Why Study at St. John's

St. John’s University is one of America’s leading Catholic universities—recognized for superior programs, Vincentian values,  and a commitment to service and leadership in health sciences. A graduate degree from St. John's will help you build your knowledge, advance in your field or embark upon a new career. Students enjoy world-class academics; distinguished professors; high-tech facilities; and a long tradition of excellence and service. Our diverse, scholarly academic community will add vitality to your learning experience.  Convenient evening classes are offered for students who balance the demands of work and family. 

The MPH program at St. John’s provides an education and experience to identify and emphasize disease prevention in metropolitan and underserved communities, as well as, enforce a collective understanding and individual responsibility for health, global health, and health care. Graduate students also benefit from the MPH program’s location in New York City—a hub of diversity, public health organizations, and public health research.  

Program Strengths
The MPH program combines a solid academic foundation in core public health disciplines coupled with a specialization in either community health or global health and real world preparation for today’s most dynamic careers in public health.

  • Evening Classes. Convenient evening classes are offered for students who balance the demands of work and family.
     
  • Community health and global health. St. John’s MPH program allows students to focus on either community health or global health.  The community health concentration equips students to address epidemiology, prevention, social and behavioral factors, and to plan, implement, and monitor essential health programs that impact the health of local communities. The global health concentration prepares graduates to design, implement, monitor, and manage global health programs. Regardless of specialization, the MPH program at St. John’s will prepare students to serve as leaders in public health, with the knowledge and experience to generate new ideas through research, to shape health care policy, and to best serve those in need. 
     
  • Curriculum. The competency-based curriculum places a great deal of emphasis on research and evaluation methods and determinants of health. 
     
  • Real-world experience. Students complete a supervised fieldwork practice experience (internship) at a public health organization or agency. This experience complements the student’s coursework and provides a hands-on application of public health skills and knowledge learned in the classroom. Each student is supervised by a qualified on-site public health professional (preceptor).