ABSTRACT
Health scholars have long been calling for a new approach to understanding and responding to public health challenges, recognizing the dynamic influence of social and ecological processes and the importance of respecting different ways of knowing. With daunting new challenges to collective health, we sought to ascertain how future generations of public health researchers and practitioners are being prepared with the knowledge, attitudes, and skills needed for the tasks ahead. We found that of the 76 graduate level programs listed by the Public Health Agency of Canada, 65% required at least one quantitative methods course, but only 26% required qualitative methods and only 16% required a course in community engagement. While 25% had at least one required course related to social theory or social determinants of health, only 3% required a course on the ecological determinants. Our examination suggests that the majority of schools of public health may still be frozen in old paradigms wherein interdisciplinary inquiry and the development of skills to work with communities to implement and evaluate interventions to promote and protect collective health are still only peripheral considerations. With the intensification of public distrust in experts in this post-truth era, greater emphasis is needed now more than ever to develop skills in understanding and engaging the public in addressing the underlying issues threatening health. We argue that as the challenges of the Anthropocene are upon us, it is urgent that we rethink the skills we are teaching and prepare ourselves to radically adjust our approach.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Funding
AY is partially funded by the Canada Research Chairs program. KL and PG are supported by grant funds from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research [grant number ROH-115212] as well as the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council [grant number 895-2012-1008].
Notes
1. The Anthropocene refers to the new geological time period that marks rapid human impacts on the Earth’s systems (Hancock et al., Citation2015; Whitmee et al., Citation2015), including the impacts of climate change (Bickton, Citation2016; McIver et al., Citation2016).