Current Issues in Public Health - Fourth Term 



 

Course Faculty
Edyth Schoenrich

Edyth Schoenrich, MD, MPH

Professor
The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Edyth H. Schoenrich has a long history of commitment to professional involvement in the health field. Over the years, she has had several careers including that of clinician, clinical research scientist, public health administrator, faculty member, and academic administrator. She received her baccalaureate degree from Duke University, her medical degree from the University of Chicago School of Medicine, and her master of public health from the Johns Hopkins School of Hygiene and Public Health. Her clinical residencies and post-doctoral appointments were through the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine at the Johns Hopkins Hospital, including a chief residency in the private medical service. She is certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine and the American Board of Preventive Medicine.

Dr. Schoenrich's clinical preparation and practice included internal medicine, hematology, and general preventive medicine. Her clinical research experience focused on connective tissue diseases. Her public health administrative experience included service in the Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, where she was in charge of all adult preventive services in Maryland including control of blood pressure, diabetes, tuberculosis, cancer, and kidney diseases. She also administered both state and local programs for chronically ill and aging adults. She was director of two tuberculosis hospitals and three chronic disease rehabilitation hospitals operated by the State of Maryland.

Dr. Schoenrich was appointed professor in what is now the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in 1974. For several years, she was director of the Division of Public Health Administration. From 1977 through 1986, Dr. Schoenrich served as senior associate dean at the School of Public Health under the deanship of Dr. Donald A. Henderson, leader of the smallpox eradication program for the World Health Organization. Since leaving the associate deanship of the School of Public Health, Dr. Schoenrich has been deeply involved in designing and implementing flexible programs to facilitate graduate study programs in public health for working health professionals.

Over the years, Dr. Schoenrich has served on a wide variety of national organizations which recommended and established health policy, as well as organizations which certified individual professionals in specialties or accredited educational and health service organizations. Examples include The National Advisory Council on Aging of the National Institute on Aging of the National Institutes of Health; The Institute of Medicine Committee for Study of Allied Health Professions and The Institute of Medicine Committee for Study of Nursing; The Regional Advisory Group of the Regional Medical Program for Heart Disease, Cancer, and Stroke; The National Professional Standards Review Council of the Department of Health and Human Services; and The Adult Medical Care and Preventive Medicine Panels of the Graduate Medical Education Advisory Committee. She served on the American Board of Preventive Medicine, which certifies specialists in preventive medicine, and on The Board of Regents of the American College of Preventive Medicine. She served as a member and vice chair of the Accrediting Commission on Education for Health Services Administration and chaired the Commission on the Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities. She also served on the governing council on Chronic Disease and Rehabilitation Hospitals of the American Hospital Association. She has been active in medical societies, having served on the Board of Directors of the Baltimore City Medical Society, as well as having been a member of the House of Delegates of the Medical Chirurgical Faculty of Maryland.

Teaching Assistants
Lydie Lebrun

Lydie A. Lebrun, MPH

PhD Student
Department of Health Policy and Management; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Lydie Lebrun is currently pursuing a PhD in health policy at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She holds a bachelor of science in biology from McGill University in Montréal, Canada, as well as a master of public health from Columbia University. Her work at Columbia included an investigation of the links among the health, behavior, and preschool attendance of young children in rural South Africa. Lydie’s current research interests are centered around health disparities and health inequality. She has explored the impact of race/ethnicity on the cancer screening behaviors of low-income populations across the United States. She has also conducted an evaluation of New York City’s Early Intervention program for infants and toddlers with developmental delays or disabilities, examining various individual and neighborhood factors associated with delayed access to services.

Heather Fay

Heather Fay

MHS Student
Department of Infectious Disease Epidemiology; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Heather is a second year MHS student in the Department of Epidemiology. She has been at Johns Hopkins for quite some time now, finishing her undergraduate degree here at the Homewood campus in 2007 in Public Health Studies. Her concentration is in Infectious Disease Epidemiology, with a focus on HIV/AIDS. Her research interests include developing effective prevention programming in international settings and looking at structural level factors that influence risky behavior.

Jennifer Mendel

Jennifer Mendel

PhD Student
Department of Health Policy and Management; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Jennifer is a third year PhD student in the Department of Health Policy and Management. She received her undergraduate degree from Tufts University in Massachusetts, where she majored in Biology and Community Health. After graduating, she was employed at the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, where she worked on improving screening and treatment for mental illness and drug addiction. Jennifer’s current research focuses on violence prevention. She is especially interested in the evaluation of policies and programs aimed at helping young people become healthy, productive adults.


 

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