Black alumni profiled to celebrate Black History Month
During Black History Month, plasma screens throughout the School shared a special slideshow honoring 11 black alumni from recent decades.
2018 Events
Celebrating a Campaign for Public Health, and more.
Alumni Award Recipients 2018
Three outstanding individuals nominated by their peers received the School’s highest alumni honor at this year’s Alumni Award of Merit celebration, held on September 20 at the School.
"I have to take this journey on."
Suraya Dalil, MPH ’05, Afghanistan’s former minister of public health, hopes to bring health and gender equality to her war-ravaged homeland.
Convocation 2018: Alumni Council President M. Rashad Massoud address
May 23, 2018 I came here to the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health in 1992. As an international student, I was invited to a special two-week seminar before the MPH classes started. The School provided this…
A breath of fresh air
Jamaji Nwanaji-Enwerem, PhD ’18, wants to use molecular tools to better understand how environmental pollutants harm health—and raise awareness about decreasing people’s risk.
Three-day mosquito repellent takes top prize at biz school competition
A nontoxic mosquito repellent that lasts for three days took a top award at Harvard Business School’s New Venture Competition on April 18, 2018. The pitch for “Hour 72+” came from Abraar Karan, MPH ’17, and Andrew Rothaus,…
Alumnus Eric Feigl-Ding running for Congress
Eric Feigl-Ding, SD ’07, has announced his bid for the U.S. House of Representatives to represent Pennsylvania’s 10th district. He is a former research scientist in Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s Department of Nutrition and the…
Measuring urban noise and its effect on health
Erica Walker, SD ’17, is working with organizations in Boston and Cambridge to map noise concerns.
Op-ed: Canada’s healthcare system lags in innovation
International comparisons suggest that Canada ranks low in health system performance among countries that offer universal health coverage, according to an op-ed by Andrew Boozary, SM '14, a visiting scientist in the Department of Health Policy and Management.