855: Advanced Epidemiology Seminar: Issues in Study Design
    Graduate Prerequisites: Primarily for doctoral students. MPH students must have completed EP854 and have consent of the instructor.
    This course is structured around reading and discussing both historical and current methodological papers. The first section of the course focuses on papers by early theoreticians and methodologists. The second section focuses on contemporary methodologic questions. Substantive areas may evolve and vary over time. Recent topics have included case-control studies, study efficiency, measures of effect, exposure misclassification, sensitivity analysis, casual diagrams, and direct and indirect effects.
  • SPH EP 857: Design and Conduct of Cohort Studies
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH BS 723 and SPH BS 730; AND SPH EP 770 or SPH EP 813 or SPH EP 854.
    This is a third-level epidemiologic methods course intended for advanced Masters and Doctoral students who desire to build depth and nuance in their understanding of cohort study design and conduct. The course will build on classic and state-of-the-art papers which focus in depth on various topics such as selection of appropriate measure of excess risk and intermediate endpoints (theory and practice). For each topic, methodologic readings will be linked back to concrete examples of cohort study design, with special emphasis on practical aspects of study conduct.
  • SPH EP 858: Design and Conduct of Case-Control Studies
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP 770 or SPH EP 813 or SPH EP 854; AND SPHBS723 or SPHBS730
    This course will develop practical knowledge of the design and conduct of case-control studies within a theoretical framework. It will cover the relationship between cohort and case-control studies and study design issues, including identification of a study base, selection of cases and controls, collection of exposure information, sources of bias, and matching. Published papers will be used to illustrate design, bias, and analytic issues through reading and discussion. Each class includes a lecture and discussion of assigned articles.
  • SPH EP 860: Novel Analytical Methods for Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: Doctoral level standing; must have completed EP854 and have SAS programming skills equivalent to BS805 or above.
    This course is intended to introduce doctoral students to a number of advanced methods in data analysis, with the aim of providing students with the ability to recognize situations in which the use of such methods may be beneficial, knowledge of the basic methods needed to conduct analyses, and an understanding of the strengths and limitations of each method. The course covers approximately five to six analytic methods in a series of 2- or 3-session modules. Topics may vary slightly in different semesters; examples of the types of methods covered include propensity scores, marginal structural models, quantitative bias analysis, machine learning and Bayesian analysis. Hands-on sessions in the classroom, homework assignments, and a final data analysis project provide students with practice in the conduct of analyses using these methods.
  • SPH EP 861: Quantitative Bias Analysis Methods for Epidemiologic Research
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP854 and SAS at the level of SPH BS805
    This course covers a novel approach to dealing with systematic error in epidemiologic research called quantitative bias analysis, QBA. QBA allows users to make corrections to measures of association for sources of bias by making assumptions typically using validation data about the nature of the bias to create intervals that account for total study error. The course will cover three types of bias analysis: simple, multidimensional and probabilistic. Exercises in Excel and SAS will allow students to practice the methods, adapt them to problems they face and present the results clearly.
  • SPH EP 862: Simulated Problems for Learning Epidemiology (SimPLE)
    Graduate Prerequisites: Successful completion of EP854 (or permission of instructor for PhD students not in the department of epidemiology). Competency in SAS as demonstrated by successful completion of EP815, EP817, BS805,
    This course will challenge students to think more deeply about the epidemiologic concepts they have learned in their methods courses and provide them with the skills to conduct simulation studies to be able to further their understanding of these concepts. Students will learn to simulate datasets from a directed acyclic graph (DAG) describing the problem or phenomenon of interest and learn how to vary the parameters of the simulation to gain a deeper insight into the problem. Students will also learn to derive the answers to questions about epidemiologic methods in cases where they do not know how to solve the problem analytically.
  • SPH EP 871: Advanced Topics in Epidemiology
    Graduate Prerequisites: SPH EP813 or EP854 or consent of instructor.
    This advanced course covers selected epidemiologic topics in greater depth than in intermediate epidemiology courses. For specific information, please refer to the SPH schedule packet on the SPH Registrar's Office web site.
  • SPH EP 911: Directed Studies in Epidemiology
    Directed Studies provide the opportunity for students to explore a special topic of interest under the direction of a SPH faculty member. Students may register for a 1, 2, 3, or 4-credit directed study. Arrangements are made directly with a full time SPH faculty member. Studies to be completed with an adjunct faculty member must be approved by and assigned to the Department chairperson. Students must complete a paper registration form and have a directed study proposal form signed by the faculty member with whom they are working. Section numbers are assigned by the SPH Registrar's Office. Students are limited to eight (8) credits of directed study, directed research or practicum during their MPH education.
  • SPH EP 912: Directed Research in Epidemiology
    Directed Research provide the opportunity for students to explore a special topic of interest under the direction of a full-time SPH faculty member. Students may register for 1, 2, 3, or 4 credits. To register, students must submit a paper registration form and signed directed research proposal form. Students are placed in a section by the Registrar's Office according to the faculty member with whom they are working. Students may take no more than eight credits of directed study, directed research, or practica courses during their MPH education.
  • SPH EP 940: Culminating Experience in Epidemiology
    Epidemiology concentrators must complete a culminating experience in their final semester of registration. For more details on the requirements for the culminating experience, please contact your department.