In January 2015, the Princeton Review ranked GW as number 1 in the U.S. for internships. Dean Lynn Goldman described our public health students, faculty, and staff as people of enormous intelligence doing transformational work. Professorial Lecturer Jennifer Sass coauthored a letter in Science. Environmental and Occupational Health students gave oral presentations at conferences and got their research published. The department’s professors had influential publications and gave noteworthy talks about Shiga toxin-producing E. coli and other microbes, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, how the food we eat impacts the health of farmers and farm workers, the health implications of organic food, and more. See the latest Department of Environmental and Occupational Health newsletter for details, including why one of our DrPH students believes that studying environmental exposures can enhance human life.
EOH Latest Newsletter: GW’s #1 National Ranking for Internships, Professorial Lecturers’ Letter in Science, Students in Action, New Publications and More
March 3, 2015