Certificate program focuses on critical role of food security

SPH-Students

Breakfast, lunch, dinner – everybody eats. But how much do most of us really think about food, how it reaches our tables and how it affects us?

Factors that impact our world’s food supply and health – from environment/agriculture, animal health, food safety and distribution to rural development, climate and weather – are far-reaching and significant.

Through a new program launching this summer at UNT Health Science Center, students can now pursue a Graduate Certificate in Food Security and Public Health to study the important issues related to bringing safe, nutritious foods to populations around the globe.

UNTHSC’s School of Public Health is the first in Texas to offer a certificate program in this field of study.

Katherine Fogelberg, DVM, PhD, Assistant Professor of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences, says the issues surrounding food safety and security cross a wide variety of professions and interests.

“Veterinarians study the role of animals in public health, while law enforcement and emergency management professionals consider the risks to food supply from bioterrorism, other threats and disasters,” she said.

“Dieticians and public health workers address food borne illnesses, food safety and the standards of food delivery. From agriculture to the health and wellness industry – even to our daily news – public concerns around global malnutrition, hunger-related conditions, obesity, healthy diet and access to fresh foods continue to rise, both in our local communities and beyond.”

The certificate program is designed for working adults who hold a bachelor’s degree and are seeking career expansion in nutrition, dietetics, emergency management, law enforcement, animal or agricultural sciences, veterinary studies and/or public health. Classes can be taken entirely online and completed within one year.

For more information on the program, visit the UNTHSC School of Public Health website.

Recent News

Hsc Pt In Dc
  • Our People
|May 2, 2024

HSC students highlight importance of physical therapy in D.C.

Prior to coming to The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth, Do Kyung Yun advocated alongside community members in his Los Angeles neighborhood. As a community organizer, Yun, a second-year physical therapy student who is known to friends as “DK,” used to frequent meetin...
58ea6a4e 2ebd 4474 Aa12 D704cc7e3475
  • Our People
|May 2, 2024

Dr. Tracy Hicks reelected board member-at-large of the Fellows of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners

Tracy Hicks, DNP, MBA, APRN, FNP-BC, PMHNP-BC, CARN-AP, FIAAN, FAANP, associate professor at The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s College of Nursing, was recently re-elected as board member-at-large of the Fellows of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners. ...
Justin New
  • Our People
|May 2, 2024

SaferCare Texas appoints new director

Justin Burton has been appointed as the new director of SaferCare Texas, The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth's department dedicated to enhancing patient safety initiatives across the state. Burton is a registered nurse with more than 20 years of experience....
Phillips
  • Community
|May 1, 2024

2024 Faculty Achievement Award winner named

On Wednesday, Dr. Nicole Phillips, assistant professor, microbiology, immunology and genetics, in the School of Biomedical Sciences was awarded The University of North Texas Health Science Center at Fort Worth’s prestigious Faculty Achievement Award. The Faculty Achievement Award Committee annual...