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Dr. Daniels' research focuses on prenatal environmental and nutritional exposures that may impact children’s growth, neurodevelopment and overall health. She has created a platform for studying early life exposure to brominated and organophosphate flame retardants, persistent organic pollutants and long-chain fatty acids as they relate to children's health in the Pregnancy, Infection & Nutrition Kids Study.

She also has directed the North Carolina sites of the Study to Explore Early Development and the Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring Network, where she has been heavily invested in programs to better understand the epidemiology of autism spectrum disorder. She is specifically interested how gene expression and environmental exposures interact to alter neurodevelopment. She works toward improved understanding and balanced communication of the role the environment may play in the children’s health.

Dr. Rohit Ramaswamy applies tools and methods of implementation and improvement science to better the quality of medical and public health programs and to strengthen service delivery processes. He works in the United States and globally, helping facilities and communities learn the tools of applied implementation and continuous quality improvement. He is currently Professor of Pediatrics and co-research director at the James M. Anderson Center for Health Systems Excellence at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.

Dr. Jennifer S. Smith is a professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Gillings School of Global Public Health. Dr. Smith is also affiliated with the UNC Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center, UNC Center for Aids Research and the UNC Center for Women’s Health Research.

Dr. Smith has conducted research on HPV infection and associated cervical neoplasia and cancer since 1995 and has published over 200 articles in international peer-reviewed journals. Her current research focuses on epidemiological studies of human papillomavirus (HPV) and cervical cancer worldwide (primarily in China, Kenya, South Africa and North Carolina), with a focus on prevention via screening, HPV self-screening and prophylactic vaccines.

Dr. Smith is currently conducting self-screening demonstration projects of HPV infection among high-risk women in Mombasa, Kenya and in rural North Carolina.

Dr. Pence is a behavioral, psychiatric and infectious diseases epidemiologist. His research spans three inter-related areas: global mental health, including scaling up mental health treatment interventions for vulnerable populations; the intersection of mental illness with other health crises included the HIV and opioid epidemics; and suicide prevention research. His work integrates intervention research, implementation science, advanced epidemiologic methods for observational data, and research leveraging large administrative data sources. Examples of current or recently funded projects include SHARP (the Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Partnership for Mental Health Capacity-Building, an NIMH U19 implementation science project focused on integrating depression treatment into general medical care in Malawi); TRACE (Tailored Response to Address Psychiatric Comorbidity and HIV Care Engagement, an NIMH R34 project to pilot-test a mental health intervention for people living with HIV in the southern US); INSPIRE (Innovations in Suicide Prevention Research, an NIMH R01 to establish a suicide surveillance system in North Carolina and use it to identify intervention points for suicide prevention); and a NIDA R21 (acronym needed!) to examine the relationship of different long-term opioid prescribing patterns with opioid-related (overdose) and infectious disease (HIV, HCV, syphilis) outcomes. He is also the director of a NIAID T32 pre- and postdoctoral training program in infectious diseases epidemiology and associate director for research of an NIMH D43 training program in mental health research for Malawian scientists. He is Professor of Epidemiology, Associate Director of the Division of Global Mental Health in the department of Psychiatry, Member of the Institute for Global Health and Infectious Diseases, and Affiliate Faculty of the Injury Prevention Research Center at UNC.

With Dr. Kathryn Whetten, Dr. Pence co-authored the second edition of You’re the First One I’ve Told: The Faces of HIV in the Deep South (Rutgers University Press, 2013). This book presents the life histories of 25 individuals infected with HIV and living in the US Deep South, and highlights in particular the high prevalence and profound influence of traumatic life experiences for these individuals. In the second edition, the original qualitative findings are substantiated with new quantitative research, primarily drawn from the Coping with HIV/AIDS in the Southeast (CHASE) longitudinal cohort study of over 600 HIV-infected individuals from across the Southeastern US.

Retired ESE Professor Kamens "has implemented, under the sponsorship of the Institute of the Environment at UNC, a UNC undergraduate student exchange/research program in Thailand and currently serves as its field site director. The purpose of the program is to provide students with a global environmental perspective built upon learning and research experiences in overseas field site locations. Students are provided the opportunity to attend environmental classes along with students from the host country, and to participate in environmental research projects that address crucial problems of the host country and region."

Thailand Program Brochure: http://ie.unc.edu/files/2015/12/thailand_brochure.pdf

For students interested in the study abroad program: Study Abroad in Thailand


This online guide provides resources and information for new Gillings School international students.

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Concentration Change Current students (online or residential) wishing to change MPH concentrations may do so under extenuating circumstances, on a limited basis only, must be in good academic standing, and... Read more »

Dr. Labbok's teaching, research and service since 1974 has addressed the needs of women and families to achieve optimal reproductive health, with the last 30 years centered on breastfeeding for the health of mothers and children.

Her 150+ publications focus on the creation of evidence-based for sustainable improvements, primarily in birth, breastfeeding and birth-spacing practices.

Using epidemiologic, operational, translational and implementation research approaches, she developed the Lactational Amenorrhea Method of family planning and served as technical secretariat for the Innocenti Conference on breastfeeding in 1990, leading the team in development of today's breastfeeding definitions.

Dr. Labbok also studied the implementation of systems change (BFHI), served as senior advisor of Infant and Young Child Feeding at UNICEF and created a model for sustainable scale-up (ETIERS) using newer innovations related to organizational and systems sustainability. She has received many academic and professional awards.

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