SPH Blog

Read about SPH people, research and impact.

Together, we can heal from the trauma of COVID-19
As several states restrict access to gender-affirming care, researchers, practitioners and students share its importance to trans youths’ mental health
Together, we can center community voices to address structural racism
Together, we can help interpret cold-case forensic samples using more advanced statistical analysis
School of Public Health alumna turns personal experiences and education into advocacy and action for UW custodians 
We're excited to invite you to the upcoming APHA National Public Health Week and Career Month Events taking place from April 3-27, 2023.
In this Q&A, Andrea Ordonio (PH-GH, ’21) describes her work as a patient access coordinator lead at Fred Hutch Cancer Center.
Danafe Matusalem (PH-GH, ’18) shares her interests in equity, diversity and inclusion, and for all individuals to have equitable health access and educational opportunities.
Michael Tynan (Online MPH ‘22), Team Lead with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Office on Smoking Health, Policy Planning and Coordination Unit works with states and communities on tobacco control policy issues, including smoke-free topics.
The University of Washington School of Public Health is pleased to welcome Craig Brownson as the new assistant dean for finance and administration. Brownson brings with him 15 years of finance, project and operations leadership experience in academic medicine and has most recently served as associate director for clinical programs and finance in the Department of Surgery at the UW School of Medicine since 2016.
In this Q&A, Sabica Nasar (PH-GH, ’22) describes the importance of social determinants of health and systems thinking to improve health outcomes at a population level.
Olivia Brandon’s interests in health care swing from micro to macro. She loves sodium — not the variety most of us love at dinner time — but the element sodium and its impact on infant health. She’s so passionate, her lab peers will tell you she’s salty about it.
There’s a line Brittney Dias wrote that’s been serving as inspiration for herself and the children she writes for: “No matter the time, no matter the day, Ava and Mae find a way.” Ava and Mae are two Black girls and protagonists of a children’s book series written by Dias. Their message of perseverance also speaks to the work Dias is committed to, which is to increase diverse representation of main characters in children’s media.
The University of Washington School of Public Health is celebrating the 10-year anniversary of its Public Health-Global Health (PH-GH) major, a milestone marking the growth of interdisciplinary public health undergraduate offerings around the country that are training the next generation of public health-minded professionals. 

 

Affording food is such a challenge in Washington state that residents who experience food insecurity say their grocery bills are their biggest source of financial stress, more so than paying for rent or utilities.