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  • Coffee & Careers: Get to know School Director

    Get to know our School Director- Professor David Bishai! We had the pleasure of organizing a captivating career sharing with Prof Bishai , where he generously shared his career journey, personal insights and practical career tips, inspiring our students on their path forward toward their public health careers. Stay tuned for more exciting opportunities as we continue to empower our students to explore meaningful careers that contribute to advancing public health!

  • MPH Orientation Weeks 2023 – Career Development and Alumni Sharing

    Our MPH Orientation Week continues with an Alumni Sharing Session! An inspiring and enthusiastic evening from 8 MPH alumni sharing their personal learning experience and academic journey during their MPH study. A unique moderated panel led by Dr Nason Tan with the invited alumni gave further insights on how they navigated on topics such as student wellness, coping strategies, support resources and fostering connection. It was an invaluable opportunity for our new students to connect our recent alumni to and receive tips from them on embarking their new MPH journey! #HKU #HKUMed #HKUSPH #MPH #Master #publichealth #香港大學 #港大醫學院 #港大公共衞生學院 #公共衞生碩士 #碩士 #公共衞生 #alumni #迎新

  • HKU Public Health Alumni Meeting – Reuniting and Strengthening Bonds!

    On 28 August, an exciting meeting took place at School of Public Health where our School Director, Professor Bishai, met with the HKU Public Health Alumni Society including The Council and alumni members. It was a fruitful conversation on developing new ways to connect and strengthen global engagement with our SPH alumni. #hku #hkumed #hkusph #publichealth #mph #master #tpg #香港大學 #港大醫學院 #公共衞生 #alumni #reunion

  • HKU MPH - We Are Accredited!

    Following a comprehensive and rigorous review process, we are excited to announce that our MPH Programme is fully accredited as a public health programme with Council on Education for Public Health (CEPH). CEPH is an independent agency recognized by the U.S. Department of Education to accredit schools of public health and public health programmes. CEPH acted to accredit our MPH programme at its council meeting in June 2022. The accreditation term is for five years, until 1 July 2027. Our programme’s initial accreditation date was recorded as 13 March 2020. This is a significant achievement for our programme and a reflection of hard work from our faculty and staff who worked tirelessly attending meetings and gathering data for the self-study and the CEPH Site Visit. The result was an astonishing achievement and a report demonstrating full compliance across all CEPH criteria. This CEPH accreditation attests to the quality of our MPH and we want to take this opportunity to thank you all for SPH members in helping our MPH programme achieve this important milestone.

  • Student Voice - Pang Cheuk Him Johnny

    After obtaining my bachelor’s degree in Biomedical Engineering from CUHK in 2020, I work in the government as a graduate biomedical engineer under the HKIE Scheme A. During the training to be a qualified biomedical engineer, I have the opportunity to rotate to different divisions within the Electrical and Mechanical Services Department and the Department of Health and face the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic. The experience made me understand the importance of public health, especially from the government’s point of view. I am currently doing a part-time MPH in Health Economics, Policy and Management. I am grateful and honoured to be awarded the UGC Targeted TPg Programmes Fellowship. Being a recipient of this Fellowship gave me the recognition in further developing my career path in the healthcare industry, and greatly motivates me to strive for my best. I really enjoy this MPH program because it gives me the opportunity to explore and enrich my knowledge, learning from world-renowned academic experts and fellow aspiring classmates from different areas of the healthcare profession. I have had several tutorial classes and valuable discussions with experienced and knowledgeable classmates. This is truly a valuable and unique experience. I am also very interested in studying public health issues and policies in Hong Kong and around the world. I wish to make use of the knowledge I acquire in this program to develop my career in the government, and to make our healthcare system even better.

  • Student Voice - Jie Guo Rachel

    Hi there – my name is Rachel, I am currently a part-time Year One MPH candidate in the concentration of Health Economics, Policy and Management (HEPM). I am now working in a public institution, mainly for public relations, editorial and digital communications. I was born and raised in the Mainland, then moved to Hong Kong 10 years ago for my first Master’s degree in journalism and communication. My first decade in Hong Kong has brought me challenge, aspiration and dignity than I could ever dare to wish for. I think I am ready and eager to see what life will bring in the second decade ahead – MPH is my new adventure. I was privileged to be granted the UGC Targeted TPg Fellowships. I was truly grateful that Fellowships recognised multidisciplinary integration while I see myself as an “exception” case. For me, the MPH adventure is indeed challenging, but informative and totally rewarding. I can tell that the School of Public Health has put a lot of thoughts in designing the class, recognising interprofessional collaboration and communication, which are pivotal in our future endeavours. I am particularly interested in issues regarding health equity and justice. COVID-19 has shown us again that the patterns of power, privilege and inequity that run throughout the society are just recapitulated in this health crisis. And people from underprivileged background have been disproportionately affected. I wish to be better equipped with public health competencies and join hands with stakeholders towards better addressing equity and justice in health in the region.

  • Student Voice - Li Kin Cheung Harrison

    My name is Harrison and I graduated from HKU Food & Nutritional Sciences program in the Class of 2021. I currently engage in a dual career – working in the banking industry, as well as running a healthcare social enterprise dedicated to managing and treating chronic diseases like eczema. I studied nutrition because of my personal journey in overcoming a 10-year-long struggle with eczema through the power of lifestyle medicine, and I wish to share this domain knowledge with the global population at scale. I didn't want to recover, be happy for a few months and forget about it. Part of my circumstantial genetic predisposition can be transformed into a gift to serve others similarly in need. The MPH program is a logical advancement to learn how to develop interventions at a global scale. My passion lies in the use of lifestyle medicine to manage chronic health conditions through modifiable behavioral risk factors, in conjunction or in lieu of mere pharmaceutical medications as sole therapy. In my application for the MPH program I had shared the same vision, and I feel grateful to have been recognized by the School of Public Health to receive the UGC Targeted TPg Fellowship. It reinforces my belief in engaging public health and the continuous mindset to learn and improve, particularly from domain experts and healthcare professionals from the curriculum. I enjoy the diversity of classmates which prevent groupthink in classwork, a common hidden problem in undergraduate studies. For example, my group mates are often diversified among cultural backgrounds, professional fields (medical, nursing, education, business), and years of working experience. This diversity prompts us to approach public health problems we didn’t think of before and nurtures our critical thinking ability. In terms of technical knowledge, I enjoy the course design where there is a healthy balance of theoretical academic research and real-world discussions (e.g. current affairs of the pandemic, guest speakers from local and international NGOs). I also personally find the ‘applied’ courses productive, from financial accounting, health economics, to health policy design and production. Graduating from the MPH (HEPM) program will equip me with established and state of the art theoretical and empirical models in engaging public health problems, and that I can push the needle further to close the gap between literature and real world application through advocacy and operating a socially-responsible business. If you’re reading this and considering the program, I’d recommend it at the level that you’re ready and willing to invest in yourself. In a Master’s program, no one will spoon-feed you with knowledge. If you don’t speak on Zoom, if you don’t engage assignments with effort, your degree duration (1 year for full-time or 2 years for part-time) will fly by at the blink of an eye. Join, but join with your dedication to engage in the domain to grasp the full value of the program!

  • Student Voice - Chua Ka Kit Tony

    I am a lecturer at the School of Chinese Medicine (CM) at Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU). I am responsible for the teaching, research and clinical duty. I supervise both undergraduate and postgraduate CM students. Clinical research is my major research area and hence, knowledge of epidemiology and biostatistics is my major need. Besides, I am also an officer in Hong Kong Auxiliary Medical Service (AMS) and a section officer in the Health Protection Unit (HPU). My major duty is providing training and health promotion talks for both AMS medical members and Hong Kong citizens. Obviously, a Master of Public Health (MPH) is the most suitable course for me to fulfil my actual need and enhance my ability. However, the tuition fee has always been a huge burden and boundary for me. I have almost given up studying after I got married. The UGC Targeted TPg Fellowship is my timely rain. It is my great honor to be selected as one of the recipients of the Fellowship. I have completed courses in the first semester and am now working hard on my concentration courses, focusing on epidemiology and biostatistics. It is really not an easy task to finish my full-time job duty and keep studying in the remaining time. However, the knowledge and view I got from the MPH courses, especially the broad but scientific thinking of Dean Leung, is just well-fit and directly applicable to my daily work which really inspires me to keep going. I remember that in my undergraduate study, Prof. Vivien Wong shared her career development pathway and said “being a good doctor, I can help a number of patients; being a good teacher, I can help a hundred of people; being a good policymaker, I can help a thousand of citizens.” I believe that after my completion of the MPH programme, I can have much clearer, broader, scientific, and international insights to contribute to the health domain of Hong Kong, specifically the CM policy and the management of CM hospital.

  • 15 HKUSPH Researchers ranked in the Top 1% worldwide

    Fifteen faculty members of the School of Public Health, LKS Faculty of Medicine of The University of Hong Kong (HKU), are recognised as “HKU Scholars in the Top 1%” this year. The School ranks top among all HKU academic units in terms of total number of Top 1% Scholars, three years in a row. They are: Professor Cowling, Benjamin John Professor Guan, Yi Dr Ho, Daniel Sai Yin Professor Lam, Tai Hing Dr Lam, Tommy Tsan Yuk Dr Leung, Sze Man Kathy Professor Peiris, Joseph Sriyal Malik Professor Poon, Leo Lit Man Dr Schooling, Catherine Mary Dr Siu, Parco Ming Fai Dr Tian, Linwei Professor Wu, Joseph Tsz Kei Dr Wu, Peng Dr Yen, Hui-Ling Dr Zhu, Maria Huachen *In alphabetical order This list recognises HKU researchers ranked by Clarivate Analytics in the top 1% worldwide, by citations in at least one of the 22 research fields. Data is drawn from Essential Science Indicators (ESI) . The School extends our heartfelt congratulations to our top scholars. Source: HKU Scholars Hub

  • Top 1% Scholars at HKU

    We are proud to announce that 13 School of Public Health faculty members are included in the 2019' list of top 1% scholars at HKU. Congratulations to our top scholars! #hku #publichealth #academia

  • Dr Janice Johnston received the University Distinguished Teaching Award 2020

    Dr Janice Johnston, Associate Professor, Deputy Director (Education) and Head of Division of Health Economics, Policy and Management of School of Public Health, LKS Faculty of Medicine of The University of Hong Kong (HKUMed), was awarded the University Distinguished Teaching Award 2020. Dr Johnston has been teaching at the School of Public Health for almost 30 years. She has been a pioneer and an advocate of public health education, as well as the guiding spirit and backbone of our Master of Public Health (MPH) programme, the flagship programme of our School and the largest taught postgraduate programme in HKUMed. She has also been an engine for developing our School’s new undergraduate programme, Bachelor of Arts and Sciences in Global Health and Development . The award is a recognition of her dedication to teaching, her tireless efforts to make learning enjoyable and challenging, and the impact that she has brought to her students and public health education. The School extends our heartfelt congratulations to Dr Johnston. To get to know more about Dr Johnston, please view her biography , or a video featuring her journey as an educator.

  • Professor Ben Cowling honoured with an MBE in the 2021 Queen's Birthday Honours List

    Professor Ben Cowling, Professor and Head of Division of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, was honoured with Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in the 2021 Queen’s Birthday Honours List. MBE is a special honour to recognise the awardees’ outstanding achievement or service to the community. Honours recipients are announced twice a year, once in the New Year's Honours List, and once on The Queen's official birthday. As the Co-Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the School of Public Health, Professor Cowling has worked tirelessly on infectious diseases and the recent COVID-19 pandemic. His efforts have had significant impact on science and public health in both Hong Kong and the United Kingdom, and also globally. Professor Cowling is also the Lead of the Epidemiology and Biostatistics concentration of MPH programme at HKU. We extend our sincerest congratulations to Professor Cowling for his achievement. To get to know more about Professor Cowling, please view his biography , or a video featuring his journey as a scientist.

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