Department of Maternal and Child Health (GRAD)

The Gillings School's Department of Maternal and Child Health was founded in 1950 and is one of the world’s leading academic departments for research, teaching and practice.

We are dedicated to improving the health of women, children, and families — domestically and globally. Our teaching program provides students with broad exposure to maternal and child health population needs and priorities, as well as with the skills to become leaders of tomorrow. Our faculty members represent a rich mix of academic backgrounds and interests and contribute their expertise and leadership in a wide range of disciplines. We invite you to join us as we embark upon an exciting new year of scholarship, leadership, and service.

Degrees and Programs

Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) Programs

Master of Public Health (M.P.H. Residential)

The Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) concentration in Maternal, Child and Family Health (MCFH) focuses on the determinants, mechanisms, and systems that promote and maintain the health and safety of women, children, and their families to enhance the future health and welfare of society. Our field is population-based and interdisciplinary, and we provide a strong foundation of knowledge, frameworks, and methods for program monitoring, process/impact evaluation, and program planning and implementation. As graduates, students will be equipped with a highly adaptable toolkit and prepared to lead interdisciplinary efforts that require multiple perspectives and competencies in domestic and global contexts. The degree is designed for students who have a bachelor’s degree and is intended for applicants who plan a practice career. It requires 42 credit hours, entailing SPH integrated core courses, MCFH core courses, and three elective courses.

Dual Master of Public Health and Master of Social Work (M.P.H.-M.S.W. Residential)

A cooperative arrangement between the Gillings School and the School of Social Work (SSW), the Dual Master of Public Health and Master of Social Work provides knowledge of the major factors associated with maternal health and child health, principles and methods for improving the health of mothers and children, and principles and methods of program planning, management, consultation, and policy analysis in the U.S. and in international settings. The program provides skills related to program planning, implementation, and evaluation; limited scientific investigation; computer applications; interdisciplinary functioning; and consultation as they relate to maternal and child health. The program objective is to develop a public health perspective consistent with population-based strategies for solving community health problems, addressing the responsibility of government and the contributions of scientific investigation and the interdisciplinary approach.

Dual Master of Public Health and Doctor of Pharmacy (M.P.H.-Pharm.D. Residential)

The objective of the Pharm.D./M.P.H. dual degree is to prepare students for an ever-expanding pharmacist role that increasingly requires proficiency in medication therapy management and health promotion on an individual patient, regional, state, and national level. A public health pharmacist is expected to use their pharmacotherapeutic knowledge and skills, in combination with their public health skills, to “plan, organize, manage, and perform drug-related activities within a specific public health focus or within a public health setting.

Doctoral Program (Ph.D.)

The Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) is a residential degree program which develops research scholars capable of producing and disseminating new knowledge and methods for the public health profession in the field of maternal and child health. Each doctoral student is expected to develop and demonstrate competence in at least three areas: core maternal and child health content, research methods, and a chosen area of specialization. The specialization area will be related to the student’s dissertation research.

Master of Public Health (M.P.H.) - Maternal, Child, and Family Health Concentration

At the Gillings school, we're dedicated to improving the health of women, children and families - in North Carolina and around the world. Women and children are the largest component of the global population, but experience has shown that — absent categorical attention — their needs are not equitably addressed.

Moreover, the health of this critical population provides key indicators of the well-being of the population as a whole across the life course. The World Health Organization’s current mission and global strategy reflect these realities, and women, children and adolescents are at the heart of the new United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Degree Requirements

Requirements for the M.P.H. degree in the Maternal, Child, and Family Health concentration

Course List
Code Title Hours
M.P.H. Integrated Core
SPHG 711Data Analysis for Public Health Fall 1 2
SPHG 712Methods and Measures for Public Health Practice Fall 1 2
SPHG 713Systems Approaches to Understanding Public Health Issues Fall 1 2
SPHG 701Leading from the Inside-Out Spring 1 2
SPHG 721Public Health Solutions: Systems, Policy and Advocacy Spring 1 2
SPHG 722Developing, Implementing, and Evaluating Public Health Solutions (MPH Comprehensive Exam administered in class) Spring 1 4
M.P.H. Practicum
SPHG 703MPH Pre-Practicum Assignments Spring 1 0.5
SPHG 707MPH Post-Practicum Assignments Fall 2 0.5
M.P.H. Concentration
MHCH 701Foundations of Maternal and Child Health I Fall 1 3
MHCH 702Foundations of Maternal and Child Health II Spring 1 2
MHCH 713Research Methods in Maternal and Child Health Spring 1 3
MHCH 713LResearch and Evaluation Methods in Maternal and Child Health Lab Spring 1 1
MHCH 728Introduction to Implementation Research and Practice in Maternal, Child and Family Health Fall 2 3
MHCH 723Introduction to Monitoring and Evaluation Spring 2 3
M.P.H. Electives
Elective (Graduate-level courses, 400+ level at Gillings, 500+ level at UNC) 3
Elective (Graduate-level courses, 400+ level at Gillings, 500+ level at UNC) 3
Elective (Graduate-level courses, 400+ level at Gillings, 500+ level at UNC) 3
M.P.H. Culminating Experience
MHCH 992Master's (Non-Thesis) Spring 2 3
Total Hours42

Admissions

Please visit Applying to the Gillings School first for details and information. Application to the residential M.P.H. is a 2-step process. Please apply separately to (1) SOPHAS and (2) UNC–Chapel Hill (via the Graduate School application). Visit the Graduate School website for more details. If you are interested in the online M.P.H., please visit the MPH@UNC website and fill out an inquiry form.

Milestones

Maternal and Child Health, Doctoral Program (Ph.D.)

The Ph.D. program develops research scholars capable of producing and disseminating new knowledge and methods for the public health profession in the field of Maternal and Child Health. Each doctoral student is expected to develop and demonstrate competence in at least three areas: core Maternal and Child Health content, research methods, and a chosen area of ‘ specialization.’ The specialization area is topic-specific and should be related to the area chosen for the student’s dissertation research.

Course Requirements

Course List
Code Title Hours
Public Health Foundational Courses
SPHG 600Introduction to Public Health 1 3
Core Courses
MHCH 701Foundations of Maternal and Child Health I 2 3
MHCH 702Foundations of Maternal and Child Health II 2 2
MHCH 801Doctoral Research Seminar3
MHCH 859Proposal Development for Maternal and Child Health3
Two Research Method Courses 3 6
Two Analytic Courses 4
MHCH 862Program Impact Evaluation3
Minor
Ph.D. students must declare a minor course of study in another department or program in the School of Public Health. Minors in departments in other Schools can be considered (e.g. Public Policy) but must be approved by the student’s faculty advisor and the Associate Chair for Academics. 15 hours of coursework in the minor department are required. 15
Electives
A minimum total of 13 elective credit hours required. Must be graduate level courses. 13
Thesis/Substitute or Dissertation
MHCH 994Doctoral Research and Dissertation (Two semesters for 3 credits each)6
Minimum Hours 57

Students with a prior public health degree are not required to take SPHG 600; exemptions are available for those with non-public health degrees from accredited SPHs. Students should discuss with their Academic Coordinator.

Students who have an M.P.H. in Maternal and Child Health do not need to take the MHCH 701 and MHCH 702 sequence .

All students must complete at least two 3-credit courses in research methods (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed). These courses can be taken outside of the MCH Department but must be approved by the student’s faculty mentor.

One of the analytic courses is MHCH 862. Students must take a minimum of two other quantitative analytic courses that include multivariate analysis. The two additional courses may be taken in other UNC departments, must be approved by the student’s faculty mentor, and have no minimum credit hour requirement attached to the non-MHCH 862 courses.

Elective Course Options

Milestones

Following the faculty member's name is a section number that students should use when registering for independent studies, reading, research, and thesis and dissertation courses with that particular professor

Professors

Dorothy Cilenti (036), Improved Care Systems for Vulnerable Women and Children, Build Foundational Capabilities of Governmental Public Health Agencies, Systems Integration, Workforce Development, Evidence-Informed Decision-Making
Sian Curtis (049), International Reproductive and Maternal Health, Including Family Planning and Abortion, Monitoring and Evaluation of Population and Health Programs
Julie Daniels, Epidemiology of Reproductive Health, Infant and Child Growth and Development, Autism and Developmental Disabilities, Environmental and Nutritional Exposures Related to Reproductive and Developmental Outcomes
Claudia Fernandez (031), Workforce and Leadership Development, Inter-Professional Teams, Leadership Issues in Healthcare and Related Fields
Herbert Peterson (001), Global Health, Maternal and Newborn Health, Including Family Planning, Implementation Science
Ilene Speizer (015), Unintended Pregnancy Prevention, Evaluation of Reproductive Health Programs in Developing Countries, Adolescent Health, Male and Couple Involvement, Gender-Based Violence, HIV Prevention
Alison Stuebe (069), Breastfeeding, Maternal Depression, 4th Trimester Needs

Clinical Professors

Pierre Barker, Improving the Reliability of Effective Health Programs in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Australasia, and Latin America
John Thorp Jr., Preterm Birth, Birth Asphyxia, Episiotomy, Community Child Health

Associate Professors

Sherri Green (025), Maternal Health, Public Health Leadership, Substance Abuse, Violence Prevention
Larissa Jennings Mayo-Wilson, Improved Sexual and Reproductive Health and HIV in Adolescents and Young Adults, LGBTQ Health, Economic-Strengthening Interventions Reducing Sexual and Reproductive Health Inequities, Biostatistical, Epidemiologic and Respondent-Driven Sampling and Qualitative Analysis
Kavita Singh Ongechi (010), Evaluation of Maternal and Child Health Interventions in Low and Middle Income Countries, Role of Social Factors on Maternal and Child Health Outcomes, Measurement of Maternal and Child Health Outcomes, Newborn Health
Meghan Shanahan (067), Diagnosis and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect, Program Evaluations, Prescription Drug Overdose
Bharathi Zvara (055), Early Childhood Adversities, Parent-Child Relationships, Childhood Health and Development Lifetime Consequences of Trauma across Generations

Assistant Professors

Janine Barden-O’Fallon (033), Family Planning, Reproductive Health, International Health, Monitoring and Evaluation Methods for Global Health Programs in Developing Countries
Kristin Black (081), Community-Based Participatory Research, Mixed Methods and Racial Equity Approaches to Understand and Address Inequities in Reproductive Health and Chronic Disease Outcomes
Angela Parcesepe (048), Violence, Mental Health, Substance Use Disorders, Global HIV Prevention, Treatment in Low-Resource Settings
Catherine Sullivan (072), Breastfeeding, Lactation, Birth Practice, Nutrition Education and Support Services, Pediatric Obesity, Maternal Weight Management, Fourth Trimester
Christine Tucker (013), Maternal Health, Birth Outcomes, Practice-Based Research and Program Evaluation, Latino Health, Migrant Farmworker Health
Lindsey Yates, Social Justice, Health Equities, Healthcare Access for Underrepresented Minorities

Teaching Assistant Professor

Caroline Chandler (85), Early Childhood and Adolescent Mental Health and Well-Being, Qualitative and Quantitative Methods
Jon M. Hussey (34), Child Abuse and Neglect, Child and Adolescent Health, Injury Prevention, Population

Adjunct Professors

Jose Belizan, International Maternal and Child Health, Implementation Science
Janie Benson, Global Reproductive Health, Program Monitoring and Evaluation
Pouru Bhiwandi, Gynecology, International Women's Health, Public Health, Maternal and Child Health
Dorothy Browne, High-Risk Individuals and their Families (Drugs, HIV and AIDS, Sexual Behavior, etc.) Maternal and Child Health Disparities
Martha Carlough, Global Maternity Care, Global Health Education
Roldolfo Gomez Ponce de Leon, Global Sexual and Reproductive Health
Phillip Graham, Substance Abuse and Violence Prevention, Program Evaluation
Marcia Herman-Giddens, Child Development, Abuse and Advocacy, Infectious Diseases
Vijaya Hogan, Infant Mortality, Prematurity, Health Equity
Marian Johnson-Thompson, Microbiology, Environmental Health
Michael Kafrissen, Clinical Research, Product Development, Aging
Baker Maggwa, Sexual and Reproductive Health, Operations and Implementation Research
Elizabeth McClure, Maternal and Newborn Health in Low and Middle-Income Countries
Tekleab Mekbib, Implementation Science
Logan Nickels, Biochemistry, Family Planning, Male Contraception
Krista Perreira, Immigrant Health, Reproductive Health, Mental Health, Cardiovascular Health, Public Policy Analysis
Rohit Ramaswamy, Implementation Science, System and Improvement Science with Maternal and Mental Health Focus
Doris Rouse, Maternal and Child Health, Global Health, Public and Private Partnerships
Robert Schepbier, Implementation Science
Wendee Wechsberg, HIV Prevention, Women and Gender Issues, Substance Use, Gender-Based Violence
Adam Zolotor, Child Maltreatment, State Health Policy

Adjunct Associate Professors

Joy Baumgartner, Maternal and Child Health, Global Mental Health, Health Services Research and Evaluation
Mary Jane Benson, Global Reproductive Health, Program Monitoring and Evaluation
Deborah Billings, Global Sexual and Reproductive Health, Rights and Justice, Pre- and Post-natal Care, Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence, Abortion and Post Abortion Care
Shelah Bloom, Reproductive Health, Gender-Based Violence in Global Context
Dalia Brahmi, Sexual and Reproductive Health (Safe Abortion and Contraception), Primary Care
Holly Burke, Family Planning, Contraception, HIV Prevention, Youth Sexual and Reproductive Health, Health Communication, Program Evaluation
Cynthia Cassell, Reproductive Health, Global Health, Children with Special Healthcare Needs
Kerith Conron, Social and Psychiatric Epidemiology, LGBT Health
Abigail English, Adolescent Health, Policy and Law, Human Trafficking
Jennifer Fehringer, Global Health Monitoring, Evaluation, Research and Learning, Technical Leadership of Awards, Mixed-Methods Impact Evaluations and Qualitative Components Impact
Alfredo Fort, Sexual and Reproductive Health, Population and Facility-Based Survey Design
Jean Fotso, Maternal and Child Health, Adolescent Reproductive and Sexual Health
Dana Hagele, Policy and Program Development for At-Risk Child Populations, Child Behavioral and Emotional Difficulties
Dilshad Jaff, Global Public Health
Nathalie Kapp, Sexual and Reproductive Health, Most Significantly in the Areas of Contraception and Abortion
Gerri Mattson, Child and Adolescent Preventive Health, Perinatal Depression and Substance Abuse, Foster Care, Mental Health
Donna McCarraher, International Health, Research and Programs in Maternal Health, Family Planning, Service Integration
Robert Murphy, Childhood Traumatic Stress
Aunchalee Palmquist, Ethnographically Informed Research on Human Lactation, Breastfeeding, Bioethics and Human Rights Frameworks, Reproductive Health Inequities
Tammy Ringel-Kulka, Children's Oral Health, Health Promotion, and Disease Prevention
Lucy Siegel, Health Care Access, Quality, Effectiveness and Cost
David Sokal, Family Planning, Promoting Research on New Male Methods
John Stanback, International Family Health, Reproductive Health
Elizabeth Tolley, Health Behavior, Contraception, HIV Prevention and Treatment
Sarah Verbiest, Maternal and Child Health, Health Equity, Leadership, Implementation Science
Yudan Wang, Policy Evaluation, Injury Prevention, Quantitative Research Methods

Adjunct Assistant Professors

Kathryn Andersen, Global Health, Abortion, Contraception, Reproductive Health
Mary Ashinyo, Planning, Implementation, Monitoring and Evaluation of Global Healthcare Facility Quality Improvement
Courtney Bonner, Sexual and Reproductive Health, Mental Health, Substance Use, and Violence, Sustainable Intervention Development
Amy Bryant, Family Planning, Obstetrics and Gynecology
Cecilia Casanueva, Child Maltreatment, Maternal and Child Health
Renee Ferrari, Qualitative Methods, Preventative Health Services, Health Services Research, Maternal and Child Health
William Oscar Fleming, Capacity of the Public Health Workforce to Understand Complex Systems and Collaboratively Design and Implement Public Health Innovations
Shoshana Goldberg, LGBT, Adolescent and Sexual Reproductive Health, LGBT Socioeconomic Disparities and Social Determinants across Life Course
Melissa Green, Leadership, Social Media, Health Inequity
Joumana Haidar, Implementation Science
Stephanie Hernandez, Health Disparities, LGBT Health, Quantitative Methodology, Population Health
Nicole Kahn, Adolescent Sexual and Reproductive Health, Disability, the Life Course, Child Development, Teaching Skills and Course Development
Priya Nanda, Population Reproductive Health and Gender Equality
Constance Newman, Gender and Sexual Reproductive Health, Gender Based Violence in the Workforce
Logan Nickels, Family Planning, Male Contraception, Biochemistry
McLean Pollock, Adolescents and Young Adults, Substance Abuse, Violence Against Women, Child Maltreatment
Marcia Roth, Maternal, Child and Adolescent Health, Family-Centered Care, Cross-Sector Efforts Addressing Health Care Access Inequities and Disparities
Mallory Turner, Child Development, Racial and Early Life Inequities and Disparities
Nana Twum-Danso, Quality Improvement, Large-Scale Change, Community Health and Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
Stephanie Watson-Grant, Global Health Policy Effects on Health Systems and Health Outcomes, Monitoring and Evaluation
Andra Wilkinson, Adolescent Health Issues, Program Implementation and Outcomes
Katie Wouk, Breastfeeding, Mixed Methods Quality Improvement, Equity Improvement for Quality Care Access
Jennifer Yourkavitch, Equity, HIV and Infectious Disease, Health Systems and Service Delivery, Data Quality, Infant Feeding; Domestic and Global

Adjunct Instructors

Leslie deRosset, Maternal and Child Health Inequities and Disparities
Rebecca Greenleaf, MCH, Developmental Disabilities, Curriculum Development, Early Childhood
Amy Mullenix, Workforce Development, Women's Preconception Health

Faculty Emeriti

Trude Bennett
Anita M. Farel
Jonathan B. Kotch
Lewis Margolis
Diane Rowley