Community and Population Health
Note: School of Medicine graduate certificate programs are open to Doctor of Medicine (MD) students only.
A growing, critical, and specific body of knowledge explores the complex underpinnings of health care for all, which include both upstream and downstream factors. Socioeconomic (upstream) factors are shaped by the structures, systems, environments, politics, policies, and distribution of money, power, and resources at global, national, and local levels. Individual (downstream) factors include behavior, lifestyle, gender, identity, genetics, family history, and use of/access to health care.
If society is to make progress toward achieving health care for all, a cadre of physician leaders must be cultivated that understands these factors and forces, and possesses skills to intervene at the individual, system, and/or community level to impact meaningful change. The VUSM Certificate in Community Health is offered to Doctor of Medicine (MD) students who wish to deepen their knowledge and expertise in order to embark on leadership careers in this area.
Curriculum
The Certificate in Community Health requires the following course work (all required courses are offered through the School of Medicine):
1. Foundations in Community Health I & II
- FCH I: Two-week course covering foundational concepts and skills offered twice each year during the second year of medical school.
- FCH II: Monthly evening sessions during Immersion Phase during which students work with faculty facilitators to apply foundational concepts in discussing patients they encounter in health care settings.
2. Complete at least two additional courses in community health and related disciplines. The following courses count toward this requirement:
- ACE: Shade Tree Elective Clinical Services Learning
- ACE: Spanish Language Peds Clinic
- ACE: Primary Care if taken at community-based locations (i.e., Siloam, Matthew Walker)
- ISC: Community Healthcare – Patients, Populations, and Systems of Care
- ISC: Global Health
- ISC: The National Opioid Crisis
- AE: Global Health
- IDIS: Ecology and Health: Climate, Food, and Justice
- ISC: Disability Competent Care
- ISC: LGBTQ+ Health
- ISC: Sexual Medicine and Reproduction
3. Immersion Experience in Community Health (minimum two months in length):
- Mentored experience with individualized learning goals
- May be related to clinical care, research, public health, or community health
- Students may use required research immersion blocks to satisfy this requirement
- Projects can be used to satisfy Foundations of Healthcare Delivery (FHD) Quality Improvement requirement
- (requires FHD course director approval)
Contacts
For additional information on the Graduate Certificate in Community Health, please contact:
Consuelo H. Wilkins, MD, MSCI
Senior Vice President for Community Health and Inclusive Excellence
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
Senior Associate Dean for Community Health and Inclusive Excellence
Professor of Medicine
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Lourdes Estrada, PhD
Assistant Dean for Community Health Education
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
Professor of Biochemistry
Associate Director, Academic Programs & Operations for the Medical Scientist Training Program (MSTP)
Elisa Corinne Friedman, MS
Assistant Vice President, Community and Population Health
Vanderbilt University Medical Center
529 Light Hall
2215 Garland Avenue
Nashville, TN 37232-0147
(615) 322-3200