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Julie Straw (left) developed a weekly after-school program to
encourage healthy relationships for teens who live near Good
Samaritan Health Center in West Atlanta.
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Every day, students and alumni of Emory's Rollins School of Public Health
(RSPH) are building public health capacity in Atlanta and across Georgia.
CDC, Emory's next-door
neighbor, employs more than 400 alumni, many of whom give generously of
their time to mentor students. Less than five miles from Emory are other
major partners - CARE USA, the American Cancer Society, the Arthritis
Foundation, the Carter Center, the Task Force for Global Health, the Georgia
Department of Public Health, and local health departments - where students
and alumni work together in this public health capital of Atlanta.
Emory students' engagement
in the public workforce keeps growing. A few samples:
Grooming teen
ambassadors for health
Julie Straw, who graduated
this year with a master's of pubic health, has sought to reduce health
disparities for most of her life. During her formative years in Michigan,
she went on mission trips to Bolivia and Uganda and worked with inner-city
youth in Detroit. In college, she taught HIV modules to orphaned teens in
South Africa.
At Rollins, her interests
spawned the Community Health Ambassador (CHA) program to train local teens
as peer health educators. Straw partnered with the Good Samaritan Health
Center in west Atlanta to create the program under the auspices of the Emory
Public Health Training Center. Established in 2010, the center is a learning
community that builds competence in the domestic public health workforce, in
part by enabling students to work in underserved areas. Straw was the first
RSPH student awarded a summer field placement in Georgia by the center.
Drawn to Good Samaritan at a Rollins career fair, she developed the CHA
program to fill a need for encouraging healthy relationships among teens.
Straw worked with community
members to organize the CHA program and cover topics identified by teens and
their parents: dating violence, healthy eating, HIV prevention and stigma,
safe sex, mental illness and suicide, substance abuse, and peer and gang
violence. Students graduated from the program after eight weeks.
"Julie took on an incredibly
complex task of developing and executing a mentorship program," says William
Warren 79M, president and founder of Good Samaritan. "The teens who
participated truly seemed to enjoy their experience. If they enjoy it, then
they likely will remember what they were taught and carry these lessons
through life."
Building health
capital locally
For the past few years,
residents living in Atlanta's historic Fourth Ward district have seen quite
a bit of change in their neighborhood thanks to the Atlanta BeltLine, a
redevelopment initiative to create more green space and connect
neighborhoods along a former railroad corridor.
Kate Huber, who graduated
with a master's of public health this year, spent time at a new skate park
talking with residents to gather information for a survey conducted by the
Georgia Tech Center for Quality Growth and Kaiser Permanente. Huber's
questions to residents focused on social capital-how people in communities
help each other.
The Atlanta BeltLine survey
is one of several projects led by Michele Marcus, professor of epidemiology,
at the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research.
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Master's of Public Health student Momoko Kitami.
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Momoko Kitami, a Woodruff Scholar and physician from Japan set to graduate
in 2013 with a master's of public health, also is working with Marcus and
Atlanta obstetrician Annette Miles on a study looking at pregnancy
complications and outcomes for women over 40. The research will provide
valuable data to better inform these women about potential risks.
"Dr. Marcus is helping me
learn how to form research questions, analyze data, and consider all of the
details and processes that go into research," says Kitami, who was paired
with her mentor through Rollins' Scholars in Action program. "Dr. Miles has
come to see certain patterns among her patients, but it's hard for her to
take the time to conduct the research. We're helping her answer those
questions."
Moving Mountains to
Prevent Disease
Adam Weiss, a candidate for
a career master's of public health in 2013, brings a wealth of field
experience to his first-year class at Rollins because of his full-time job:
assistant director of Guinea worm eradication programs at the Carter Center.
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Moses Katabarwa (left) and Adam Weiss are health leaders at the
Carter Center, one of Rollins' public health partners in the
Atlanta community.
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Weiss first learned of the disease in 2003 as a Peace Corps volunteer in
rural Ghana. By his second year, he'd become the Peace Corps' Guinea worm
coordinator for the nation. When his Peace Corps service ended, he remained
in Ghana five more years as a Carter Center consultant, helping design and
implement interventions that resulted in disease eradication. After serving
for a year in Ethiopia-and likely witnessing the last case there as
well-Weiss returned stateside to pursue his mph and join the Carter Center
team in Atlanta. Like dozens of Rollins students before him, he is learning
from leading experts in health, human rights, and conflict resolution.
That program's success-more
than 90 percent of communities achieved treatment coverage of 90 percent or
greater annually-led to a senior post in Atlanta with the Carter Center's
programs in river blindness, lymphatic filariasis, and schistosomiasis.
Although they work on
different diseases, Katabarwa has much to teach a young colleague.
"Adam and I often chat away
about dealing with government ministries and how to, let's say, get a car
imported into the country," he says. "Most people don't think of these
things as public health. But it can be very challenging. And you can't
succeed in public health unless you know who can move mountains.";
-Reprinted with
permission of Emory University's Rollins School of Public