+7,800
Individuals trained
Our Center for Public Health Practice offers hundreds of in-person and online trainings to professionals, helping equip the workforce in the Rocky Mountain region with public health knowledge and skills.Not only do we pride ourselves on our research, we also strive for excellence in public health practice—applying data and science in the real world. We partner with communities here in Colorado, across the U.S., and around the world, promoting health and wellbeing for all. We work collaboratively with students, faculty, and community members, building lasting relationships, listening to those who identify needs in their community, and engaging in life-long learning together.
We convene diverse groups by hosting symposiums and forming collaborative working groups. We also offer practice-intensive graduate courses, community events, and professional development opportunities such as in-person trainings and online courses. In addition, our experts regularly work
with community leaders, nonprofits, businesses, and policymakers to develop evidence-based public health interventions that work. With a framework of health equity and justice guiding us, we study the barriers to health and the most effective ways
to help build a world in which all people have the opportunity to be safe, healthy, and well.
With the passage of HB21-1317 (Regulating Marijuana Concentrates), our school has been tasked with researching the health effects of high-potency THC marijuana and concentrates and providing related policy recommendations.
The COVID-19 Modeling Team, led by ColoradoSPH researchers, develops models that project the future of the pandemic in Colorado based on various policies and data.
+7,800
Individuals trained
Our Center for Public Health Practice offers hundreds of in-person and online trainings to professionals, helping equip the workforce in the Rocky Mountain region with public health knowledge and skills.15
Centers & programs
We're home to many centers and programs that engage in public health practice, including those that are nationally recognized for their excellence and expertise.+16,500
Training hours logged
Our Center for Health, Work & Environment provides trainings and other learning opportunities to working professionals, educating thousands on workplace health, safety, and well-being topics.ColoradoSPH has made strides in advancing its DEI mission, said Hunt, who has directed the school’s Center for Public Health Practice since 2016. However, it has become apparent that “we need someone to help lead these efforts, to really ensure that we as a school are working in concert with one another as we try to advance our diversity, equity and inclusion mission.”
Hunt said coupling the work of the Center for Public Health Practice with her new role as associate dean is a “great match.” Health inequities occur, she said, when systemic barriers impede a person’s access to health care.
“We know that people of color do not have access to care, and that they do not receive the same quality of care,” said Hunt, adding that the highest COVID-19 death rates are among people of color. “A lot of those inequities are related to the bias of providers. So when we’re thinking about our public health community, it’s critical to ensure we are delivering our services in culturally responsive methods that do not perpetuate inequities.”
At the school level, the Colorado School of Public Health’s strategic plan has three main goals related to DEI:
Also critical to eliminating racial and ethnic disparities in public health is the cultivation of a diverse workforce, Hunt said. “As a school, it’s key that we’re doing our part to recruit diverse students and creating pipeline programs.”
ColoradoSPH will emphasize partnerships with undergraduate pipeline programs at CU Denver as well as historically Black colleges and universities, Hispanic-serving institutions and tribal colleges. “There’s a need to not only diversify our student body but our faculty and staff as well,” she said. “We want to really create that community and those networks for students, so they’re not isolated.”
As the school assesses its structures, policies and values, it will work in concert with the new CU Anschutz Office of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion and Community Engagement led by Regina Richards, PhD.The campus is redoubling efforts to infuse diversity, equity and inclusion into all of its practices.
“Equity champions coming together representing the various CU Anschutz schools and colleges ensures that we are augmenting services – not duplicating efforts – in hopes of creating a culture of inclusive excellence for the entire campus community,” Hunt said.
Unfortunately, as tragic events throughout the United States have made clear, the scourge of racism is alive and well, she said. “We are responsible for dismantling these structures and rebuilding with a focus on racial and social justice.”
And because Hunt is motivated by momentum, anything that stymies progress, such as the tendency to work in silos, must be broken down and recast in unified mission. It all goes back to moving beyond theory and into action.
“This position is about partnering with leadership within ColoradoSPH,” she said, “which is necessary to ensure we are moving forward and creating mechanisms to hold the entire community accountable for advancing our diversity, equity and inclusive excellence mission. We will identify metrics that will monitor our implementation efforts to ensure change will materialize.”
This story originally appeared in CU Anschutz Today.
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