University of Sydney Handbooks - 2020 Archive

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Health Communication

Apply through the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Graduate Certificate in Health Communication

Graduate Diploma in Health Communication

Master of Health Communication

 

Graduate Certificate in Health  Communication

Graduate Diploma in Health Communication

Master of Health Communication

Credit points required to complete

 24

36

48

Time to complete part-time

 1 - 2 years

1.5 - 3 years

2 - 4 years

Overview

The Master of Health Communication delivers core media skills to help students to become effective communicators across health and medicine, public affairs, public relations, community relations and journalism. The program is offered through the Facuty of Arts adn Social Sciences Department of Media and Communications and the School of Public Health. With a cross-disciplinary and collaborative approach to both media and health disciplines, the program incorporates public crisis, organisational and health communication approaches.

Health communication acts as a bridge between medical bodies, public health authorities and the wider public.

The 1.5 year program (full-time) provides core communication skills for professional communicators in public and corporate health and medicine, public affairs, public relations, community relations and health journalism. It also offers an evidence-based education in international health, community-oriented health practice, non-communicable disease prevention strategies, and health promotion. Designed to meet the needs of those already working in, or wishing to enter, the private and public health sectors, as well as non-government and community organisations, our program is flexible. For example, the Graduate Diploma (1 year full-time) and Graduate Certificate (6 months full-time) courses provide shorter avenues to update and extend one’s professional skills, or to explore new career directions.

Course outcomes

Students will graduate with the knowledge, understanding and expertise in communicating health and wellbeing, incorporating a cross-disciplinary, collaborative approach.

Units of study provide training in campaign development, advocacy, humanitarian and crisis health issues, bioethics, and an understanding of health cultures, policy and promotion. Qualified students will have the chance to attain high-level skills from work experience via a well-regarded internship program while fostering professional contacts and networks prior to completion. Areas of study in the dregree include crisis communication, health communication, social marketing and organisational communication.

Further enquiries

Dr Olaf Werder
Phone: +61 2 9114 1219
Email:
Website: [[https://sydney.edu.au/arts/schools/school-of-literature-art-and-media/department-of-media-and-communications.html/Department of Media and Communications ]