About our Department
Mission Statement
In 1996 the faculty of the Irvine campus of the University of
California set an unprecedented record by receiving two Nobel Prizes in
a single year. One of these was in (environmental) chemistry honoring
the distinguished work of Professor Rowland on the effects of CFCs on
the atmosphere. The Irvine campus, now ranked 12th among public
universities nationwide, has great depth and strengths in the study of
the total environment that students are able to draw on throughout
their studies.
Our department has dual foci on the environment and health. We are
concerned with environmental health as well as the conditions that
support the health of the environment. The interests and expertise of
our faculty are diverse and crossdisciplinary, extending across natural
sciences, biological sciences and statistics/mathematics. In recent
years we have forged strong linkages to eight units in the College of
Medicine as well as other schools on campus. We have undertaken
collaborative research projects, sharing of graduate students, writing
co-authored papers, and teaching of courses at the graduate and
undergraduate levels.
The range of courses, faculty and research programs in the department
reflect the range and scope of questions being addressed. With regards
to environmental health science, we are studying agents of disease,
both bacterial and viral, and heavy metals in the environment through
environmental biotechnology, transport media (air, water, and soil),
exposure assessment, developing new biomarkers in animal models, humans
and the environment. We have projects focused on environmental
epidemiology (lead and manganese exposure of children) and social
epidemiology (suicide, child abuse and violence). We are engaged in
understanding the etiology of disease (Alzheimer's among adults, autism
and attention deficit hyperactive disorders among children) as well as
the role of alternative medicine. Likewise, we are attempting to
understand the linkages to behavior (smoking or tobacco, exposure to
heavy metals) of exposure to environmental hazards. With regards to
environmental analysis, we are studying the geophysical parameters of
recent tectonic activity, their relationships to the built environment
and potential for natural disaster in California. We are concerned
about limits of water resources, impacts to quality and derivation of
both local and international policy.
Our department is a place to acquire many new skills and a place to
acquire an appreciation of the complexity of health of the total
environment, and a place for students to identify their professional
missions and to launch successful careers in the academy, government or
the private sector. Our students find employment in a variety of
settings including academia, governmental environmental protection
agencies, environmental consulting, medicine, health care, and public
interest groups.
The overriding goal of our department is to advance knowledge of the
interactions among natural and social environments as well as health
and behavior. It is our mission to improve environmental quality as
well as human health and welfare through rigorous problem-solving and
training of the leaders in the new Millennium. We welcome those who
will join with us in advancing our mission to share implementation of
our discoveries. Welcome to the Department of Environmental Health,
Science, and Policy.
Undergraduate Program
The Department of Environmental Health, Science, and Policy offers two
undergraduate majors: 1) Environmental Analysis and Design; and 2)
Applied Ecology. The undergraduate majors in the department begin their
program of study with core courses in environmental analysis and
design, environmental quality and health, natural disasters, and human
environments. Advanced courses cover specialized topics in these
fields, as well as in public health, epidemiology, toxicology, and
geology. A number of advanced courses delve into aspects of important
environmental issues and problems, such as public policy, population
growth and management, and issues in biotechnology. Undergraduates also
gain rigorous training in research methods and statistics.
A rich array of internships are available to undergraduates through the very popular Field Study sequence. Opportunities for Field Study internships
are plentiful in Orange County in settings such as education, health,
planning, and public policy. Opportunities to participate in faculty research projects
enrich the undergraduate experience by providing competence in the
research process, thereby readying students for future careers and
graduate study. Graduates from our program have assumed positions in
the private and public sectors or have continued their education at
leading graduate institutions, where they have pursued advanced degrees
in medicine, law, public health, the environmental sciences and policy,
among other fields.
The Education Abroad Program for the Department of Environmental Health, Science, and Policy
provides students the opportunity to study abroad. Expanding the
context and content of learning by exposing students and faculty to the
challenges of diverse languages and intellectual traditions, other
approaches to knowledge, and different cultural assumptions. EAP
develops internationally aware citizens and enhances the potential of
students and faculty to understand, respond to, and contribute to a
rapidly changing world.
Graduate Program
The Department offers a degree program that leads to the Ph.D. in
Environmental Health, Science, and Policy. Graduate study in our Ph.D.
program will provide students with a foundation for a primary, or
major, specialization in one of four core areas: environmental
biotechnology, environmental health science, epidemiology and public
health, and environmental management and policy.
Graduate students in our doctoral program acquire a strong foundation
in theory, research methods, advanced statistics, as well as in the
classic and contemporary issues of their respective fields. Students
collaborate with faculty on research from the very beginning of their
graduate training and are encouraged to gain research experience with
more than one faculty member. As their interests and skills develop,
students pursue more independent research projects. With 10 full-time
and 14 affiliated faculty to serve as mentors for approximately 50
graduate students, our students enjoy the benefits of a program with an
excellent faculty-to-student ratio and with a strong sense of
community. Because students work closely with faculty throughout their
graduate careers, they regularly have opportunities to co-author
conference presentations, journal articles, and book chapters.
For more information about the Ph.D. in Environmental Health, Science, and Policy, please see the Graduate Program
webpage. Finally, if you have specific questions that remain
unanswered, please contact Margaret T. Wyvill, EHSP Department Manager
at mtwyvill@uci.edu.
Concentration in Environmental Biotechnology
The concentration in environmental biotechnology in developmental
provides training in the use of microbial, genetic, or molecular
applications for environmental monitoring, environmental cleanup, and
public health prevention and diagnostics of environmental hazards.
Concentration in Environmental Health Science
The concentration in Environmental Health Science expands the
conventional focus of this discipline to approach research questions in
an ecological context.
Concentration in Epidemiology and Public Health
The concentration in Epidemiology and Public Health embeds traditional
approaches in these fields within a framework of physical, natural, and
social systems.
Concentration in Environmental Management and Policy
The concentration in Environmental Management and Policy explores the
linkages between physical environmental problems and the social
institutions that are both their cause and solution.
Research and Computing Facilities
The Department maintains research facilities and equipment to support
students and faculty in all aspects of their research. The Department
has several laboratories equipped with laboratory equipment for use in
marine and environmental biotechnology, environmental health science,
environmental geology, air pollution, and public health microbiology
and ecology.
The School also maintains two microcomputer laboratories, which are
equipped with Pentium computers, laserjet and color printers, scanners,
and a wide variety of software programs including ArcView and ArcGIS
(spatial analysis software), SPSS (Statistical Package for the Social
Sciences), SAS (Statistical Analysis System), SYSTAT, EQS, LISREL, and
AMOS (structural equation modeling programs), and standard word
processing, graphics, and speadsheet programs such as Microsoft Word,
PowerPoint, Excel, and Corel WordPerfect. The computers are networked
to the campus ethernet system to provide high-speed access to e-mail
and the Internet.
Graduate students and faculty are given unlimited free access to these
computers, and orientation sessions offered in the fall quarter each
year provide introductions to much of the statistical software
available. The Office of Academic Computing at UCI provides further
resources for computing and statistical analysis, as well as workshops
on a variety of topics. Their technical staff are also available to
consult with students and faculty about individual needs.
The School of Social Ecology
The Department of Environmental Health, Science, and Policy at UCI is part of the interdisciplinary School of Social Ecology.
For nearly 30 years, the School of Social Ecology has been training
scientists to examine problems from interdisciplinary and contextual
perspectives.
The School enrolls 212 graduate students and more than 2,000
undergraduate majors, making it one of the most popular undergraduate
programs on campus. Across the School, five doctoral programs, three
masters programs, and five bachelors programs are offered. Affiliated
faculty from the School, and from other departments on campus, teach
relevant undergraduate and graduate courses and serve on committees for
EHSP graduate students.