Global Health (Evolutionary Global Health Sciences), PhD
Anthropology, Culture, Ethnography, Global, Global health, Health, International, Nutrition, Social Sciences, Social science, medical
ASU is no longer accepting new students to this program. Please explore Degree Search for other similar program options.
When the evolving health needs of growing global populations beckon, few are better equipped to offer solutions than those with a global health degree. As a program graduate, you are prepared for a career in which you can help improve and save thousands of lives at home and abroad.
The PhD program in global health draws on the premise that sustainable and satisfying solutions to the most pressing global health challenges require a sophisticated understanding of how cultural context, social and ecological processes, and disease are really related.
The transdisciplinary graduate program trains students broadly in cutting-edge health social science research theory and methods. The program leverages the strength of ASU's medical anthropology programming and 15 medical anthropologists, and it has the advantage of tapping a much wider set of skills offered by those in such fields as medical sociology, demography, human geography and epidemiology. It is designed to train those who anticipate working in transdisciplinary academic settings, medical schools or nonacademic health settings such as the commercial sector, government agencies or nongovernmental organizations.
Some particular thematic foci of the program are:
- biocultural approaches to human coping
- computer-based complexity modeling
- culture and health
- health in the Americas
- Indigenous and minority health
- mathematical epidemiology
- nutritional anthropology
- social justice and vulnerable populations
- social networks
- urban and environmental health
The program draws together some 80 faculty members from throughout the university to consider how cutting-edge social science can be applied not only to understand, but also to substantively improve the health of populations. The program favors community-based research and runs collaborative projects in which students are encouraged to gain experience and conduct research, from large U.S. cities to hunter-gatherer communities. Students generally enter the program with a master's degree in a relevant field.
The concentration in evolutionary global health sciences requires training in universal principles of research design, from experiments to systematic qualitative and quantitative description; data analyses; quantitative and qualitative methods; and anthropological interpretation, or the identification of determinants of the origins and distribution of health phenotypes in past and present human populations. Students choose from a wide range of data collection and inferential tools in order to address specific questions, through a combination of lecture and guided reading courses designed to master the highly diverse literature in evolutionary global health sciences that best pertains to their career goals.
- College/school:
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
- STEM-OPT extension eligible: No
84 credit hours, a written comprehensive exam, an oral comprehensive exam, a prospectus and a dissertation
Required Core (3 credit hours)
ASB 510 Health: Social and Biocultural Theories (3)
Concentration (12 credit hours)
ASB 503 Medical Anthropology (3)
ASM 560 Human Growth and Development: An Evolutionary Perspective (3)
ESS 513 Institutions (3)
ASM 456 Infectious Disease and Human Evolution (3), ESS 514 Urban and Environmental Health (3), or SSH 514 Urban and Environmental Health, or SSH 591 Topic Principles of Epidemiology for Global Health (3)
Electives (26 credit hours)
Other Requirements (16 credit hours)
ASB 500 Ethnographic Research Methods (3)
ASB 591 Topic: Professionalism II (1)
ASM 579 Proposal Writing (3)
SSH 591 Topic: Principles of Epidemiology (3)
systematic methods courses (6)
Research (15 credit hours)
ASB 500 Ethnographic Research Methods (3)
SSH 792 Research (12)
Culminating Experience (12 credit hours)
ASB 799 Dissertation (12)
Additional Curriculum Information
For the concentration coursework, students choose one course from ASM 456, ESS 514, SSH 514, or SSH 591 Topic: Principles of Epidemiology for Global Health.
For electives, students should see the academic unit for a course list approved by the chair.
Other requirement coursework may be substituted with the approval of the academic unit. At least two systematic methods courses in an area other than epidemiology or biostatistics and ethnography, such as nutrition, survey, archival analysis, demography or geographic information system, should be selected.
When approved by the student's supervisory committee and the Graduate College, this program may allow up to 30 credit hours from a previously awarded master's degree to be used for this program. If students do not have a previously awarded master's degree, the remaining coursework is made up of electives.
General university admission requirements:
All students are required to meet general
university admission requirements.
U.S. applicants | International applicants | English proficiency
Applicants must fulfill the requirements of both the Graduate College and The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Applicants are eligible to apply to the program if they have earned a bachelor's or master's degree from a regionally accredited institution.
Applicants must have a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.00 (scale is 4.00 = "A") in the last 60 hours of their first bachelor's degree program, or applicants must have a minimum cumulative GPA of 3.00 (scale is 4.00 = "A") in an applicable master's degree program.
All applicants must submit:
- graduate admission application and application fee
- official transcripts
- personal statement outlining educational and professional goals
- current curriculum vitae or resume
- three letters of recommendation
- proof of English proficiency
Additional Application Information
An applicant whose native language is not English must provide proof of English proficiency regardless of current residency.
Suitable backgrounds for admission include a master's degree in the social sciences (e.g., anthropology or sociology), public health, human biology or related fields. Students entering directly from a bachelor's degree program should have already completed at least 15 credit hours of social science and six credit hours of human biology or equivalent at the senior level, and they also should have some background in statistics or epidemiology.
Applicants may include in their application materials an optional scholarly writing sample which does not exceed 30 double-spaced pages.
Nationally and internationally, the health field provides enormous and varied career opportunities, and demand is high and growing for graduates with specific skills. The major supports the goals of those pursuing careers in academic research, teaching and health services. Sample employment venues include:
- departments of health
- government agencies
- international agencies (World Health Organization, Center for Disease Control, Global Health Council, World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank)
- nongovernmental organizations
- private sector
- universities
The program also provides a broad intellectual base for those who plan advanced specialist health training in fields such as:
- dentistry
- medicine
- nursing
- pharmacy
In Arizona and elsewhere, there is a pressing need for professionals with the appropriate skills to work in cross-cultural settings or with underserved populations, such as migrants, minorities and those living in poverty, and many of these jobs are directly or indirectly related to health.
School of Human Evolution & Social Change
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SHESC 233
shesc.grad@asu.edu
480-965-6215
Admission deadlines
3 year programs
These programs allow students to fast-track their studies after admission and earn a bachelor's degree in three years or fewer while participating in the same high-quality educational experience of a 4-year option. Students should talk to their academic advisor to get started.
Accelerated master's
These programs allow students to accelerate their studies to earn a bachelor's plus a master's degree in as few as five years (for some programs).
Each program has requirements students must meet to be eligible for consideration. Acceptance to the graduate program requires a separate application. Students typically receive approval to pursue the accelerated master’s during the junior year of their bachelor's degree program. Interested students can learn about eligibility requirements and how to apply.