| Literature DB >> 29021978 |
Sanghamitra Pati1, Rajeshwari Sinha2, Meely Panda3, Sandipana Pati4, Anjali Sharma5, Sanjay Zodpey5.
Abstract
Today, health has transcended national boundaries and become more multifaceted. Global health has evolved as a new paradigm and is recently being identified as a thrust area now in India. Despite an existing need for a standardized global health curriculum, there is little information available on its education and curriculum in medical and health education space. In the Indian context, we are yet to have a fuller picture of the current status, including, content, structure, selection, teaching methods of global health, and how students are evaluated in India. The objective of this study was to map courses relating to studies on global health in India and analyze its mode of delivery. A detailed Internet search was carried out to identify global health courses and analyzed for: (i) whether global health is a part of the teaching curriculum, (ii) mode of teaching, (iii) broad contents, (iv) instructional formats, (v) assessment, and (vi) selection process. It was found that delivery of global health education in India was fragmented with limited focus at the undergraduate and postgraduate levels. Global health teaching was largely based on certificate courses or online courses, with hardly any institutions imparting a distinct global health education program. There is also no definite specification as to which institutes can impart teaching on global health education and what the specific eligibility requirements are. Our analysis suggests that efforts should be directed toward integrating global health education into broader public health curriculum. At the same time, the need for generation of global health leaders, creation of a common forum for addressing merits and demerits of global health issues, as well as creation of more opportunities for placements are recognized.Entities:
Keywords: India; curriculum; global health; international health; public health education
Year: 2017 PMID: 29021978 PMCID: PMC5623664 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00259
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Global health courses being offered in India: location, domain, certification, duration, and fee.
| Center | Location | Domain | Certification | Duration | Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manipal University | Karnataka | International affairs and public health | Degree in global and public health program | 1 year | Rs. 2.5 lakhs |
| CIPOD, Jawaharlal Nehru University | New Delhi | International issues, health, globalization, economy, politics, and relations | MPhil, PhD, MA | 2–4 years | Within Rs. 5,000 |
| GIMS | Baroda, Gujarat | Global health, acts, management, metrics, and assessments | PG Diploma in Public Health Management | 1 year | Rs. 13,000 |
| GIMS | Baroda, Gujarat | Global issue, travel issues, policies, and management | Diploma in Medical Tourism | 6 months | Rs. 10,000 |
| IITTM | Gwalior, Madhya Pradesh | Medical tourism, travel, international business, and issues | Post Graduate Diploma in Management | 2 years | Rs. 2.5–3 lakhs |
| IIPHH | New Delhi | Public health and education | Diploma in Public Health | 1 year | – |
| CMC, Vellore | Tamil Nadu | Global health issues and policies | Masters in Family Medicine | 2 years | Rs. 90,000 |
| IIHMR, Jaipur in association with John Hopkins University | Jaipur | Real world situations in public health and its management | Certificate for Master’s in Public Health | 1.5 years | – |
| Public Health Foundation of India in collaboration with SDSN edu | New Delhi | Global public health | Digital Certificate on Global Public Health | 11 weeks | Open course and free |
| Apollo Medvarsity IPPC | Apollo Hospital, Hyderabad | Global best practices related to child health | Certificate in International Postgraduate Pediatrics | 1 year | – |
Global health courses being offered in India: correspondence, eligibility, seats, and affiliation.
| Center | Correspondence | Eligibility | Seats | Affiliated to |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manipal University | admissions@manipal.edu | Graduate | – | Manipal University |
| CIPOD, Jawaharlal Nehru University | directoradmissions@mail.jnu.ac.in | Any graduate | – | Jawaharlal Nehru University |
| GIMS | gimsindia2010@gmail.com | Graduates, MBBS, BHMS, social science, BPT, etc. | 40 | Global Educare Trust, New Delhi |
| GIMS | gimsindia2010@gmail.com | 10 + 2 graduate | 40 | Global Educare Trust, New Delhi |
| IITTM | iittm@sancharnet.in | Bachelor’s degree (10 + 2 + 3) in any discipline | 93 | AICTE, AIU |
| IIPHH | iphhadmission2013@gmail.com | Health workers and professionals | – | Director of Technical Education and Training, Govt. of NCT Delhi |
| CMC, Vellore | dedu@cmcvellore.ac.in | Medical Council of India recognized MBBS | 100 | CMC, Vellore |
| IIHMR, Jaipur in association with John Hopkins University | iihmr@iihmr.edu.in | Doctoral degree/bachelors degree with high quality experience | – | IIHMR |
| PHFI in collaboration with SDSN edu | gphmooc@phfi.org | Health care professionals | Online | PHFI |
| SDSN edu | ||||
| Apollo Medvarsity IPPC | apollohealthcity@apollohospitals.com | MBBS | Online | AHERF and Medvarsity |
CIPPOD, Centre for International Politics, Organization and Disarmament; GIMS, Global Institute of Medical Sciences; IPPC, International Postgraduate Pediatric Certificate; AHERF, Apollo Hospitals Educational and Research Foundation; CMC, Christian Medical College; IIHMR, Indian Institute of Health Management Research; PHFI, Public Health Foundation of India; IITTM, Indian Institute of Tourism and Travel Management; IIPHH, Indian Institute of Public Health and Hygiene. AICTE, All India Council for Technical Education; AIU, Association of Indian Universities
–Indicates that exact data could not be retrieved.
Figure 1Radar diagram for comparison of topics being covered under global/international health, worldwide, and in India.
Proposed template syllabus for global health teaching.
| Module I: Basic concepts in global health | |
|---|---|
| 01. | Defining and measuring global health |
| 02. | Global health definitions, case studies |
| 03. | Historical origin and evolution |
| 04. | Health systems and global health |
| 01. | Current global health status |
| 02. | Global burden of disease |
| 03. | Global health priorities for twenty-first century |
| 04. | Global health at the human–animal–ecosystem interface |
| 01. | Environment, climate, and migration |
| 02. | Food, water, and sanitation |
| 03. | Health disparities |
| 04. | Women’s health |
| 05. | Emerging, remerging infectious diseases |
| 06. | NCD and injuries |
| 07. | Maternal and child health |
| 08. | Childhood immunization |
| 09. | Adolescent health |
| 10. | Neglected tropical diseases |
| 11. | Antimicrobial resistance |
| 01. | Overview of global health diplomacy |
| 02. | Global health actors and activities |
| 03. | Global health financing |
| 04. | Global health policy and governance |
| 05. | Drivers of policy for global health diplomacy |
| 06. | Globalization, trade, work, and health |
| 07. | Foreign policy and health |
| 01. | Global health security |
| 02. | Pandemics and health security responses |
| 03. | Health in complex humanitarian emergencies |
| 04. | Humanitarian response and humanitarian dilemmas |
| 05. | Global health equity |
| 06. | Values in global health |
| 07. | Toward a social justice approach to global health |
| 01. | The environment, sustainable development, and health |
| 02. | Universal health coverage in the context of aging |
| 03. | Sustaining good health with equity at low cost |
| 04. | Science and technology for global health |
| 05. | Scaling up effective models in global health delivery |