April 29, 2010
Three graduate students at UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health have been selected to be part of the Global Health Council‘s 2010 conference, presenting research that addresses sexuality and public health.
 
Diana Michel and Joshua Davis

Diana Michel and Joshua Davis

Joshua Davis and Diana Michel, master’s students in health policy and management, received the Council’s New Investigators in Global Health award for an abstract of their research, “Cost Effectiveness of Male Versus Female Sterilization in Sub-Saharan Africa.”

 
Quoc Nguyen, MD, MPH, doctoral student in epidemiology, is an invited exhibitor in the conference’s poster session. His research shows “Results of an MSM (men who have sex with men) Internet Survey in Vietnam.”
 
Davis was one of 30 students, selected from 338 submissions, invited to present research at the Council’s annual International Conference on Global Health June 14-18 in Washington, D.C. His work is part of a panel discussion on “Improved Methodologies in Maternal and Child Health Research.”
 
“Going to the conference will be a great experience for me, personally and professionally,” Davis said. “I look forward to interacting with other members of the panel and learning more about global health issues.”
 
“Our research is important because there has been none like it in the developing world,” Michel said. “Also, our results are very different from those in the developed world; thus, we would like to see more research in the field to substantiate our findings.”
 
Dr. Quoc Nguyen, in Vietnam

Dr. Quoc Nguyen, in Vietnam

Because of culture and fear of stigmatization, Nguyen said, many Vietnamese men who have sex with men hide their sexual identities and behaviors. Therefore, little is known about this population in Vietnam.

 
“There have been many HIV prevention programs in Vietnam,” Nguyen said, “but no attention has been paid to MSM. The study is the first to report sociodemographics, sexual identities and sexual behaviors of MSM in Vietnam who use the Internet. The results suggest that [members of this group] have many behaviors that might put them at risk of acquiring and transmitting HIV. This information suggests an urgent need to scale up HIV intervention for MSM in Vietnam.”
 
Established in 1972, the Global Health Council aims to identify priority world health problems and report on them to the U.S. public, legislators, international and domestic government agencies, academic institutions and the global health community.
 
Its New Investigators in Global Health Program was launched in 2005 to highlight exemplary research, policy and advocacy initiatives of new and future leaders in global health and to empower participants with global health advocacy skills. The competitive abstract review process is open to all undergraduate, graduate and medical students engaging in research, policy and advocacy initiatives relating to global health.
 
 

UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health contact: Ramona DuBose, director of communications, (919) 966-7467 or ramona_dubose@unc.edu.

 

 

RELATED PAGES
CONTACT INFORMATION
Gillings Admissions: 233 Rosenau Hall, (919) 445-1170
Student Affairs: 263 Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-2499
Dean's Office: 170 Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-3215
Business and Administration: 170 Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-3215
Academic Affairs: 307 Rosenau Hall, (919) 843-8044
Inclusive Excellence: 207B Rosenau Hall, (919) 966-7430
Room Reservations
Facilities


135 Dauer Drive
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7400