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- Courses
- Documents
- Past events
- *The UNC Department of Epidemiology: Our First 40 Years,1936-1976
Written, compiled and edited by Judith Winkler and Victor J. Schoenbach, February 2018 "The Chapel Hill work might be typified as being concerned with developing epidemiological strategies to measure the health effects of social and cultural change ... The work of Cassel and his colleagues at Chapel Hill has had a profound impact on social epidemiology." – James Trostle, 1986.
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Cardiovascular Epidemiology Program at UNC: A Brief Historical Perspective
Powerpoint presentation by Wayne Rosamond
- EpiGrad Today!
Because every Epidemiologist needs a place to call her own. Created by Robby Poore and Lynne Sampson, courtesy of the Internet Archive
- 0-EPID Memories book - vol 1.pdf
Created by Sue Wolf; scanned by Judith Winkler; uploaded by Vic Schoenbach
- 0-EPID Memories book - vol 2.pdf
Created by Sue Wolf; scanned by Judith Winkler; uploaded by Vic Schoenbach
- Bahia-Carolina Partnership, Fogarty Center
The Bahia-Carolina Project: A North-south Partnership for Workplace and Environmental Justice
Vilma S. Santana, MD, PhD, lnstituto de Saude Coletiva, Universidade Federal de Bahia
Dama P. Loomis, PhD, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
The origin of the Bahia-US training program in occupational and environmental health is rooted in the long term ties built by faculty and former students from the Federal University of Bahia, mainly from the Department of Preventive Medicine of the Medical School, who came to the graduate program in Epidemiology in the School of Public Health at UNC-CH.
- Hal Morgenstern EPID methods course 1975-1976.pdf
These notes were developed by Hal Morgenstern (PhD 1978, Department of Epidemiology). Here is Hal’s account of their origin: “In July 1975, after I finished my first year in the PhD program at UNC Epi, I attended the 3-week Graduate Summer Session in Epidemiology at the University of Minnesota (which I directed at the University of Michigan from 2004 through 2017). One of the courses I took in 1975 was "Advanced Methods" taught for the first time in that program by Ken Rothman. Based on that 1975 course and unpublished notes by Olli Miettinen at Harvard, I "taught" an informal course at UNC between Sept 1975 and Mar 1976.“ The informal course was the precursor to the EPID268 course (Advanced epidemiologic methods) that David Kleinbaum and Larry Kupper taught in spring 1978, with Hal as the teaching assistant. The course also became the basis for their now classic textbook Epidemiologic Research: Principles and Quantitative Methods (Wiley, 1982, https://www.wiley.com/en-us/Epidemiologic+Research%3A+Principles+and+Quantitative+Methods-p-9780471289852). [In the outline on page 1, “D” refers to David Kleinbaum; “I” and “me” refer to Hal; “M” refers to Olli Miettinen.] (PDF received from Hal Morgenstern, 2/7/2018)
- Interviews, skits, and more about the Department
- More history and notes on Vic's Google Drive
(Overlaps with other items here)
- Newsletters and other materials
- News release about Department of Epidemiology history 1936-1976
- Robert Korstad, Dreaming of a Time
The School of Public Health, The University of North Carolina, 1939-1989. Written by Robert Korstad of the Duke Sanford School of Public Policy, the book was commissioned by Dean Michel Ibrahim for the School's 50th anniversary. Harriet Barr worked closely with Korstad.
- Robert Korstad - Fighting For Our Lives
Condensed history of the School of Public Health's first 50 years. Carolina Alumni Review, Fall 1989.
- Scans from faculty-staff-student photo books (selected photos)
These photo booklets were distributed to members of the School of Public Health in the 1970s and early 1980s.
- Scans from School of Public Health and EPID catalogs and booklets
Includes faculty listings, course listings, selected other pages from April 1976 and April 1979 SPH catalogs, Epidemiology spring 1975 brochure, SPH 1977-1978 student handbook
- See also Annual Reports
- Stephen Zyzanski remembers working with the Evans County Study (10 min)
A 10-minute segment from Vic Schoenbach's 8/26/2015 interview with Stephen Zyzanski, in which Steve recounts his experiences working with the Evans County Study and a trip he took to Claxton GA with Bert Kaplan and David Jenkins, their interactions with Curtis Hames, and the way they developed the social/behavioral measures for the 1967 follow-up. File ID: SteveZyzanskiEvansCounty73min-84min.mp3