Call & Times

RWU, R.I. DOH create new health partnershi­p

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BRISTOL – Roger Williams University’s rapidly expanding public health program is forging a new partnershi­p with the Rhode Island Department of Health (RIDOH), aiming to bolster the health of all Rhode Islanders through a range of public policy, research and quality-improvemen­t initiative­s.

RWU President Donald J. Farish and Director of Health Nicole Alexander-Scott signed the memorandum of understand­ing just as RWU is about to create a Department of Public Health on July 1.

The university’s public health program has experience­d rapid growth since it began working with the RIDOH about nine years ago. At first, the university offered a public health minor, and it began offering a public health major in 2015.

The newly formalized partnershi­p calls for student “public health scholars” at the RIDOH Academic Center, research opportunit­ies for students and faculty members, summer programs for high school students interested in public health fields, joint quality-improvemen­t programs, a health-care speakers bureau, and the sharing of data for research and public policy matters.

“Roger Williams University is pleased to formalize and deepen its ongoing partnershi­p with the Rhode Island Department of Health,” RWU Provost Andrew Workman said. “We are committed to serving our community by helping it to improve the health of Rhode Islanders and to provide our students with the kind of experienti­al learning opportu- nities that this kind of partnershi­p will foster.”

“This new collaborat­ion will allow us to develop, implement and evaluate cutting-edge public health interventi­ons that will help improve health outcomes in every ZIP code in Rhode Island,” Dr. Alexander-Scott said.

Laurie Leonard, director of the RIDOH Academic Center, said, “The Rhode Island Department of Health is excited to formalize our partnershi­p with Roger Williams University as we utilize research to inform public health policy and practice and provide interdisci­plinary experienti­al learning opportunit­ies for students through the RIDOH Public Health Scholar Program to achieve improved health for all Rhode Islanders.”

“This is wonderful opportunit­y,” RWU Anthropolo­gy, Sociology and Public Health Professor Marybeth MacPhee said.

RWU’s Public Health (Bristol) and Healthy Communitie­s (Providence) programs are part of a national emphasis on community-based public health strategies, which focus attention on the social and environmen­tal conditions, such as housing, employment, and transporta­tion that affect people’s health, MacPhee said, adding the university is working with the Department of Health on their Health Equity Zone initiative­s in Bristol, Providence, Newport and Central Falls/Pawtucket.

More informatio­n about the RIDOH Academic Center is available online at health.ri.gov/programs/detail.php?pgm_id=1026

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