Abstract

Although public health undergraduate education is increasingly popular in the West, studies describing the needs assessment and curriculum development of public health undergraduate education programs are lacking in the Asia Pacific. The objective of this study was to describe the needs assessment and curriculum development of a second major in public health for undergraduates in the National University of Singapore, the first in Singapore. We used the integrated framework for curriculum development in higher education, which consisted of five stages. In Stage 1, the environment was assessed on the need for a new curriculum. Externally, there was a demand for public health workforce in Singapore based on a review of reports from the Ministry of Health and the job portals. Internally, there was a demand from existing students of the university, along with support from the faculty to offer a new curriculum. There was no university in Singapore offering an undergraduate major program in public health. In Stage 2, competencies to be developed were identified from public health job descriptions using job portals, the needs of public health stakeholders, and competencies listed in the public health curriculum accreditation frameworks such as the Council on Education for Public Health. In Stage 3, based on data triangulation, the curriculum was designed as a second major that is offered to all students of the university from year 2 onward. Students have to complete a total of 12 modules, of which 6 are core and 6 are elective. The capstone module is a 320-h internship module where students will be attached to public health–related agencies, organizations, or non-governmental organizations. Our curriculum is generally aligned with undergraduate public health programs in other established universities in the United States of America, United Kingdom, Australia, and Hong Kong. In Stage 4, various pedagogical strategies were identified for the core modules. We are currently at Stage 5 where implementation, monitoring, and evaluation are still being carried out. We hope that the lessons learnt will serve to inform other universities in the Asia Pacific that are considering implementing such programs and broadening their offerings in public health education.

Highlights

  • Public health is the art and science of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health through the organized efforts of the society [1]

  • We evaluated two sources of data: (i) public health job descriptions using the same job portals in Singapore from Stage 1, and (ii) competencies listed in public health curriculum accreditation frameworks such as the Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH) [36] and the Agency for Public Health Education Accreditation (APHEA) [37]

  • After several meetings from November 2018 to July 2019, based on data triangulation and consensus, we developed a formal curriculum for a second major in public health

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Summary

Introduction

Public health is the art and science of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health through the organized efforts of the society [1]. There has been a rapid growth of graduates from undergraduate programs contributing to the public health workforce globally [5]. Public health is taking on greater prominence in undergraduate education. This could be due to the efforts and advocacy from various organizations. In 2003, the Institute of Medicine (IOM) recommended that all undergraduates should have access to education in public health as it is an essential part of the training of citizens [6]. The Task Force provided actionable guidelines to improve education in public health [8]. By 2016, 271 institutions in the USA were offering undergraduate public health curricula [9]. The number of public health degree conferrals had increased from 1,484 in 2004 to 13,605 in 2017 in the USA [10]

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