In order to succeed in a multi-disciplinary, cross-cultural field like global health, practitioners must be able to work effectively in a complex environment on problems that do not honor borders or disciplines. HGHI’s Intro to Global Health Workshop offers students the chance to think more broadly about their role in global health solutions. This workshop is being held Monday January 23rd from 5-8PM and includes topics such as:
Want to learn more about careers in Global Health? Interested in options other than a clinical degree?
The Harvard Global Health Institute and The Secondary Field in Global Health and Health Policy invite current Harvard undergraduates to a Panel Discussion featuring recent graduates in the field of Global Health. Please see the PDF below for additional details about the event and the panelists. Pizza will be served, so please click here to register. We hope to see you...
The Harvard Global Health Institute, the Secondary Field in Global Health and Health Policy, and the South Asia Institute invite you to a screening of the Short Film: Getting Better - Stories from KEM Hospital and GS Medical College, India. Dinner will be provided, and the screening will be followed by a discussion with the filmmaker, Gulserene Dastur, and Dr. David Jones, A. Bernard Ackerman Professor of the Culture of Medicine.
What’s going to happen to Obamacare after our new president is elected? Could “single-payer” ever work in this country? How did we get to this point, and what’s next in a new Trump or Clinton administration?
If you’re curious about the role of health care in this year’s presidential election, come on October 12th to learn about what’s at stake and where the candidates stand on these issues. Ellen Montz and Emma Sandoe, Harvard PhD students in Health Policy, have worked behind the scenes in Washington DC and will provide expert commentary on this year’s race and the future of...
In Spring 2016, Harvard University’s Defeating Malaria: From the Genes to the Globe Initiative will offer a multidisciplinary Undergraduate Colloquium on malaria. Examining an ancient global health problem from a continuum of disciplines and perspectives - all the way from the genes to the globe - enables students to develop an analysis of the economic, political, cultural, biological, and historical factors that shape malaria and human responses to it.