| Population Health | | |
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School | University of Ottawa/Université d'Ottawa - Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies | | |
Location | Ottawa, ON, Canada | | |
School Type | Graduate School | | |
School Size | Full-time Graduate: 7,244 | | |
Degree | Doctorate | | |
Honours | | | |
Co-op | | | |
Length | 4 Year(s) | | |
Entry Grade (%)* | 80% | | |
Prerequisites | | | |
Prerequisites Notes | Students are admitted under the general regulations of the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies. The minimum requirement is a master's degree, with an A- or equivalent average, in a field related to population health (for example, epidemiology, human kinetics, audiology, physiotherapy, nursing, law, environmental studies, sociology, psychology, biology). An applicant whose master's degree did not include a thesis must demonstrate the ability to undertake an independent research project.
Several key areas of knowledge are required of applicants: health sciences, social or behavioural sciences, advanced research methods, graduate level statistics and epidemiology. Those who are missing three or more of these key areas must successfully complete prerequisite courses prior to admission. Students deficient in two or fewer of these knowledge areas may be offered the opportunity to take a course or courses as co-requisites. These courses would be additional to the 18 credits required of all students in the program. Applicants must have an active knowledge of either English or French, and a passive knowledge of the other language. Passive knowledge is defined as both oral and reading comprehension ability. As part of the application process, students are required to complete a second language test. For international students, the Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies English language requirements also apply. | | |
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Description | The population health doctoral program is closely linked to the University's Institute of Population Health, which brings together ten faculties within the University (Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies, Medicine, Health Sciences, Science, Social Sciences, Law (Common Law Section), School of Management, Engineering, Arts and Education). The Institute is composed of ten research centres: McLaughlin Centre for Population Health Risk Assessment, Centre for Multiple Interventions, Centre for Best Practices, Centre for Global Health, Centre for Health Policy, Research unit Gap Santé, Women's Health Research Unit, ACADRE, Immigrant & International Health, WHO Collaborating Centre for HTA.
The doctoral program is designed to meet the needs of a wide variety of candidates, such as health professionals; epidemiologists and biostatisticians; social and behavioural scientists, health administrators and lawyers with an interest in population health; environmental scientists interested in the health sector; biologists with an interest in human population health. Students are encouraged to apply the science of their individual background disciplines to issues of population health. They acquire a broad knowledge of population health through courses and the comprehensive examination, and pursue in-depth study in an area of specialization within the population health framework. The five areas of specialization, which constitute the field of population health, are population health issues, determinants and causes, interventions, delivery systems and health policy.
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