Outbreaks and Epidemics
Offered By: Johns Hopkins University via Coursera
Course Description
Overview
Professional epidemiologists are often called on to investigate outbreaks and epidemics. This course serves as an introduction to the essentials of investigation, identifying pathogens, figuring out what's going on, reporting, and responding. You'll learn how to ask precise epidemiologic questions and apply epidemiologic tools to uncover the answers. You'll also learn about basic epidemic dynamics and the terrible law that cause them to grow, as well as the reasons why they recede and eventually go away. The course concludes with deep dives into some real outbreaks from Ebola, in West Africa, to the opioid epidemic in the United States.
Syllabus
- Identifying and Investigating Outbreaks: The Basics
- In this module we're going to be talking about outbreaks. All the way through identifying the pathogens and figuring out what's going on to reporting and responding to the outbreak. In doing so we're going to learn several important epidemiological concepts.
- Weighing Evidence and Identifying Causes
- In this module, we'll be learning about how to ask precise epidemiologic questions and how to investigate these using important tools.
- The Terrible Law: Basic Epidemic Dynamics
- In this module, we'll be talking about basic epidemic dynamics and the terrible law that causes epidemics to grow, and the reasons why epidemics recede and eventually go away
- Case Studies in Outbreaks and Epidemics: From Ebola to Overdose
- In this module, we're going to take a deep dive in some outbreaks from Ebola, in West Africa, to the opioid epidemic in the United States.
Taught by
Justin Lessler
Tags
Related Courses
Ebola : Vaincre ensemble !University of Geneva via Coursera Ebola in Context: Understanding Transmission, Response and Control
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine via FutureLearn Global Disease Masterclass: Communicable Diseases Epidemiology, Intervention and Prevention
Imperial College London via Coursera Urban Health in Crisis: Response from Sub-Saharan Africa
Georgetown University via edX