Teaching public health in 2022....

To state the obvious, these are tough times in public health. It was tough long before the pandemic- the 2008 recession led to a major disinvestment in public health. This meant that prior to the COVID-19 pandemic there was a 20% reduction in local health department workforce and weakened public health infrastructure.

And things have only gotten worse for the public health workforce. The COVID-19 pandemic increased the visibility and workload of the public health workforce, then that increased visibility led to increased harassment. According to the deBeaumont Foundation, more than half of governmental public health workforce employees have symptoms of PTSD, over 20% describe their mental health as “poor” or fair” and nearly one in 3 are considering leaving their jobs in the next year (stress, overwork and burnout are commonly cited reasons). In a national survey of 583 health departments , 15% of health departments reported employees experiencing threats to individual or family safety. Black and Asian leaders of local health departments were disproportionately affected by this harassment.

Political conflicts have driven resignations and firings of public health officials throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. At the same time, student interest in public health has increased. The Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health reported a 40% increase in applications to graduate programs in public health from March 2020 to March 2021. As an educator, I love that a generation of students has discovered a passion for public health. As a public health professional, I’m worried about what will happen when these new students graduate and enter an overextended, burnt out workforce. Public health people are the best people I know- even in the current conditions, over 90% of the surveyed governmental public health workforce reports that their jobs are important and they give their best effort at work. How can those of us in the classroom train public health students so that they are able to make positive contributions during their internships and first jobs?

A big part of what I emphasize in my classroom is drafts and revisions- the importance of editing, revising, and making things better. I create opportunities to fail and to recover from that failure. In my experience, students find this approach scary and feel like things have to be perfect the first time. I also see a tendency to freeze in the face of any ambiguity- that often students are so afraid of doing something wrong they put off tasks til the last possible moment or don’t do them at all. I’m not sure how to respond to this- my approach is to review my assignments multiple times, revisiting those assignments each semester to remove ambiguity. I try to break things down into smaller pieces that students can ultimately assemble into a finished product. I’ve tried talking about tolerance for ambiguity in class, but that seems to backfire — undergraduates who have a higher tolerance for ambiguity seem more resistant to feedback and correction. Pandemic stress has shortened attention spans and weakened interpersonal communication skills. My response has been to lean even harder on scaffolding and repetition.

Carpe diem? In the next few years we’re going to be learning important lessons about training and supporting the public health workforce. This is exciting and also deeply hard for those of us in the trenches.

Dreaming

At some point this weekend the president's words about DACA, and all the accompanying news coverage flashed across a screen.  I'm not sure how I reacted- I think I swore, I might have screamed, I might have cried. Whatever my response, it was enough to bring Sage the Cat flying to engulf me in a furry kitten-bear hug. 

There are students all over this country who were already living in limbo whose lives have become infinitely more precarious. Human beings who are being used as pawns in political posturing. I teach 120 students at the most diverse campus in the Minnesota State Colleges & Universities (MNSCU) system, the most affordable public university system in the state. It's not a question of if my students are affected, it's a question of which of my students are affected. These kids- who are bright, excited, terrified, stressed out, disorganized, full of hopes for the future- how am I supposed to teach them when they're worried about being deported?

Thankfully, the Minnesota Dream Act (aka Minnesota Prosperity Act) is still intact, and will not be affected by changes in federal policy.   I'm a big believer in Ring Theory (Comfort in, dump out) , and it's not my place to do a whole lot of complaining here. I *will* write my representatives, I will tweet about DACA, I will do everything I can to spread information about the rights of DACA recipients. I will also show up to class this week, and every week, attempting to keep things predictable and consistent, offering what stability I can in a crazy world. I will give my best to my students and my colleagues at all times, and hope that somehow, it is enough.
-charis

Home

A little while ago, the University of South Carolina's Facebook page posted a video that's resonated with me in a way that no other university promotion materials ever have (link).  It's that "Welcome home" at the end, I think.

I remember my very first day at USC, the way the crisp January air and the old trees welcomed me out after my intro to health promotion course. But it wasn't just the red bricks and the squirrels around the Horseshoe...it was that I finally had found my people. My bachelor's degree was in biology, from a small liberal arts school that didn't have a lot of options. I'd moved on from there to an internship in molecular toxicology, all the while wishing that I knew how to connect my interests in natural science to my interest in community. I wanted, desperately, to see how all that fascinating science actually affected people. I wrestled with next steps, tried to find volunteer opportunities and ways to dabble in community work on the side. Finally, a researcher in the lab next to mine asked if I'd ever considered going into public health fulltime. It was like a door swung open, and about six months later I was accepted into USC's MPH program.

And finally, I was home. Here were people who cared about science and also the nuances of how that science changes people's lives. As I get ready for my first semester at Minnesota State, I keep coming back to that feeling. Who will my students be? And for those whose home is in health promotion, how can I help them find their way there faster than I did?

-charis