Courses Taught by Richard Neitzel
EHS651: Occupational Health, Safety And Environmental Program Management
- Graduate level
- Residential
- Winter term(s) for residential students;
- 3 credit hour(s) for residential students;
- Instructor(s): Jan Lach, Richard Neitzel, Simone Charles, (Residential);
- Offered Every other year (next offering: Winter 2025)
- Last offered Winter 2023
- Prerequisites: None
- Advisory Prerequisites: None
- Description: This course introduces students to the breadth of functions and activities routinely performed by OHSE managers. Topics include: OHSE organization structure, management systems, program content, metrics, budgeting, risk management, incident investigation, emergency preparedness and response, regulatory compliance, legal systems, health and safety culture, and prevention through design processes.
- Learning Objectives: Students will gain a fundamental understanding of: (1) How OHSE programs are typically organized, the roles and responsibilities of OHSE managers, and expectations of other OHSE stakeholders in the organization. (2) Challenges associated with managing personnel and processes, including dealing with ethical issues, setting goals and measuring performance, hiring and training professionals, and managing consultants. (3) Financial aspects of program management, such as risk management and insurance, budgeting, workers compensation, and legal liability for both corporate activities and products. (4) Incident investigation and management, as well as emergency planning and response management. (5) Regulatory rulemaking, inspections, and compliance management processes.
Department | Program | Degree | Competency | Specific course(s) that allow assessment | EHS | Industrial Hygiene | MPH | Describe the relevance of business and managerial practices to workplace health and safety | EHS651 |
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EHS655: Human Exposure Analysis
- Graduate level
- Residential
- Winter term(s) for residential students;
- 3 credit hour(s) for residential students;
- Instructor(s): Richard Neitzel (Residential);
- Offered Every winter semester (next offering: Winter 2025)
- Last offered Winter 2024
- Prerequisites: Graduate standing
- Description: Students taking this course will learn how to conduct statistical analyses of human exposures, and will apply these skills to a dataset containing exposure and health outcome data. They will also develop skills for understanding, interpreting, and communicating exposure information and for identifying and communicating evidence-based risk management recommendations.
- Syllabus for EHS655
EHS658: Physical Hazards
- Graduate level
- Residential
- Fall term(s) for residential students;
- 2 credit hour(s) for residential students;
- Instructor(s): Richard Neitzel (Residential);
- Last offered Fall 2024
- Prerequisites: Graduate Standing or Perm. Instr.
- Description: Lectures, discussions, demonstrations on the health effects, measurements methods, regulations, and control technologies related to physical hazards, including temperature extremes, noise, vibration, lasers, non-ionizing radiation (rf, microwave, IR, visible, and UV), and ionizing radiation.
- Syllabus for EHS658
Department | Program | Degree | Competency | Specific course(s) that allow assessment | EHS | Environmental Health Sciences | MPH | Recommend approaches to prevent and control environmental exposures that are risks to human health and safety | EHS658 |
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PUBHLTH305: The Environment And Human Health
- Undergraduate level
- Residential
- Winter term(s) for residential students;
- 4 credit hour(s) for residential students;
- Instructor(s): Richard Neitzel (Residential);
- Prerequisites: None
- Description: This course introduces major issues of environmental health science. We will examine what those issues are, what determines them, and how they can be altered. The course provides an overview for students who want an introduction to environmental health as well as students planning to pursue additional environmental health coursework.
- Syllabus for PUBHLTH305
PUBHLTH514: Public Health Sciences and the Environment
- Graduate level
- Both Residential and Online MPH
- This is a first year course for Online students
- Winter term(s) for residential students; Winter term(s) for online MPH students;
- 2 credit hour(s) for residential students; 2 credit hour(s) for online MPH students;
- Instructor(s): Richard Neitzel (Residential); Richard Neitzel (Online MPH);
- Prerequisites: MPH, MHI, or MHSA Residential Students Only or By Instructor Permission
- Description: Many public health outcomes are directly influenced by human contact with the environment. This course will explore an important discipline within public health, environmental health sciences- that is, the study of how environmental factors affect human health and disease. We will apply environmental health and systems thinking principles to evaluate several major threats to public health: climate change, the built environment, and environmental justice issues. We will also assess the effectiveness of policies designed to address and reduce the threats presented by these and other issues.
- Learning Objectives: After completion of the course, students should be able to: --Explain the critical importance of evidence in advancing public health knowledge (CEPH LO 6)--Explain effects of environmental factors on a population's health (CEPH LO 7, linked to competency M1, CEPH C15) --Explain how globalization affects global burdens of disease (CEPH LO 11, linked to competency CEPH C22) --Apply process mapping methods to systematically evaluate the generation and movement of environmental hazards on the public (linked to competency CEPH C22) --Explain the impact of pollution control policies on public health outcomes (linked to competency CEPH C15) --Explain how environmental and occupational exposures can be measured and connected to human health (linked to competency M1) --Explain why a focus on sensitive and vulnerable groups is critical in environmental health science (linked to competency CEPH C15) --Explain strategies that can be applied to reduce environmental and occupational hazards
- This course is required for the school-wide core curriculum