Public Health is Everybody's Business

Borough of Manhattan Community College

Public Health Academy 

PHA PhotO Slidedeck

The goal of the Public Health Academy (PHA)  is to is to establish a public health education and workforce pipeline that meets the needs of BMCC’s health professions students and the growing need for public health professionals in NYC underserved communities. 


The Public Health Academy (PHA), a student success program jointly administered by the Borough of Manhattan Community College (BMCC/CUNY) Health Education Department and BMCC Learning Academy (BLA), matches student goals with the explosive demand for community and public health professionals in underserved communities throughout New York City. 

 

Launched in August 2021 with a cohort of 20 students, the PHA links students with the fast-growing public health career sector.  Our nation’s vulnerability and unpreparedness to address public health priorities became apparent in 2020 with the onset of the novel coronavirus. Despite decades-long warnings of a looming pandemic, predictions of public health workforce shortages, and ongoing recognition of health inequities, the U.S. was blindsided by the COVID-19 pandemic.  A well-trained public health workforce is the first line of defense to address current COVID-19 related health inequities and those likely to emerge from future pandemics. 


While graduate school has traditionally been the gold-standard for public health education, to meet the health needs of an increasingly at-risk and culturally diverse population, more students should be trained and training must begin earlier in their academic careers. 


The PHA provides community college students opportunities to gain first-hand experience in the field by working with public health professionals to address long-standing and stark health disparities in real-world contexts, focusing on social determinants of health, health equity, and community-engaged research and practice.   The program begins with a summer bridge program and includes weekly seminars on student success, job readiness, leadership, career preparation, research training, and internship placement.  Students gain experience in developing a research project and delivering oral presentations.  As PHA scholars, Community Health Education and Public Health majors gain valuable health professional skills as well as extensive academic support.

"The PHA showed me ways I can reach community members, ways that other health professionals can't or won't be able to."

                 -Jasmine Lecadre, 2022-2023 PHA Scholar

"I loved that it was a "health community” and it was a lot of different people coming together. It gave me a platform to discuss public health with people who are also interested in it. It opened my interest to research."

                                                                  -2021-2022 PHA Scholar

"PHA helped me to gain a better understanding for what public health really means. It highlighted the importance of the career path for me." 

-Racquel Dunn, 2022-2023 PHA Scholar


2022-2023 PHA Scholars

What is public health?

Public health is the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health through organized efforts of society. This involves identifying and addressing the health needs of populations, rather than just individuals. Public health includes a wide range of activities such as disease surveillance, vaccination programs, health promotion and education, environmental health, and emergency preparedness. The goal of public health is to improve overall health outcomes and quality of life for communities by addressing the social determinants of health and creating equitable and accessible health systems.

Health Equity

Health equity means that everyone has the opportunity to achieve their highest level of health. It requires removing obstacles to health such as poverty, discrimination, and lack of access to quality health care. Health equity recognizes that social factors like income, education, and race/ethnicity have a significant impact on health outcomes. Achieving health equity means addressing these underlying social determinants of health and ensuring that all individuals have fair and just opportunities to lead healthy lives.