September 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
The University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, established a collaborative educational program with an infant mortality program and introduced medical and nursing students to population-based medicine through a focus on maternal and infant health.
September 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
Researchers at the University of Missouri - Columbia, established a Rural Scholars Program and introduced curricular changes, including multidisciplinary opportunities for medical, nursing, and health services management students.
September 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
Tufts University worked to design, implement, and evaluate a didactic and practical curriculum stressing the interwoven concepts of culture and community for the improved training of health professionals.
September 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
The University of Tennessee, Memphis, provided health education to rural young people while exposing health professional students to rural communities and principles of population-based medicine.
September 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
The Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine introduced curriculum changes involving behavioral sciences and population-based medicine, established an Academic Health Department to integrate community health workers into the academic environment.
September 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
Rush University built on its pre-existing Rush Community Service Initiatives Program, a network of community service and educational programs, established in 1990, matching medical students with the social and health needs of disadvantaged communities.
June 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
Ohio State University, prepared a chapter on health, nutrition and physical well being for the revised and updated Millennial Edition of the Historical Statistics of the United States.
May 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
Between 1993 and 1999, the American Association for World Health, Washington, organized three annual meetings.
April 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
Between 1996 and 1998, the New York Academy of Medicine, New York, oversaw the development of two books on the changing roles and responsibilities of public health and medicine in the 21st century.
April 1, 2001
|
Program Result Report
The American Medical Association and its subcontractor, the Gallup Organization, designed, implemented and disseminated two national telephone surveys on the public's health habits, one of young adults and the other of adults conducted by Gallup.