págs. 1417-1435
págs. 1542-1542
págs. 1543-1544
Written informed consent and HIV testing rates: the San Francisco experience.
Moupali Das-Douglas, Nicola M Zetola, Jeffrey D. Klausner, Grant N Colfax
págs. 1544-1545
págs. 1546-1546
Untapped resources: exploring the need to invest in doctor of public health-degree training and leadership development.
págs. 1547-1549
From mosques to classrooms: mobilizing the community to enhance case detection of tuberculosis.
Mahfuza Rifat, I. D. Rusen, Mohammad Hasan Mahmud, Israt Nayer, Akramul Islam, Faruque Ahmed
págs. 1550-1552
On inspiration and leadership: a conversation with Barbara Sabol, MA, RN, and Henrie M. Treadwell, PhD. Interview by Kathleen M. Nelson.
págs. 1553-1555
Building and sustaining a multiuniversity and multicampus program or school of public health.
Michael R. Greenberg, Audrey Gotsch, George Rhoads, Dona Schneider
págs. 1556-1558
Core academic competencies for master of public health students: one health department practitioner's perspective.
págs. 1559-1561
Competencies: from deconstruction to reconstruction and back again, lessons learned.
págs. 1562-1564
págs. 1565-1569
págs. 1570-1572
Process is the point: justice and human rights: priority setting and fair deliberative process.
págs. 1573-1577
págs. 1578-1583
págs. 1584-1592
págs. 1593-1593
págs. 1594-1597
Development of a core competency model for the master of public health degree.
Judith G Calhoun, Kalpana Ramiah, Elizabeth McGean Weist, Stephen M. Shortell
págs. 1598-1607
Approaching health disparities from a population perspective: the National Institutes of Health Centers for Population Health and Health Disparities.
Richard B. Warnecke, April Oh, Nancy Breen, Sarah Gehlert, Electra D. Paskett, Katherine L. Tucker, Nicole Lurie, Timothy Rebbeck, James S. Goodwin, John Flack, Shobha Srinivasan, Jon Kerner, Suzanne Heurtin-Roberts, Ronald Abeles, Frederick L Tyson, Georgeanne Patmios, Robert A Hiatt
págs. 1608-1615
The context for choice: health implications of targeted food and beverage marketing to African Americans.
págs. 1616-1629
Project Cerberus: tobacco industry strategy to create an alternative to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control.
págs. 1630-1642
Waking a sleeping giant: the tobacco industry's response to the polonium-210 issue.
Monique E Muggli, Jon O. Ebbert, Channing Robertson, Richard D Hurt
págs. 1643-1650
págs. 1651-1657
págs. 1658-1663
Neighborhood psychosocial hazards and cardiovascular disease: the Baltimore Memory Study.
Toms Augustin, Thomas Glass, Bryan D James, Brian S Schwartz
págs. 1664-1670
Mental health in Sumatra after the tsunami.
Elizabeth Frankenberg, Jed Friedman, Thomas Gillespie, Nicholas Ingwersen, Robert Pynoos, Iip Umar Rifai, Bondan Sikoki, Alan Steinberg, Cecep Sumantri, Wayan Suriastini, Duncan Thomas
págs. 1671-1677
Improving health behaviors in an African American community: the Charlotte Racial and Ethnic Approaches to Community Health project.
págs. 1678-1684
Tobacco industry control of menthol in cigarettes and targeting of adolescents and young adults.
Jennifer M Kreslake, Geoffrey Ferris Wayne, Hillel R. Alpert, Howard Koh, Gregory N Connolly
págs. 1685-1692
US child labor violations in the retail and service industries: findings from a national survey of working adolescents.
Kimberly J Rauscher, Carol W Runyan, Michael D Schulman, J Michael Bowling
págs. 1693-1699
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