
Schneider's Introduction to Public Health
Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
7th Edition
Published on 7. November 2024
Book
Paperback/Softback
600 pages
978-1-284-29180-3 (ISBN)
Description
Offering a thorough, accessible and lively overview of public health for students new to the field, Schneider's Introduction to Public Health offers a broad-reaching, practical framework for understanding the forces and organizations of public health today. Through engaging, nontechnical language, illustrative real-world examples, and the current political, economic, and cultural news of the day, students gain a clear understanding of the scope of today's public health problems and possible solutions.
Building on Schneider's engaging and easy-to-read narrative approach, new author team Kruger, Moralez, and Siqueira draw on their diverse perspectives for the Seventh Edition to bring a greater focus on the social determinants of health, ecological approach, and life course experiences as a framework to understand public health in the 21st century.
Key Features:
*Updated statistics and information in every chapter illustrate the current state of public health.
*Streamlined organization to better align with a traditional 16-week semester course.
*New chapters addressing the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, and mental health.
*New chapter on research methods, that includes qualitative data.
*Timely examples, including links to videos and websites, cover public health issues discussed in the text.
*Alignment with Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH) criteria for undergraduate public health.
Building on Schneider's engaging and easy-to-read narrative approach, new author team Kruger, Moralez, and Siqueira draw on their diverse perspectives for the Seventh Edition to bring a greater focus on the social determinants of health, ecological approach, and life course experiences as a framework to understand public health in the 21st century.
Key Features:
*Updated statistics and information in every chapter illustrate the current state of public health.
*Streamlined organization to better align with a traditional 16-week semester course.
*New chapters addressing the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, and mental health.
*New chapter on research methods, that includes qualitative data.
*Timely examples, including links to videos and websites, cover public health issues discussed in the text.
*Alignment with Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH) criteria for undergraduate public health.
More details
Edition
Seventh Edition
Language
English
Place of publication
Sudbury
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Edition type
New edition
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 228 mm
Width: 180 mm
Thickness: 15 mm
Weight
585 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-284-29180-3 (9781284291803)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Previous edition
Jessica Kruger | Andy Moralez | C. Eduardo Siqueira
BOOK ALONE: Schneider's Intro to Public Health 7E
Book
11/2024
7th Edition
Jones and Bartlett Publishers, Inc
€89.00
Shipment within 15-20 days
Persons
Jessica S. Kruger, PhD, MCHES, is a health educator whose research focuses on consumption and addictive behaviors, health behavior decision-making and pedagogy in public health. She collaborates with a wide variety of community-based organizations and advises students at the Lighthouse Free Medical Clinic and the Seneca-Babcock Community Center, both in the Western New York area. Kruger is the vice-chair of the board of directors for the Society of Student-Run Clinics and focuses on increasing the interprofessional collaboration in free clinics around the U.S. She also serves as a member of the leadership team of Interprofessional Education and Collaborative Practice at UB. Most recently, Kruger has been named a 2021 SUNY Online Ambassador for her enthusiastic, effective virtual teaching and advocacy of online education in the SUNY community. She recently joined the editorial board for the journal Pedagogy and Health Promotion.
E. Andy Moralez, Ph.D., MPH, CHES, earned his doctorate from the University of Colorado Denver in Health and Behavioral Science and his MPH from New Mexico State University specializing in community health education. He also served as a faculty member at the Southern New Mexico Family Residency Program in New Mexico, and as a Research Project Lead with the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. Dr. Moralez's research collaborations focus on the intersection of public health and clinical medicine, working in interprofessional groups (e.g., medical anthropologists, social workers, and clinical psychologists) to improve patient care and community health. This included his doctoral research, which examined the impact of chronic illness severity on depression outcomes in primary care settings among low-income, complex patients. His most recent clinical-based research focused on training family medicine residents in communication strategies to discuss chronic pain and treatment management and integrate social determinants of health into the residency curriculum. He has also served as a program evaluator for various public health and clinical interventions.His recent work has focused on developing and implementing supplemental public health education outside the classroom to promote students' collaboration with community partners. Dr. Moralez has published in public health and medical education journals, including Frontiers in Public Health, the Journal of Cancer Prevention, the Journal of Education and Health Promotion, and the American Board of Family Medicine Journal.
Dr. Carlos Eduardo Siqueira is a Professor of Environment and Public Health at the School for the Environment and Coordinator of the Transnational Brazilian Project at the Mauricio Gaston Institute of Latino Community Development and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Over his career he has researched the political economy of the migration of hazards between developed and developing countries, Brazilian immigrant health, health policy, and health and safety inequities at work.
E. Andy Moralez, Ph.D., MPH, CHES, earned his doctorate from the University of Colorado Denver in Health and Behavioral Science and his MPH from New Mexico State University specializing in community health education. He also served as a faculty member at the Southern New Mexico Family Residency Program in New Mexico, and as a Research Project Lead with the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. Dr. Moralez's research collaborations focus on the intersection of public health and clinical medicine, working in interprofessional groups (e.g., medical anthropologists, social workers, and clinical psychologists) to improve patient care and community health. This included his doctoral research, which examined the impact of chronic illness severity on depression outcomes in primary care settings among low-income, complex patients. His most recent clinical-based research focused on training family medicine residents in communication strategies to discuss chronic pain and treatment management and integrate social determinants of health into the residency curriculum. He has also served as a program evaluator for various public health and clinical interventions.His recent work has focused on developing and implementing supplemental public health education outside the classroom to promote students' collaboration with community partners. Dr. Moralez has published in public health and medical education journals, including Frontiers in Public Health, the Journal of Cancer Prevention, the Journal of Education and Health Promotion, and the American Board of Family Medicine Journal.
Dr. Carlos Eduardo Siqueira is a Professor of Environment and Public Health at the School for the Environment and Coordinator of the Transnational Brazilian Project at the Mauricio Gaston Institute of Latino Community Development and Public Policy at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Over his career he has researched the political economy of the migration of hazards between developed and developing countries, Brazilian immigrant health, health policy, and health and safety inequities at work.