Essential Epidemiologic Tools for Public Health Practice Course Syllabus
Full curriculum breakdown — modules, lessons, estimated time, and outcomes.
Overview: This beginner-friendly course provides a concise introduction to essential epidemiologic tools used in public health practice. Over approximately 4 hours divided into four modules, you'll gain hands-on experience calculating key metrics, visualizing health data, and creating basic maps to understand disease patterns in populations. Each module combines foundational concepts with practical exercises using real-world data and widely used tools like QGIS.
Module 1: Role of Epidemiology in Public Health
Estimated time: 1 hour
- Definitions of public health and epidemiology
- Key components for population health
- Overview of the hands-on exercise
- Introduction to public health data through video and reading
Module 2: Numeric Estimates in Epidemiology
Estimated time: 1 hour
- Counts (numerators) and populations (denominators)
- Calculating ratios, proportions, and rates
- Understanding measures of disease burden
- Hands-on practice with sample data
Module 3: Depiction of Epidemiologic Data
Estimated time: 1 hour
- Principles of effective data visualization
- Identifying good versus poor visual designs
- Using global disease-burden data to visualize risk factors
- Creating a visualization using online datasets (e.g., IHME)
Module 4: Basic Mapping of Epidemiologic Data
Estimated time: 1 hour
- The role of place in public health
- GIS basics and spatial data handling
- Using QGIS with Census data
- Downloading and installing QGIS
- Building a map using spatial and epidemiologic data
Module 5: Final Project
Estimated time: 1 hour
- Integrate rate calculations from Module 2
- Create a data visualization based on risk factors
- Produce a basic map showing health data distribution using QGIS
Prerequisites
- Familiarity with basic computer operations
- Access to a computer with internet connection
- No prior experience in epidemiology or GIS required
What You'll Be Able to Do After
- Define public health and epidemiology and describe their role in community health
- Calculate and interpret key epidemiologic measures such as rates and proportions
- Create clear and effective visualizations of public health data
- Use QGIS to produce basic maps that display health patterns geographically
- Apply foundational skills to real-world public health data scenarios