GAIHN has a number of programs to help you acquire valuable skills and experiences with nursing and social justice
Providing 90% of health care services in the world via a multitude of settings across the continuum of care, nurses play a crucial role in defining and in addressing global health challenges. This is a key reason why the Ingram School of Nursing (ISoN) formally appointed Global and Indigenous Health Nursing (GAIHN) as a unified front in overseeing all global health activities and initiatives within the School.
Ashukin Program:
The ISoN launched the Ashukin program in January 2018, which enables Bachelor of Science (Nursing) BSc(N), Bachelor of Nursing (Integrated) (BNI)—and eventually, Master of Science (Applied) in Nursing - Direct-Entry—students to acquire clinical learning experiences in Indigenous communities in Quebec. The program is aptly named “Ashukin”, a Naskapi and Atikamekw word meaning “bridge”, in reference to the tangible connections being created between communities. The program provides students with the opportunity to work with Indigenous populations in both Southern and Northern Quebec, in urban, rural and remote communities.
As part of the program, students perform a needs assessment in collaboration with community members, who actively take part in identifying their own needs. Based on the assessments, students are tasked with developing a health promotion or primary prevention project to be shared with the community at large upon completion. This way, students get to exchange culture and knowledge with members of an Indigenous community, while learning clinical competencies ranging from public health, health promotion, health education to primary prevention, and the communities get to share their knowledge, and benefit from the students’ work. To learn more about this program and how to apply click here.
Global Health Concentration:
In tandem with GAIHN, the ISoN developed a Global Health Concentration in 2007, an enriched educational stream for globally conscious graduate nursing students, featuring curricula designed to prepare nurses for the challenges of working with diverse populations in limited resource environments. The philosophy driving the curricula stresses the importance of understanding the inherent power dynamics, equity issues and ethical dilemmas that arise through global health nursing work. You can learn more about this program here.
Ambassador Program:
The Ambassador Programs enables Undergraduate students to complete their final internship outside of the ƬƵ hospital network including in rural and Indigenous communities, in other provinces and countries to broaden their understanding of health care in difference cultures and health care systems. GAIHN supports the annual information session for students interested in applying to the ambassador program in collaboration with the Nursing Undergraduate Society (NUS), where alumni come and share their clinical experiences in global health settings with interested students. This also creates a culture at the ISoN that is open to discussing issues of health equity.
Pre-departure Workshop:
The Pre-departure workshops started in 2006 for all students going outside of Montreal for a clinical stage with both the Ambassador Program and the Global Health concentration. The importance of pre-departure training has long been established as essential to prepare students going to complete clinical stage components outside of their culture. The pre-departure workshop focuses on the ethics of learning in another culture, reflecting at one’s positionality and role within another health care system. GAIHN was instrumental in developing and offering this training, involving and coordinating with former students to come and mentor students about to embark on a clinical placement outside of their culture.
Re-Entry Workshop (REW):
Over the years the importance of supporting students upon their return from global health experiences has received much less attention, despite the challenges that students face. GAIHN was a leader in developing a Re-Entry Workshop (REW), one of the first organized debriefing training programs offered at ƬƵ (mandatory for the GHC students) to help students with the challenges of re-integration. Students come together in a group with an experienced facilitator, several times over a 3-month period of time to share and debrief over a meal and further develop and integrate the learning from their Global Health experience working with an underserved population.
There are many electives that have been taken and recommendedby past students thatdeepen knowledge of global and Indigenous health,the following chart has a list of these electives:
Electives
GAIHN Suggested Elective List
Suggested Electives |
Description of Courses |
Offered 2019/2020 |
AFRI 598 |
Research Seminar in African Studies (3 credits):An interdisciplinary research seminar on topics of common interest to staff and students of the African Studies Program. As part of their contribution, students will prepare a research paper under the supervision of one or more members of staff |
Winter 2020 |
AGEC 442 |
Economics of International Agricultural Development (3 credits):The course deals with economic aspects of international development with emphasis on the role of food, agriculture and the resource sector in the economy of developing countries. Topics will include world food analysis, development project analysis and policies for sustainable development. Development case studies will be used. |
Winter 2020 |
AGRI 411 |
Global Issues on Development, Food and Agriculture (3 credits):International development and world food security and challenges in developing countries. Soil and water management, climate change, demographic issues, plant and animal resources conservation, bio-products and biofuels, economic and environmental issues specially in tropical and sub-tropical regions. Globalization, sustainable development, technology transfer and human resources needs for rural development. |
Winter 2020 |
AGRI 550 |
Sustained Tropical Agriculture (3 credits):Contrast theory and practice in defining agricultural environmental "challenges" in the Neotropics. Indigenous and appropriate technological means of mitigation. Soil management and erosion, water scarcity, water over-abundance, and water quality. Exploreagro-ecosystem protection via field trips and project designs. Institutional context of conservation strategies, NGO links, and public participation. |
Winter 2020 |
ANSC 400 |
Eukaryotic Cells and Viruses (3 credits):The basic principles of molecular biology and the underlying molecular basis for various methodologies in molecular biology are covered. The molecular genetic basis for viral infections and tumorigenesis will be covered as examples of the use of molecular genetic approaches to address biological problems. |
Winter 2020 |
ANTH 227 |
Medical Anthropology (3 credits):Beliefs and practices concerning sickness and healing are examined in a variety of Western and non-Western settings. Special attention is given to cultural constructions of the body and to theories of disease causation and healing efficacy. Topics include international health, medical pluralism, transcultural psychiatry, and demography. |
Fall 2019/Summer 2020 |
ANTH 212 |
Anthropology of Development (3 credits):Processes of developmental change, as they affect small communities in the Third World and in unindustrialized parts of developed countries. Problems of technological change, political integration, population growth, industrialization, urban growth, social services, infrastructure and economic dependency |
Winter 2020/Summer 2020 |
ANTH 302 |
New Horizons in Medical Anthropology (3 credits):Using recent ethnographies as textual material, this course will cover theoretical and methodological developments in medical anthropology since the early 1990's. Topics include a reconsideration of the relationship between culture and biology, medical pluralism revisited, globalization and health and disease, and social implications of new biomedical technologies. |
Winter 2020 |
ANTH 322 |
Social Change in Modern Africa (3 credits):Theimpact of colonialism on African societies; changing families, religion, arts; political and economic transformation; migration, urbanization, new social categories; social stratification; the social setting of independence and neo-colonialism; continuity, stagnation, and progressive change. |
Fall 2019 |
ANTH 326 |
Anthropology of Latin America (3 credits):Central themes in the anthropology of Latin America, including colonialism, religiosity, sexuality and gender, indigeneity, social movements, and transnationalism. |
Fall 2019 |
ANTH 327 |
Anthropology of South Asia (3 credits):An introduction to anthropological research in India and greater South Asia. Topics include politics, caste, class, religion, gender and sexuality, development and globalization. |
Not Currently Offered |
ANTH 407 |
Anthropology of the Body (3 credits):This course will survey theoretical approaches used over the past 100 years, and then focus on contemporary debates using case studies. The nature/culture mind/ body, subject/object, self/other dichotomies central to most work of the body will be problematized. |
Winter 2020 |
ANTH 423 |
Mind, Brain and Psychopathology (3 credits):Evolutionary origins of the human mind and the 'social brain', and the psychopathologies that are said to provide access to this evolutionary history, through the perspective of the anthropology of science and psychiatry. |
Fall 2019 |
ANTH 426 |
Immigration and Culture (3 credits):Immigration is transforming Europe and NorthAmerica, andis a major demographic and cultural process in Canada. It is also the subject of government policies in Canada and elsewhere, including the increasingly controversial "multiculturalism." The study of immigration and its cultural dimensions should be covered in our anthropology curriculum, if we are to beup-to-datein our understanding and teaching about globalization and about Canada today. |
Not Currently Offered |
ANTH 436 |
North American Native Peoples (3 credits):A detailed examination of selected contemporary problems |
Fall 2019 |
ANTH 438 |
Topics in Medical Anthropology (3 credits):Conceptions of health and illness and the form and meaning that illness take are reflections of a particular social and culturalcontext. Examination of the metaphoric use of the body, comparative approaches to healing, and the relationship of healing systems to the political and economic order and to development. |
Not Currently Offered |
ANTH 522 |
Issues in Biological Anthropology (3 credits):Recent developments in biological anthropology, such as the evolution of social systems in primates, foraging strategies, and emerging infectious diseases. |
Not Currently Offered |
ARCH 564 |
Design for Development (3 credits):Designing for sustainable development to meet broad developmental goals. Innovative design approaches, strategies and projects to address these objectives via economic empowerment, food security, gender equity, health, sanitation, climate-change preparedness, and shelter-sector engagements. |
Not Currently Offered |
ECON 313 |
Economic Development 1 (3 credits):Microeconomic theories of economic development and empirical evidence on population, labour, firms, poverty. Inequality and environment |
Fall 2019/Winter 2020 |
ENVR 430 |
The Economics of Well-Being (3 credits):Definition, measurement, and determinants of subjective well-being and their implications for policy, growth, and the environment |
Fall 2019 |
ENVB 500 |
Advanced Topics in Ecotoxicology (3 credits):Exploring the impact of environmental chemicals on biological organisms in an ecological context. Basic topics in ecotoxicology, such as source and fate, routes of exposure, bioavailability, dose-response, biomarkers, and risk assessment will be covered from both theoretical and applied perspectives. The processes by which pollutants are tested, regulated, and monitored will be critically examined. |
Fall 2019 |
EPIB 684 |
Principles of Environmental Health Sciences 1 (3 credits):Topics in environmental health sciences: principles of exposure assessment and of toxicology. |
Fall 2019 |
EPIB 685 |
Principles of Environmental Health Sciences 2 (3 credits):Topics in environmental health sciences: principles of environmental epidemiology. |
Winter 2020 |
FMED 506 |
Indigenous Perspectives: Decolonizing Health Approaches (1 credit):Indigenous-grounded health promotion in primary care with the goal to foster meaningful patient and community engagement in research and healthcare while using a decolonized framework. Class discussions draw on diverse ways of knowing and living, enriched by group interactions with facilitators (i.e. Indigenous elders, patients, and health workers) |
Not Currently Offered |
FMED 619 |
Program Management in Global Health & Primary Health Care (3 credits):Program management design, theory, methods and practical applications in both domestic and global health settings, with a focus on primary health care in order to achieve rapid scale-up of effective health interventions towards universal coverage while strengthening health systems for sustained impact. |
Winter 2020 |
GEOG 210 |
Global Places and Peoples (3 credits):Introduction to key themes in human geography. Maps and the making, interpretation and contestation of landscapes, 'place', and territory. Investigation of globalization and the spatial organization of human geo-politics, and urban and rural environments. |
Winter 2020 |
GEOG 216 |
Geography of the World Economy (3 credits):The course introduces the geography of the world economic system. It describes the spatial distribution of economic activities and examines the factors which influence their changing location. Case studies from both "developed" and "developing" countries will test the different geographical theories presented in lectures. |
Fall 2019 |
GEOG 221 |
Environment and Health (3 credits):This course introduced physical and social environments as factors in human health, with emphasis on the physical properties ofthe atmospheric environment as they interact with diverse human populations in urban settings. |
Fall 2019 |
GEOG 301 |
Geography of Nunavut (3 credits):An introduction to the physical and cultural geography of Canada's newest territory. The course will emphasize the bio-physical heterogeneity of the natural environment and the cultural and political ecology of the human population |
Fall 2019 |
GEOG 303 |
Health Geography (3 credits):Discussion of the research questions and methods of health geography. Particular emphasis on health inequalities at multiple geographic scales and the theoretical links between characteristics of places and the health of people |
Winter 2020 |
GEOG 310 |
Development and Livelihoods (3 credits):Geographical dimensions of rural/urban livelihoods in the face of socioeconomic and environmental change in developing regions. Emphasis on household natural resource use, survival strategies and vulnerability, decision-making, formal and informal institutions, migration, and development experience in contrasting global environments |
Winter 2020 |
GEOG 325 |
New Master-Planned Cities (3 credits):This course examines the origins, designs, motivations and cultural politics of planned cities, focusing primarily on those currently under construction in Africa, the Middle East and Asia. A variety of themes will be explored including design responses to urban pollution and over-crowding, 'new' cities from earlier decades, totalitarianism and the city, utopianism, 'green' cities, and 'creative' cities. The course examines the various motivations underlying the design and construction of planned cities and how they are shaped by power, religion, and political ideologies. There will be a focus on evolving concepts used in city design as well as the continuities and cultural revivalism expressed through urban design and architecture. Students interested in urban and cultural geography, cities, architecture andplanning in different cultural contexts will enjoy this course. |
Winter 2020 |
GEOG 403 |
Global Health and Environmental Change (3 credits):Major themes and contemporary case studies in global health and environmental change. Focus on understanding global trends in emerging infectious disease from social, biophysical, and geographical perspectives, and critically assessing the health implications of environmental change in different international contexts. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 406 |
Human Dimensions of Climate Change (3 credits):This course will examine the human dimensions of climate change focusing on the vulnerability of human systems, climate change adaptation and mitigation, key policy debates, and current and future challenges. Case studies will be utilized to provide context and help investigate and understand key concepts, trends, and challenges. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 408 |
Geography of Development (3 credits):Examines the geographical dimensions of development policy, specifically the relationships between the process of development and human-induced environmental change. Focuses on environmental sustainability, struggles over resource control, population and poverty, and levels of governance (the role of the state, non-governmental organizations, and local communities). |
Fall 2019 |
GEOG 409 |
Geographies of Developing Asia (3 credits):Current development questions that are of concern to the Asian region. Emphasis on critically studying the major processes of social, economic and environmental change through regional case studies in rural, peri-urban and urban contexts. Covers important debates and considerations that lie at the heart of development geography. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 417 |
Urban Geography (3 credits):Classic and contemporary perspectives in urban geography. Range of topics including effects of capitalism, gender,suburbanism, segregation and inequality, property, urban landscapes, and urbanspace. Emphasizes theoretical issues but includes empirical and/or case studies. |
Fall 2019 |
GEOG 423 |
Dilemmas of Development (3 credits):Africa seems beset by development problems. Some of these appear to have no clear answer. Such dilemmas present significant barriers to moving forward with durable, effective development in Africa. This course will examine two primary and frequently interlocked dilemmas in East Africa with wide ranging impact - food security, and conflict. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 493 |
Health and Environment in Africa (3 credits):Health and Environment in Africa (3credits)Explorationof key diseases of development, as well as patterns and determinants of health and disease in East Africa. Topics will focus on population and environmental health. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 502 |
Geography of Northern Development (3 credits):Analysis of the evolution of development policies and their spatial implications in circumpolar areas with an emphasis on the application of geographical concepts. Special attention is given to indigenous peoples and new immigrant populations in northern North America |
Fall 2019 |
GEOG 503 |
Advanced Topics in Health Geography (3 credits):A critical review of current themes and trends in health geography, with emphasis on geographical perspectives in public health research. Topics include the social and environmental determinants of chronic and infectious disease, health and health-related behaviours. Seminars focus on critical appraisal of conceptual and methodological approaches in health geography research. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 507 |
Advanced Social Geography (3 credits):Current theories and themes in social geography, such as relations between society and space, social and spatial relations of inequality, difference and diversity, situated and embodied identities, social issues and problems, connections between society and nature, all within a spatial framework. |
Not Currently Offered |
GEOG 530 |
Linkage of physical processes (hydrology and ecosystems) with issues of societal and socio-economic relevance (land, food, and water use appropriation for human well-being). Application of a holistic perspective on land, food and water issues in an international setting, highlighting linkages, feedbacks and trade-offs in an Earth system context. |
Not Currently Offered |
HSSM 605 |
Medical Anthropology (3 credits):Seminar in the anthropology of medicine. |
Not Currently Offered |
HSSM 610 |
Sociology of Medicine (3 credits):Seminar in the sociology of medicine. |
Not Currently Offered |
INDS 111 |
Molecules to Global Health (6 credits):Introduction to the scope of medical and dental practice, from the molecular to global health. Basic principles of pathology and pharmacology, concepts of disease, and the role of the physician and dentist in the Canadian health care system. |
Fall 2019 |
INTD 200 |
Introduction to International Development (3 credits):Aninterdisciplinary introduction to the field of International Development Studies focusing on the theory and practice of development. It examines various approaches to international development, including past and present relationships between developed and underdeveloped societies, and pays particular attention to power and resource distribution globally and within nations. |
Fall 2019/Winter 2020 |
INTD597 |
Seminar in International Development (3 credits):Aninterdisciplinary research seminar on topics of common interest to staff and students of the International Development Studies program. As part of their contribution, students will prepare a research paper under the supervision of one or more members of staff. |
Not Currently Offered |
LAWG 521 |
Student-Initiated Seminar 1 (3 credits):Supervised student-initiated seminar. |
Fall 2019/Winter 2020 |
MICR 341 |
Mechanisms of Pathogenicity (3 credits):A study of the means by which bacteria cause disease in animals and humans. Includes response of host to invading bacteria, bacterial attachment and penetration processes, and modes of actions of exotoxins and endotoxins. |
Fall 2019 |
MIMM 214 |
Introductory Immunology: Elements of Immunity (3 credits):Basic immunology, organs and cells, elements of innate immunity, phagocytes, complement, elements of adaptive immunity, B-cells, T-cells, antigen presenting cells, MHC genes and molecules, antigen processing and presentation, cytokines and chemokines. Emphasis on anatomy and the molecular and cellular players working together as a physiological system to maintain human health. |
Winter 2020 |
MIMM 324 |
Fundamental Virology(3 Credits):A study of the fundamental properties of viruses and their interactions with host cells. Bacteriophages, DNA- and RNA-containing animal viruses, and retroviruses are covered. Emphasis will be on phenomena occurring at the molecular level and on the regulated control of gene expression in virus-infected cells. |
Fall 2019 |
MIMM 413 |
Parasitology (3 credits):Astudy of the biology, immunological aspects of host-parasite interactions, pathogenicity, epidemiology and molecular biological aspects of selected parasites of medical importance. Laboratory will consist of a lecture on techniques, demonstrations and practical work. |
Winter 2020 |
NRSC 221 |
Environment and Health (3 Credits):Introduction to physical and social environments as factors contributing to the production of human health, with emphasis on the physical properties of the atmospheric environment as they interact with diverse human populations in urban settings |
Fall 2019 |
NUR2 516 |
An overview of the main issues in global health studies, approaches by which to understand these issues, and the importance of making reasoned links between the key global health studies concepts. |
Fall 2019 |
NUR2 636 |
Global Health Nursing Clinical (3 Credits):This course continues to develop the knowledge and skills required to enhance the health of families. Family health has to do with ways of learning, developing, relating, behaving, and thinking which promote physical and psychological well-being. It involves coping with adversity by developing or drawing on family and individual strengths, as well as external resources. From the foundational perspective of Strengths-Based Nursing, students will continue to develop approaches to family assessment and intervention using theoretically and empirically grounded strategies for working with families. |
Fall 2019 |
NUTR 341 |
Global Food Security (3 credits):Food insecurity is one of the most critical issues humanity has faced in history. The magnitude of this phenomenon, reflected in its worldwide presence and in the number of individuals affected, makes it an imperative component of all nations' and of allinternaltionalagencies' agendas. Its complexity of determinants and its numerous consequences require the involvement ofmultipedisciplines and sectors. ƬƵ undergraduate students as future professionals tackling global issues require an integrated and multidisciplinary training on food security. |
Fall 2019 |
NUTR 501 |
Nutrition in Developing Countries (3 credits):This course will cover the major nutritional problems in developing countries. The focus will be on nutrition and health and emphasize young children and other vulnerable groups. The role of diet and disease for each major nutritional problem will be discussed. |
Fall 2019 |
NUTR 512 |
Herbs, Foods and Phytochemicals (3 credits):An overview of the use of herbal medicines and food phytochemicals and the benefits and risks of their consumption. Thephysiological basis for activity and the assessment of toxicity will be presented. Current practices relating to the regulation, commercialization and promotion of herbs and phytochemicals will be considered |
Fall 2019 |
PARA 410 |
Environment and Infection (3Credits):Infectious pathogens of humans and animals and their impact on the global environment are considered. The central tenet is that infectious pathogens are environmental risk factors. The course considers their impact on the human condition and juxtaposes the impact of control and treatment measures and environmental change |
Winter 2020 |
PARA 515 |
Water, Health and Sanitation (3 credits):The origin and types of water contaminants including live organisms, infectious agents and chemicals of agricultural and industrial origins. Conventional and new technological developments to eliminate water pollutants. Comparisons of water, health and sanitation between industrialized and developing countries. |
Winter 2020 |
POLI 227 |
Developing Areas/Introduction (3 credits):An introduction to Third World politics. A comparative examination of the legacies of colonialism, the achievement of independence, and contemporary dynamics of political and socio-economic development in Africa, Asia and Latin America. Topics include modernization, dependency, state-building and national integration, revolution, the role of the military, and democratization |
Winter 2020 |
POLI 522 |
Developing Areas (3 credits):Seminar on developing areas. Topic varies year to year. |
Not Currently Offered |
POLI 646 |
Politics of Developing Areas 1 (3 credits):A specific problem area in the Comparative Politics of Developing Areas. |
Winter 2020 |
POLI 650 |
Seminar in Peacebuilding (3 credits):An examination of transitions from civil war to peace, and the role of external actors (international organizations, bilateral donors, non-governmental organizations) in support of such transitions. Topics will include the dilemmas of humanitarian relief, peacekeeping operations, refugees, the demobilization of ex-combatants, transitional elections, and the politics of socio-economic reconstruction. |
Winter 2020 |
POLI 670 |
Advanced Topics: International Relations (3 credits):A specific problem area in International Relations |
Fall 2019 |
POLI 575 |
Seminar: International Politics (3 credits):Aresearch seminar dealing with topics in the field of international politics. |
Fall 2019 |
POLI 679 |
International Security: Conflict and Co-operation (3 credits):Covers theoretical and historical literature on international security, strategy, war, and cooperation. Includes systemic, societal and normative explanations or war, peace, security, and change. |
Not Currently Offered |
POLI 680 |
Social Change/Advanced Industrialized Democracies (3 credits):Introduction to the theories, concepts and empirical work on advanced democracies with a focus on issues of social change. Theories of the welfare states, social capital,postmaterialism, political participation, social movements and issues of diversity are studied from a variety of methodological perspectives. |
Winter 2020 |
PPHS 501 |
Population Health and Epidemiology (3Credits):This course presents concepts and methods of epidemiology at the introductory level. The use of epidemiologic methods for population and public health research and practice will be illustrated. A review of selected population health questions such as the HIV/AIDS epidemic, the cardiovascular disease epidemic, cigarette smoking, or screening for disease will be presented. |
Winter 2020 |
PPHS 511 |
Fundamentals of Global Health (3 credits):This exciting and interactive course aims to give students the opportunity to broaden their understanding and knowledge of global health issues, including global burdenof diseases, determinants of health, transition in health and drivers of such transition, challenges in healthcare delivery in resource-limited settings, and the variety of agencies and actors engaged in addressing global health challenges. The course consists of lectures, case studies, debates, discussions and small group work. |
Fall 2019/Winter 2020 |
PPHS 525 |
Health Care Systems in Comparative Perspective (3 credits):Comparative perspective to illustrate processes involved in the development and evolution of health care systems around the world. Countries examined will represent different welfare state regimes, health care system typologies, levels of development and wealth. |
Fall 2019 |
PPHS 527 |
Health Services Research and Policy (3 credits):Key health policy topics in developed economies using analytic frameworks and tools from economics. Major topics include health insurance, health care financing, and the roles of individuals and public and private institutions in the health care system. |
Not Currently Offered |
PPHS 528 |
Economic Evaluation of Health Programs (3 credits):Concepts and methods used to carry out economic evaluations of health programs and interventions, including public health interventions, pharmaceuticals, and other health care interventions. Includes topics such as calculation of unit costs, measurement of quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) and assessment of uncertainty in cost-effectiveness analysis. |
Fall 2019 |
PPHS 529 |
Global Environmental Health and Burden of Disease (3 credits):This course presents the grand challenges in global health from environmental and occupational risks along with the multi-disciplinary methods used to identify, control, and prevent them. It will introduce students to knowledge and skills in core disciplines of environmental health and approaches to environmental risk recognition, control and prevention in a global context. |
Winter 2020 |
PPHS 602/ EPIB 602 ??? |
Foundations of Population Health (3 credits):Introduction to population health and the conceptual basis of the population health approach to measuring disease occurrence and to prevention. Fundamentals of, and methods for, studying burden of disease in population, and how these differ across time, space, and groups. Topics include population dynamics, denominators, occurrence of events, time, person and place, health indicators, standardization, life tables, age, cohort and period effects, disease surveillance and vital statistics. Introduction to the concepts and principles of measurement including measurement error, validity, reliability, and accuracy. |
Not Currently Offered |
PPHS 612 |
Principles of Public Health Practice (3 credits):Principles and methods in public health practice. Topics will include investigation in public health, public health intervention, program evaluation, public health and the health care system, society and public health. |
Not Currently Offered |
PPHS 615 |
Introduction to Infectious Disease Epidemiology (3 credits):Introduction to the field of infectious disease epidemiology taught from a public health perspective. Topics include analytic methods, study design, outbreak investigations, surveillance, vaccine development and evaluations, screening, modelling, and infectious causes of cancer or chronic diseases. |
Fall 2019 |
PPHS 624 |
Public Health Ethics and Policy (3Credits):Critical assessment of ethical dilemmas and policy considerations raised by the practice of public health. Specific topicsinclude:measuring and defining health; surveillance and privacy; preparedness, quarantine, and distribution of resources during a health emergency; and health inequalities. |
Fall 2019 |
PPHS 616 |
Principles and Practice of Public Health Surveillance (3 credits):The objectives of this course are to familiarize students with the theory and methods of surveillance, a core public health function. The seminars will define surveillance and explore surveillance applications andmethods through case studies and in-class exercises. Topics willinclude:measurement, indicators, analytical methods, and the future of surveillance. Computer-based modules will complement seminars. Topics willinclude:estimating the burden of a disease, detecting disease outbreaks, and identifying cases of chronic disease |
Winter 2020 |
PSYC 533 |
International Health Psychology (3 credits):The focus will be on health and illness in developing countries, in particular, on health problems (malnutrition, alcohol abuse, mental illness, family planning, and HIV) where psychosocial factors play a large role in the problem and the solution. Attempted solutions based on community participation, health education, non-governmental and international agencies will be discussed. |
Not Currently Offered |
PSYT 711 |
Cultural Psychiatry (3 credits):Topics covered: cross-national epidemiological and ethnographic research of major and minor psychiatric disorders; culture-bound syndromes and idioms of distress; culture, emotion and social interaction; psychological and symbolic healing; mental health of immigrants and refugees; psychiatric theory and practice as cultural constructions; methods of cross-cultural research. |
Not Currently Offered |
RELG 572 |
Religion and Global Politics (3 credits):An exploration of the resurgence of global religions in geo-political and international relations in thepost Cold-War era. It examines the complex roles that religious traditions play in democratization, human rights, conflict, and development. |
Fall 2019 |
SOCI 225 |
Medicine and Health in Modern Society (3 credits):Socio-medical problems and ways in which sociological analysis and research are being used to understand and deal with them. Canadian and Québec problemsinclude:poverty and health; mental illness; aging; death and dying; professionalism; health service organization. |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 254 |
Development and Underdevelopment (3 credits):Competing theories about the causes ofunderdevelopment in the poor countries. Topics include the impact of geography, the population explosion, culture and national character, economic and sexual inequalities, democracy and dictatorship. Western imperialism and multi-national corporations, reliance on the market, and development through local participation, cooperation, and appropriate technology. |
Winter 2020 |
SOCI 307 |
Globalization (3 credits):Socio-economic, political and cultural dynamics related to processes of globalization. An examination of the following: key theoretical foundations of the globalization debate; the extent and implications of economic globalization; global governance and the continuing relevance of nation-states; instances of transnational activism; the diffusion of cultural practices; patterns and management of global migration and mobility. |
Winter 2020 |
SOCI 309 |
Health and Illness (3 credits):Health and illness as social rather than purely bio-medical phenomena. Topicsinclude:studies of ill persons, health care occupations and organizations; poverty and health; inequalities in access to and use of health services; recent policies, ideologies, and problems in reform of health services organization |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 331 |
Population and Environment (3 credits):Main topics and controversies linking population processes and the environment. Topics include how population processes influence the environment, population responses to changing environments, policies related to these effects, variation across and within developed and developing countries. |
Winter 2020 |
SOCI 365 |
Health and Development (3 credits):Main concepts and controversies linking health to broader social and economic conditions in low income countries. Topics include the demographic and epidemiological transitions, the health and wealth conundrum, the social determinants of health, health as an economic development strategy, and the impact of the AIDS pandemic. |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 370 |
Sociology: Gender and Development (3 credits):Exploration of the main development theories and discussion of how gender is placed within them, analysis of the practical application of development projects and discussion of how they affect gender dynamics, and examination of power relations between development agencies and developing countries. Examples from Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America are used. |
Fall 2019 |
SOCI 390 |
Gender and Health (3 credits):Key conceptual and substantive issues in gender and health since c1950: stratified medicalization of women's and men's health; social movements in health including the women's health movement; gender inequality in morbidity and mortality; gender, power and control in patient/physician interactions; embodied experience; politics and policies of gender and health. |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 508 |
Medical Sociology and Social Psychiatry (3 credits):Medical Sociology and Social Psychiatry (3credits)Thesocial construction of mental illness and disease, the personal and professional definition and recognition of illness, the distribution and determinants of illness, disease, sickness in the population, and the politics of medical research |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 512 |
Ethnicity & Public Policy(Credit):Major themes in the theoretical literature on ethnicity. Public policies with direct and indirect implications for inter-ethnic relations will be studied. Policies affecting areas such as language, education, immigration, employment and promotion, multiculturalism and welfare. Examples drawn from several multi-ethnic societies. Political, constitutional, and economic problems associated with these policy initiatives |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 513 |
Social Aspects HIV/AIDS in Africa (3 credits):Examination of the social causes and consequences of HIV/AIDS in Africa. Gender inequality, sexual behaviours, marriage systems, migration, and poverty are shaping the pandemicas well as how the pandemic is altering social, demographic and economic conditions across Africa. |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 515 |
Medicine and Society (3 credits):The sociology of health and illness. Reading in areas of interest, such as: the sociology of illness, health services occupations, organizational settings of health care, the politics of change in national health service systems, and contemporary ethical issues in medical care and research. |
Fall 2019 |
SOCI 519 |
Gender and Globalization(3 Credits):Focus on the diverse forces of globalization that impact the lives of men and women. Critical analysis of key theories and concepts implicated in the intersection of globalization processes with gender dynamisms. |
Fall 2019 |
SOCI 520 |
Migration and Immigrant Groups(3Creidts):Review of the major demographic, economic and sociological theories of internal and international migration. The main emphasis will be on empirical research on migration and immigrant groups. |
Not Currently Offered |
SOCI 525 |
Health Care Systems in Comparative Perspective (3 credits):Comparative perspective to illustrate processes involved in the development and evolution of health care systems around the world. Countries examined will represent different welfare state regimes, health care system typologies, levels of development and wealth. |
Fall 2019 |
SOCI 545 |
Sociology of Population (3 credits):The classic literature of sociology of population. Drawing reciprocal linkages between social and population processes: Historical, family and labour force demography, demographic and fertility transitions, mortality, ethnic and race relations, gender, macro-structural interaction theory, and the relation of population and the environment |
Fall 2019 |
SOCI 588 |
Biosociology/Biodemography (3 credits):This course will explore linkages between social and biological systems, their influence on health and well-being over the lifecourse, and on health disparities. Topics include classical sociological approaches to biosocial processes, sociobiology (reductionist, but population-based), and newer demographic studies on gen-environment, epigenetic, and stress-metabolic/allostatic processes. |
Winter 2020 |
SWRK 400 |
Policy and Practice for Refugees (3 credits):Refugee-generating conflicts, international and national responses are considered. Canadian policy, history and response to refugees are analyzed. Theory-grounded practice with refugees is examined, including community organizing and direct service delivery to individuals and families. |
Fall 2019 |
SWRK 620 |
Migration and Social Work (3 credits):Informing practice through examination of how migration's social, economic, political, legal, cultural aspects shape lives of those migrating voluntarily or involuntarily to Canada. Historical context of immigration policies, acculturation frameworks, different models of service provision in resettlement. Intersecting oppressions of status, ethnicity, gender, class, age, sexual orientation and differential ability. |
Winter 2020 |
SWRK 626 |
International and Community Development (3 credits):Advanced analysis of international and community development as a field of practice, policy and research. Critical concepts include colonization, development and underdevelopment, international socio-economic inequalities, social justice and social change, planning for development, governance. |
Winter 2020 |
URBP 501 |
Principles and Practice 1 (2 credits):This six-week intensive course exposes students to issues and techniques that are applicable in diverse professional planning contexts. The subject matter, geographic area, scale of intervention and institutional location of planning varies from semester to semester. The course focuses on a specific case study and is taught by a visiting lecturer with professional experience in the selected subject matter. |
Not Currently Offered |
URBP 520 |
Globalization: Planning and Change (3 credits):Economic and social issues related to planning for sustainable development, with a focus on water. Political and environmental determinants of resource use. Impact of global, regional and local institutions, programs and plans in Barbados and in the field locale in general. |
Fall 2019 |
WILD 424 |
Parasitology (3 credits):Systematics, morphology, biology and ecology of parasitic protozoa, flatworms, roundworms and arthropods with emphasis on economically and medically important species. |
Not Currently Offered |
Funding Opportunities
Travel Awards:
Three ISoN students were awarded funding in the fall 2019. Given the inability to travel, GHP agreed to offset costs given these funding bursaries. There were three applicants for the 2020 spring travel awards. All applicants were evaluated by faculty. The pandemic interrupted the process and the bursaries were not given.
Global Health Programs offers a variety of travel awards for ƬƵ students, including the Luger-Mikelberg Travel Award for Global Healthand the Mary A. Metcalf International Travel Fund-which you can find more info on here.
Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies department also features theGraduate Mobility Award, which you can find here.
Other Awards, Grants, Scholarships
CNF
TheCanadian Nurses Foundationis the only national foundation solely committed to promoting the health and patient care of Canadians by financially supporting Canadian nurses engaged in higher education, research, home health-care and specialty certification; advocating dissemination and utilization of nursing knowledge.
Study Awards are supported by the Scholarship Fund Trust Accounts investment income as designated by CNF donors, and by contributions made by corporate and individuals donors. CNF gives nurses across Canada approximately $250,000 annually in scholarships and certification awards.
The awards have different values, depending on the level. Generally the average value is:
- Baccalaureate level from $750 to $3,000
- Master and Nurse Practitioner level from $1,000 to $5,000
- PhD level from $2,000 to $10,000
Award values can vary from the average indicated.
You must have already have completed, or be in the process of completing, at least one year in a nursing program, and have at least three complete semesters remaining after the application deadline.
For more information, visit the.
COS
Community of Sciencefunding information is drawn from federal and regional governments, private foundations, societies, corporations and associations. Visit thewebsite for more information.
NSERC Concourse
TheNatural Sciences and Engineering Research Counciloffers scholarships and fellowships for every stage of study, from undergraduate to postdoctoral.
Visit thepage of the NSERC website for more information.
OIIQ
TheOrdre des infirmières et infirmiers du Québecoffers a range of scholarships for baccalaureate, masters, and doctoral students.
Visit thepage of the OIIQ website for more information.
RRISIQ
Each year, theRéseau de recherche en interventions en sciences infirmières du Québechands out graduate level fellowships and undergraduateHonortype bursaries to promising students that are likely to become tomorrow's generation of nursing researchers.
For more information, visit.
ƬƵ's Scholarships and Student Aid Office
Find all the resources and advice you need to help pay for university, from step-by-step guides on how to apply for funding to information on how to budget effectively. Visitmcgill.ca/studentaid/for more information.
Funding for all Nursing Students
F.A. Davis Nursing Undergraduate Scholarship
F.A. Davis. F.A. Davis is an independent Nursing, Medicine, and Health Sciences publisher located in Philadelphia, PA. They are offering their 3nd annual undergraduate! This scholarship reflects their continual commitment to the education of nurses and recognizes the very special nature of those who have chosen to embark on this challenging, yet rewarding career path. They understand how hard nurses work, and want to reward them for their dedication to the field.
Award amount: $1,500 · Deadline: July 15, 2017·
Ingram School of Nursing Alumni Awards
Several awards of approximately $1,000 each are granted annually to undergraduate nursing students in the second and third year of their program and to students in the graduate program in Nursing. These prizes include: the Marion Lindeburgh Scholarship, the Irma Riley Award and the Agnes Boisde Award.
The Ingram School of Nursing also awards book prizes. Students are encouraged to inquire at the School about additional fellowships and scholarships available during the current academic year.
Application deadline: TBA
ƬƵ Global NCD Alliance Grants
The ƬƵ Global Noncommunicable Diseases Alliance (GNCDA) is pleased to announce the call for applications for its 2021 grants round. Annually, the GNCDA supports NCD research in resource-limited communities by providing microgrants to students, medical residents, university faculty and healthcare professionals. This year, microgrants will be awarded to eight groups of researchers across the three grant categories:
- : Three awards worth $3,000 each for graduate students within and outside ƬƵ. Deadline: July 5, 2021
- : Three awards worth $2,000 each for healthcare and allied professionals, university faculty, or medical residents living in resource-limited communities for community-based research at their local/home site. Deadline: July 5, 2021
- : Two grants worth up to $5,000 per group for ƬƵ researchers collaborating with researchers from and in resource-limited communities on NCD-related projects. Deadline: July 31, 2021.
Only one proposal submission per applicant regardless of grant type. Applicants with multiple submissions will be disqualified. Find out more.
The McBurney Fellowship Program
The McBurney Fellowship Program is a unique opportunity for ƬƵ faculty with partners in Latin America to receive funding to send and mentor one or more outstanding graduate or undergraduate students of all levels to serve with programs that are improving the health and social conditions faced by poor and marginalized populations in Latin America.
For more details, including application deadline, visit theInstitute for Health and Social Policywebsite.
Global and Local Community Awards
The following global and local community awardsare available toƬƵ students and residents working with underserved populations in Montreal or elsewhere:
Alex W. Strasberg MD CM 1921 and Harvey M. Weinstein MD CM 1967 Global Health Award:Awarded by the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences upon recommendation of the Director of Global Health Programs to provide support for undergraduate medical students or post-graduate residents in the Faculty who are engaged in global health research and/or clinical training related to immigrant, refugee, and aboriginal/indigenous populations, in Canada and abroad. Support may include funds for travel, housing, research, and/or clinical experiences. Preference will be given to projects of merit and projects with cross-disciplinary perspectives as well as faculty support. Value: Varies.
Dr. Yuk Chan Ma and Dr. Yuen Kok Chan Prize in Multicultural and International Medicine:This award is for a project that has ALREADY been completed. Established in October 2006 by Dr. Alice Chan‐Yip, M.D., C.M. 1962,in memory of her late parents, the prize is awarded annually by the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Scholarship Committee to a medical student who participates in a Canadian multicultural or international elective, research project or community service experience of at least four weeks. The prize (up to $1000) will be awarded to the student who presents the best project demonstrating an understanding of the contribution of social and cultural factors to health.
You can find more information about both internal and external funding available to nursing students on the GHP funding website here.
Funding for Indigenous Students
Two $2,500.00 nursing scholarships are to be awarded and administered by the Canadian Indigenous
Nurses Association (CINA). The aim of the scholarship is to encourage nurses of Indigenous ancestry to
obtain the specialized knowledge they will require.
A $1000 bursary, to a Native Woman of Kahnawake pursuing higher education in the field of health sciences. The first scholarship was awarded in 1993.
Global Health Programs Travel Awards
The ƬƵ Global Health Travel Awards program is designed to provide opportunities for ƬƵ University students planning to travel for global health projects. Students have access to a variety of travel awards from the ƬƵ Global Health Programs (GHP). The program supports students participating in global health projects internationally or in Canada.
Indspire is a national Indigenous registered charity that invests in the education of First Nations, Inuit and Métis people for the long term benefit of these individuals, their families and communities, and Canada.
The purpose of Karonhiaráhstha’s Memorial Fund is to provide financial assistance to Kahnawakehró:non students who are pursuing their education and career in the fields of Medicine and other Health Care Professions, including but not limited to, Holistic Medicine and Mental Health Professions. Additionally, Karonhiaráhstha’s Memorial Fund aims provide education and awareness training in child safety, protection, first-aid and life-saving techniques to all community members. Furthermore, the Memorial Fund is also available for bereavement relief, community recognition awards, and providing specialty equipment, programs and/or books to community organizations.
Thanks to the generosity of Roger Warren, one fellowship for $25, 000 is being offered to a deserving Indigenous student seeking admission to a Master’s or a Doctoral program at ƬƵ University in 2020-21. The applicant’s research must focus on some aspect of the study of Canada. Based on progress reports and participation in the activities of the Institute, the award may be renewed.
Funding for Students with Disabilities
Information about funding for students with disabilities and assistance with applications is available through theOffice for Students with Disabilities(OSD). It is recommended that students make an appointment with an OSD advisor to find out how to best have their needs addressed