2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
    Aug 04, 2025  
2025-2026 Undergraduate Catalog

Public Health, BS/MPH


Contact

Maureen Thompson, Undergraduate Program Director, Public Health
444B White Hall
315-443-9815
 
Dessa Bergen-Cico, Graduate Director, Public Health
444C White Hall
315-443-0250

Description

The BS in Public Health (BSPH)/Masters Public Health (MPH) is a 150-credit hour, 5-year academic program that provides students with an accelerated pathway to an advanced degree in public health. Students gain core knowledge, research, and practice skills necessary for the advancement of evidence- based public health, while eliminating redundancy if the degrees were completed separately. Students complete 2 internships, one in year 4 (undergraduate study) and one in year 5 (graduate study). Each degree requires a culminating experience. The bachelor’s degree requires a capstone internship paper. The master’s degree requires an integrative learning experience paperThe bachelor’s degree is awarded at the completion of year 4 and the master’s degree is awarded at the completion of the 5th year of study.

The BSPH and MPH programs are accredited by the Council on Education in Public Health (CEPH).

Admission

Entry to the accelerated program is a 2-stage process. 1) Undergraduate stage:  Students initiate interest in the program no later than 2nd semester sophomore year.  Interested students meet with the undergraduate program director to determine if the program can be completed within the 5-year time period.  After meeting with the undergraduate director, students confirm their interest by completing ‘An Intent to Pursue’ form. A personal statement, note of support from the academic advisor, and UG GPA of 3.3 is required. 2) Graduate program application stage: Students formally apply to the graduate program during the fall of the senior year. Eligibility for the MPH portion of the program is contingent on students earning grades C- or higher in graduate courses taken as part of the BSPH degree. A personal statement, letters of recommendation, and an UG GPA of 3.0 is required for this application. The GRE is not required.

Financial Support

Undergraduate financial aid will be provided as awarded via Syracuse University Financial Aid Office.

Graduate assistantships for year 5 will be provided as are feasible under the Falk College annual budget.

Facilities

Courses are taught in classrooms across the newly renovated Falk Complex. Public health faculty and administrative offices are housed on the 4th floor of the Falk Complex. In addition to administrative and academic program offices and classrooms, the Falk Complex also offers student access to dedicated study/collaborative space, computer labs and comforts like a café and student lounge.

Student Learning Outcomes: BS


At the completion of the BSPH/MPH degrees, students will be able to:

Public Health Core Learning Outcomes

  1. Communicate public health information, in both oral and written forms and through a variety of media, to diverse audiences
  2. Locate, use, evaluate, and synthesize public health information
  3. Apply basic principles of project implementation
  4. Use concepts of population health and models from social and behavioral disciplines to promote health and address health related needs and concerns of groups and communities across the life course
  5. Relate biology, health behavior, social determinants, and environmental contexts to human health, disease, and the expression of health disparities
  6. Outline the organizational structure, function and delivery modalities for U.S. and global healthcare systems
  7. Act according to professional values and ethics in public health practice, research and education
  8. Describe how community forces, economic factors, and research shape health practices and policies

Concentration Competencies


Addiction Prevention

  • Explain theoretical underpinnings of addiction in individuals and communities
  • Apply public health prevention theory, ethical principles, and findings from current scientific literature in addiction prevention programming 
  • Examines substance use and substance use disorders in the context of social and environmental influences 

Community Health Education

  • Apply a conceptual framework when planning community health education
  • Develop an advocacy plan 
  • Evaluate individual and community behavioral health theories that guide public health research or practice
  • Health and Society
  • Elucidate challenges populations may face in regards to human rights, access to services, financial strain, and social stigma
  • State the basic theories and concepts of behavioral neuroscience
  • Describe nutrition-related approaches to promote health

Healthcare Management

  • Examine the role of ethics and policy in the delivery of healthcare
  • Use fundamental concepts and processes relevant to quality improvement within healthcare systems
  • Describe the complex issues impacting health care delivery, currently or in the future
  • Apply leadership and management principes to the strategic management of healthcare employees

Student Learning Outcomes: MPH


At the completion of the BSPH/MPH degrees, students will be able to:

Learning Outcomes for MPH Core:

  1. Apply epidemiological, quantitative,  and qualitative data methods to public health challenges.
  2. Examine structural biases and systemic factors of health care, public health, and regulatory systems across diverse socio-cultural, national and international settings
  3. Design population-based policies, programs, and interventions using scientific principals, assessment and evaluation
  4. Apply culturally relevant and effective public health communication strategies using verbal, visual, and written methods
  5. Use systems thinking tools and leadership principles and skills to understand and address organizational or community challenges 
  6. Engage with non-public health fields and settings to cultivate diverse perspectives of addressing public health issues

Additional Learning Outcomes for Global Health Concentration:

  1. Evaluate governance approaches and responses to global health problems within diverse sociocultural and political settings
  2. Differentiate among the roles of public and private actors including global organizations, consortiums, and networks in responses to global health problems
  3. Propose solutions to eliminate environmental exposures using principles of sustainable development, justice, and accountability
  4. Propose strategies to address health equity and social justice challenges affecting underserved populations
  5. Evaluate prevention and control strategies for infectious disease

 

Program Requirements


For requirements for the undergraduate and graduate portions of the accelerated program, visit the B.S.  and MPH program pages.  15 credits are shared across both programs.

During the junior and senior years of undergraduate study, the following graduate courses are completed and the corresponding BSPH courses are not required.

Graduate Course Substitutes for UG courses


PHP 627 substitutes for PHP 306

PHP 661 or PHP 624 substitutes for PHP 402

PHP 664 substitutes for PHP 309

PHP 665 substitutes for PHP 403

PHP 668 substitutes for PHP 401

Culminating Experiences


Undergraduate Culminating Experience = Senior Capstone Internship Paper
Graduate Culminating Experience = Integrative Learning Experience Paper

Total Credits Required


B.S. Public Health: 123

Master’s Public Health: 42

[15 credits shared across both programs]

Transfer Credits


The usual Syracuse University rules will apply for the consideration of transfer credit. Transfer credit will be considered for undergraduate level courses (100-499) that are an integral part of the program. Grades of C or better are required for UG courses considered for transfer. A maximum of 66 credits of UG coursework may be transferred from an associate degree program. Transfer credit will be considered for graduate level courses (600-799) that are an integral part of the program. Grades of B or better are required for graduate courses considered for transfer. A maximum of 9 credits of GRAD coursework may be transferred.

Part-Time Study


At the graduate level, students may study part-time; however, all MPH requirements must be completed within a 7-year period from the time the student registers for the first course to be applied in the MPH program. 

Satisfactory Progress


Students are required to maintain a CUM GPA of 2.0 or higher to meet degree requirements for the BS degree.

Students are required to maintain a CUM GPA of 3.0 or higher to meet degree requirements for the MS degree.

Notes


MPH Degree Milestones



These non-credit bearing experiences are required.

  • Interprofessional Education:  Students enrolled in the MPH degree participate in an Interprofessional Practice (IPP) event.  Students must successfully complete all required assessments and interactive experiences associated with this event.
  • Applied Practice Experience Pre-Planning:  Prior to registering for PHP 667 Graduate Practicum in Public Health, MPH students must complete the planning steps (agency identification, competency mapping and products) required for this course.