Women and children's health are critically important for the health of a population. If women are healthy, they have healthy babies, and healthy babies and children grow up to be healthy adults. This unit provides an introduction to the health status of women and children in resource-poor settings, and highlights the interconnectedness of women's and children's health, and why it is important to monitor and report women and children's health outcomes. This unit presents some of the major causes of morbidity and mortality for women and children around the world, with an overview of the interventions and approaches to improving outcomes from a public health perspective. This unit also explores why gender-focused advocacy, and its resulting community mobilization, is such a valuable tool for global health to amplify the voices of communities not yet heard. Throughout the semester a range of experts describe some of the major issues related to the health of women and children. In the tutorials you facilitate a weekly discussion and thus get a deeper understanding of one of the main causes of morbidity and mortality.
Unit details and rules
| Academic unit | Public Health |
|---|---|
| Credit points | 6 |
| Prerequisites
?
|
None |
| Corequisites
?
|
None |
|
Prohibitions
?
|
MIPH5115 |
| Assumed knowledge
?
|
None |
| Available to study abroad and exchange students | No |
Teaching staff
| Coordinator | Elizabeth Kirkwood, elizabeth.kirkwood@sydney.edu.au |
|---|---|
| Lecturer(s) | Camille Raynes-Greenow, camille.raynes-greenow@sydney.edu.au |
| Elizabeth Kirkwood, elizabeth.kirkwood@sydney.edu.au | |
| Tutor(s) | Maxime Vromman, maxime.vromman@sydney.edu.au |