The program for the 4th annual conference of the Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science (IAPHS) is now available online. “Pushing the Boundaries of Population Health Science: Social Inequalities, Biological Processes, and Policy Implications,” to be held October 3-5 in Washington DC, features the latest in interdisciplinary research on population health and promotes exchange between scientists and stakeholders from policy and practice fields. You can register here; Early Bird rates have been extended through August 1.
Follow Us On:
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Search the site:
-
Recent Posts
- Social support and intimate partner violence in rural Pakistan: a longitudinal investigation of the bi-directional relationship
- Overflowing Disparities: Examining the Availability of Litter Bins in New York City
- In New York City, pandemic policing reproduced familiar patterns of racial disparities
- The COVID-19 Pandemic as a Threat Multiplier for Childhood Health Disparities: Evidence from St. Louis, MO
- Lessons Learned From Dear Pandemic, a Social Media–Based Science Communication Project Targeting the COVID-19 Infodemic
Faculty Publications on:
PubMed Feed
- Women's attitudes towards intimate partner violence in Guyana: a population-based study
- Integrating mental health and psychosocial support into economic inclusion programming for displaced families in Ecuador
- A case study of the development of a valid and pragmatic implementation science measure: the Barriers and Facilitators in Implementation of Task-Sharing Mental Health interventions (BeFITS-MH) measure
- Optimizing generalized anxiety disorder screening in young adults perinatally affected by HIV: A psychometric analysis
- Prevalence and predictors of cancer screening in transgender and gender nonbinary individuals
- The association between cumulative exposure to neighborhood walkability (NW) and diabetes risk, a prospective cohort study
- Associations Between Earlier Menarche and Fibroid Severity in Individuals Seeking Hysterectomy
- Authors' reply to correspondence on "direct potable reuse and birth defects prevalence in Texas": An augmented synthetic control method analysis of data from a population-based birth defects registry
- It's personal: navigating research questions that stem from our lived experiences
- Design of a Location-Based Case-Control Study of Built Environment Risk Factors for Pedestrian Fatalities in the U.S