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Ranked in top 5% within the University of Cincinnati in annual grants and contracts.
The Department of Environmental and Public Health Sciences at the University of Cincinnati is committed to studying how environmental factors negatively impact human health, how to recognize and prevent these effects, and how to improve public health through clinical care and health care policy.
The department is part of the University of Cincinnati’s College of Medicine and is home to a dynamic, collaborative, and highly interactive faculty conducting bleeding-edge research and training the next generation of leaders in environmental science, occupational medicine, and public health.
The department offers a variety of graduate programs, and a clinical fellowship, and is the home of pre-and post-doctoral training programs funded by the National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) and the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS).
Our interdisciplinary programs include approximately xx faculty and subject matter experts from multiple colleges at the University of Cincinnati, governmental agencies, including NIOSH, the Environmental Protection Agency, and multiple health departments in the region.
The impact of our research, education, and clinical programs is leading the way to effectively improve the health of our communities.
05/20/2020
"The center’s outstanding accomplishments is one of the reasons why the CDC is considering moving its new NIOSH research facility closer to the university,” says Shuk-Mei Ho, PhD, Jacob G. Schmidlapp Professor and Chair of Environmental Health.
"This move will greatly strengthen occupational health and medicine research in the region and around the nation as the ERC and the Department of Environmental Health have great talents and proven track records on innovation in these areas.”
With the renewal, the ERC will focus on occupational safety and health of home health care workers and that growing segment of the workforce. Additionally, postdoctoral students and PhD students outside the core ERC disciplines who participate in the home health care research can be funded through the ERC.
"In years past, the focus has been on firefighters’ occupational safety, and now, the research work is shifting to the occupational safety and health around home health care workers,” says Tiina Reponen, PhD, professor in the Department of Environmental Health and director of UC’s ERC. "These nurses and caregivers are going to the home instead of the work they were doing in a hospital or nursing home, so we will be looking at everything that can be done to help nurses in these scenarios, from ergonomic issues, impact on their travel to and from and into homes, to indoor air quality issues within the homes.”
ERC across three colleges, five areas of study Students in the ERC are comprised of graduate students from the colleges of medicine, nursing and engineering and applied science. About 40 students are part of the ERC at any given time.
There are five disciplinary graduate programs within the ERC:
Each program has its own curriculum with required interdisciplinary work that all students take. There are also many opportunities for fieldwork and experiential learning through field trips, observation and research, as well as symposiums and engagement with industry.
Depending on the requirements of their program/college affiliation, students also incorporate clinical rotations, internships or research in local industries into their graduate studies.
In August, students of the ERC went to Indiana to visit Meadow Lake Wind Farm to learn about its electricity output and economic benefits to the nearby communities. They also toured Purdue University’s nanotechnology center. After trips, students share their experiences on the ERC’s blog.
This and other interdisciplinary activities are led by Gordon Gillespie, PhD, deputy director of Occupational Health Nursing in the ERC and an associate professor at the UC College of Nursing. Gillespie says the goal of such trips is to give students exposure to occupational safety and health in a variety of public and private settings. Gillespie also teaches occupational health nursing and assists students with achieving the research aims of the grant for their translational research training.
ERC’s history includes high job placement Reponen says job placement for students from the ERC is high—nearly 100 percent—and many have a job offer before they complete the program; some even start jobs before they graduate.
"Some of our students continue on in academic research, but they also go on to work in governmental institutes and into private industry,” says Reponen. She says about 50 percent stay in the Tristate area after finishing their graduate work.
A national needs assessment of the occupational safety and health workforce (WestStat, 2011) found that the future national demand for occupational safety and health services will significantly outstrip the number of professionals with the necessary training, education and experience to provide such services.
"Even as the ERC continues training, we still would meet only half of the industry need, particularly for industrial hygiene professionals as well as in nursing occupations,” notes Reponen.
NIOSH currently funds 18 university-based Education and Research Centers; University of Cincinnati is the only one in Ohio, and was one of the first established ERCs in the country.
To learn more about the ERC, there are events and symposiums open to the public such as the fall pilot research symposium Oct 13-14, showcasing occupational health and safety research.
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Department of Environmental & Public Health SciencesKettering Lab Building160 Panzeca WayCincinnati, OH 45267-0056Mail Location: 0056Phone: 513-558-5701