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Health, Lifestyles and Society
BIO 100

PHIL 266

UNST 215

CRJS/SOCI 406

UNST 217
UNST 218

UNST 221

UNST 225
MATH 111 UNST 226
MATH 112 UNST 227

UNST 202

UNST 228
UNST 209  
UNST 214  

Course in this cluster introduce students to the behavioral foundations of healthy lifestyles. Courses will also explore the impact of advances in biotechnology, medical research, medical ethics, and the operation of the heath care system on the human condition. Special attention is paid to health and lifestyle issues affecting women, the elderly, and the African American community.

UNST 202. Ecological Approach to an Active Healthy Lifestyle
This course examines the integration of cultural, psychological, sociological, and ethical issues affecting and affected by the health and wellness of individuals and the society in which they live. Students explore the contextual and theoretical basis of holistic approaches including the complex nature of humans with regard to health and well-being from ecological perspectives. Students gain experience with specific methods to foster greater appreciation for personal responsibility for health and strategies to enhance and preserve the individual's and the public's health. Societal health issues and the factors that impact on the health and wellness of communities and the individual's role in health policy are also examined.

UNST 209. Disparities in Public Health Care: The Effects on Race, Gender, and Class

This course is designed to explore the disparities that exist among the categories of race, gender, and class in relationship to healthcare. The course focuses on six areas of major health inequities including infant mortality, cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, HIV/AIDS, and immunizations.

UNST 214. Maps, Mapping, and Environmental Health
This course encourages students to conceptualize and assess environmental and health issues from a spatial or geographical perspective. Topics such as air pollution, water pollution, population dynamics, occupational health, food protection, epidemiology, disease causation and prevention, vector-borne disease, and consumer protection are covered. Geographic Information Systems technology is used to model environmental health topics.


UNST 215. Comparative Socio-Cultural Environments of Health Care Systems
This course examines the differential effects of social, political, economic and cultural factors on the development and utilization of health care systems across diverse societies. Students further explore the interrelationships among specific aspects of the socio-cultural environment and the availability and use of health care.

UNST 217. Health and Wellness in the 21st Century
This course explores the impact of globalization on health and wellness from the perspectives of culture, religion, politics, history, economics, and technology. 


UNST 218. Fitness for Life
This course is a combination of classroom and activity-based learning activities with a focus on proper nutrition and the mastery of the knowledge and skills necessary for students to become accomplished monitors of their personal fitness.

UNST 221. Thematic Writing and Speaking: Technology and Society
This course is designed to improve students’ abilities to write, speak, and think critically about important issues in the contemporary world by focusing on the rhetoric of science, technology, and progress. Students examine rhetoric as represented in fiction and nonfiction: essays, short stories, drama, poetry, novels, film, popular culture (including popular science writing and journalism), and speeches.

UNST 225. Epidemiology
This course will introduce students to the basic principles, theories and concepts of epidemiology and their application specifically pertaining to the distribution and determinants of disease. The course will focus upon the biological, environmental, social, and analytical approaches to understanding the determinants of human health, and the application of that knowledge to improving the health of populations.

UNST 226. A Personal Approach to Health
This course will address the relationship between lifestyle health-related issues, including sexual responsibility, psychological health, nutrition, and exercise. Additionally, issues such as weight control, stress management, tobacco, and alcohol use will be addressed.

UNST 227. Global Health and Socio-Economic Development
This course will introduce students to the main concepts of global health and the critical links between public health and social and economic development. The course reviews the determinants of health status in terms of biology, demography, epidemiology, culture, sociology, economics, and politics. Global Health introduces students to key concerns regarding reproductive health, child survival, nutrition, communicable diseases, and chronic diseases.

UNST 228. Contemporary Issues in Public Health
This course explores current public health, environmental health, and health service delivery issues in the U.S.  Topics include organization and costs of health systems, access to care, and the interrelationships between risk factors and health.

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BIO 100. Biological Science
This is a general education course that stresses the objectives presented under the general education program of the University. This course stresses central concepts in biology including; basic chemical and physical phenomena, biochemistry, cell form and function, genetics, evolution, and multicellular organization. The laboratory will examine major biological concepts. Biological Science is not open to Biology majors.

CRJS/SOCI 406. Criminology
The genesis and origin of crime and an analysis of theories of criminal behavior will be studied.

HEFS 135. Food and Man's Survival

HPED 219. Human Sexuality
This course introduces students to the biology of human sexuality, the anatomy and physiology involved in the human sexual response, and the emotional and cultural perspectives of human sexuality.

HPED 222. Health and Wellness in the 21st Century

This course explores the impact of globalization and its associated issues on the health and wellness of humanity. Such phenomena are examined from the perspectives of culture, religion, politics, history, economics and technology. These issues are also analyzed and addressed within the context of developing and developed countries and synthesized from a global perspective.

MATH 111. College Algebra and Trigonometry
This course is a review of basic algebra; first and second degree equations; polynomial and rational functions-systems of equations-inequalities, right triangle trigonometry; and trigonometric identities and equations. Prerequisites: Mathematics 099 or two units of high school algebra, one unit of high school geometry and a satisfactory score on the mathematical portion of the Scholastic Aptitude Test.

MATH 112. Calculus for Non-Mathematics Majors
This course includes a brief treatment of basic concepts of differential and integral calculus with applications to business, economics, social and behavioral sciences; polynomial, rational, exponential and logarithmic functions. Prerequisite: MATH 102, 110, or 111.

NURS 305. Nutrition for Healthy Lifestyles

NURS 315. Issues in Women's Health

NURS 415. Health Care in a Global Society
The purpose of this course is to provide students with the opportunity to learn about the impact of health and illness of all populations in the USA and select countries worldwide. Students will be able to compare the major public health concerns in the United States to those in other countries. Prerequisites: Junior Standing in the University.

PHIL 266. Contemporary Moral Problems
This course begins with an examination of various ethical theories and then applies these theories to address moral challenges faced by today’s society. Topics include the environment, abortion, treatment of animals, drug use, pornography, hate speech, euthanasia, famine relief, affirmative action and the death penalty.

PSYC 320. General Psychology
This course includes an introduction to psychology as a life science especially designed for the major in areas other than psychology. Topics given major consideration include maturation and development-motivation, emotion, and personality; mental health, intelligence and aptitude; perception and attention; learning, forgetting, language, and thinking; social influence, attitudes, and beliefs, and vocational adjustment. PSYC 320 or 321 serves as a prerequisite for all psychology courses except for PSYC 242.

SOCI 304. Social Aspects of Human Sexuality
Social aspects of human sexuality and American sexual behavior and its influence on life styles will be studies. Emphasis will be on social roles.

SOCI 308. Sociology of Marriage and the Family
The family as a social institution and family types in cross-cultural perspectives will be studied.

SOWK 370. Aging in Society
Aging and its implication in social institutions are studied. Prerequisite: Junior standing

SOWK 409. Disability and Employment
This course will focus on selected mental, physical, and social disabilities, and their implications for coping and employment.

SOWK 415. Medical Sociology
This course includes sociological analysis of medical services, the roles of the sick professional organizations and quasi-professional groups; socializational structure of hospitals; sociodemographic and socioepidemiologic variables in relation to modern societies. Cultural and cross-cultural customs and traditions affecting attitudes toward health and the healing art will also be studied.

 

 

*Use of these courses as theme-cluster electives in subsequent semesters is not guaranteed.

 

 

 
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Last Updated September 2007
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