PhD Public Health Sciences

Creating a healthier future at the university of waterloo.

As part of the School of Public Health Sciences, you will be immersed in leading research, and gain the skills to tackle some of the biggest health concerns of today.

Besides our leading researchers, you will learn how to integrate perspectives from multiple disciplines as well as discover how to use research to design, implement, and evaluate health programs, policies and services.

Professor and student examine health informatics research on a computer monitor.

Program overview 

  • Transdisciplinary approach to addressing public and population health challenges in Canada and around the world
  • You'll learn how to use research to improve the management and accountability of health promotion programs, and health or healthcare systems.
  • PhD students in the School of Public Health Sciences can pursue a designated field to exemplify an area of expertise within their broader program. Fields include  epidemiology and biostatistics, health evaluation, health informatics, health and environment, global health, aging and health and work and health . 
  • The University of Waterloo's unique Intellectual Property (IP) Rights Policy #73 grants ownership to the inventor.
  • The Faculty of Health is committed to providing guaranteed funding over four years to support new domestic doctoral students as part of its PhD funding initiative. Students may also be eligible for additional scholarship and funding opportunities.
  • Our alumni lead careers in research (industry, government and academia), health promotion, health planning, policy and health information analysis, research management, healthcare coordination, epidemiology, program evaluation, and other professions.
  • Research-based, on campus
  • 12 terms | 4 years (Full-time from Master's level)
  • 24 terms | 8 years (Part-time from Master's level)
  • Doctoral thesis
  • Collaborative water specialization also available

Faculty research and expertise

Our research investigates and aims to solve significant local, provincial/state, national and international challenges in various areas of public health and health systems.

Learn more about our experts and their research areas →

Finding a supervisor

  • A supervisor must be secured before an applicant is eligible to receive an offer of admission. Students are strongly advised to secure a confirmed supervisor before applying. Please review the  profiles of faculty members  in your areas of interest.
  • Indicate your confirmed supervisor in the "requested supervisor" section of your application.
  • If you do not have a confirmed supervisor, then use the "requested supervisor" section to name a supervisor with whom you would like to work.
  • Before approaching a potential supervisor, check their profile and see if they are accepting new students to supervise.   Review other key topics for discussion with potential supervisors .
  • Please avoid sending generic inquiries to supervisors. Students are more likely to successfully match with supervisors who share similar research interests and experiences.

Water specialization

Full- or part-time | On campus | Thesis based

Global water issues are becoming increasingly complex and often require a collaborative approach across the breadth of disciplines. The MSc Public Health and Health Systems offers a water specialization.

Facilitated by the University of Waterloo's   Water Institute , this collaborative approach provides access to more than 140 faculty members involved in water research across Waterloo's campus. The program allows you to develop   specialist expertise in public health and health systems, while matching the knowledge and skills required to communicate across disciplines and within interdisciplinary teams in the water sector. 

Find out more about graduate studies in the Collaborative Water Program →

Degree requirements →

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Admission requirements

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How to apply

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Tuition costs

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Living costs

Application deadline: feb 1.

For admission in September 

Apply today.

Our research graduate programs are highly competitive and receive far more applicants than we can accommodate. As such, we are not able to consider late or incomplete applications. For an application to be considered complete, all required documents, including academic references, must be submitted on or before the date above. You must also indicate an interested supervisor in the "requested supervisor" section of your application. We strongly recommend submitting your application no later than January 1 to allow time for document uploads and for references to be submitted by the January 15 deadline.

Considerations for international students before submitting an application:

  • While the Faculty of Health at the University of Waterloo values international students in our graduate programs, we can only accept a small proportion of these students. 
  • Guaranteed funding packages may not be able to cover all tuition and living expenses incurred during a graduate program and students are encouraged to understand more about the cost of completing their graduate program before applying.
  • Your requested supervisor may also be required to fund your studies for your application to be successful.

Graduate student resources

  • Graduate Student Handbook
  • Policies and procedures
  • Funding and awards
  • Study and living costs
  • Centre for Teaching Excellence
  • Research Groups/Labs
  • Graduate Students' Association
  • Graduate student housing

Student stories

As part of her doctoral research,   Lesley Johnston  is investigating ways in which community well-being in Mongolia and Zambia are affected by Canadian-sponsored mining operations.

Learn more about Lesley and other students in the School of Public Health Sciences on our graduate student profile page . 

Lesley Johnson rides camel in the desert.

PhD Public Health Sciences

phd in public health salary in canada

 OUR PhD PROGRAM 2023

The Department of Public Health Sciences has broadened its PhD program to include all areas of research expertise represented in our faculty including, but not limited to, epidemiology, biostatistics, qualitative, mixed- and community-based methods, the use of health and public-health services, program evaluation, clinical epidemiology, health equity, global health, indigenous health, and health economics.

Our programs place an emphasis on close faculty-student relations and a philosophy that puts the student first. Through coursework, thesis opportunities, and involvement in the academic life of our department, our students graduate with an in-depth understanding of public health research. Our graduates are able to function as independent investigators in academic, health-research institutes and health-research government agencies, or as emerging public-health leaders in government or the private sector.

In the coming year, our PhD program in the Department of Public Health Sciences at Queen’s University has a number of exciting opportunities for qualified applicants. The following members of our department have each expressed an interest in supervising a new PhD student:  

Dr. Susan Bartels is a Clinician-Scientist in the Department of Emergency Medicine with a cross appointment to Public Health Sciences. Her research focuses on the health and well-being of women and children affected by humanitarian crises around the globe. Dr. Bartels is interested in the social determinants of health and uses innovative research methods to provide evidence intended to inform policy and programming that will improve health outcomes and mitigate the risks of natural disasters, armed conflict and forced displacement.  

Dr. Susan Brogly is an epidemiologist with research interests in the area of perinatal epidemiology, surgical outcomes, and advanced epidemiologic methods. Dr. Brogly used both population-based administrative health care data (ICES, Medicaid) and primary data collection in her studies.  

Dr. Steven Brooks is a Clinician-Scientist and Emergency Physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine who conducts research in the areas of cardiac arrest and resuscitation. Dr. Brooks may have availability for a PhD student willing to work with the Canadian COVID-19 Emergency Department Rapid Response Network. This is a developing registry funded by CIHR and the Ontario government, tracking patients with suspected and confirmed COVID-19 who attend one of 50 EDs in the country.

Dr. Bingshu Chen is a biostatistician with an interest in survival analysis and generalized linear models. He has developed biomarker threshold models to predict treatment benefit in cancer clinical trials. His other research interests include analysis of health economic data, statistics computing and missing data problems.  

Dr. Anne Duffy is a Clinician-Scientist. She has longitudinal data spanning two decades in high-risk offspring of bipolar parents and has up to two years of psychosocial, clinical and familial data from a representative cohort of undergraduate university students to understand mental health and academic outcomes. These databases provide several opportunities that would make for an interesting thesis including using joint modelling, multi-state and survival analysis. Further information on Dr. Duffy’s research can be found at: https://www.mdco.ca/research/ .

Dr. Jennifer Flemming is a Clinician-Scientist who studies the link between cirrhosis and biliary tract cancer and the burden of chronic liver disease and cirrhosis in Ontario. She uses large population-based databases housed at ICES. Her goal is to improve management strategies for Canadians with liver disease.

Dr. Ana Johnson is a health economist who conducts economic evaluations of health care programs, cost-effectiveness analyses, assessments of resource allocations and use of health technologies.

Dr. Will King is a molecular epidemiologist whose research program seeks to identify modifiable risk factors for cancer. Dr. King studies intermediate markers of cancer risk and genetic susceptibility to better understand environment-cancer relationships.

Dr. Diane Lougheed is a Clinician-Scientist with a research interest in asthma and the development of better information technologies to improve the care of patients with asthma. Dr. Lougheed conducts health services and outcomes research and guideline implementation research in asthma and often uses the ICES data holdings to conduct her work.

Dr. Zihang Lu is a Biostatistician. His research focuses on developing and applying statistical and machine learning methods to answer clinical and epidemiological research questions. His current research interests are in longitudinal data, survival data and high-dimensional data modeling. He is also interested in Bayesian statistics, causal inference and data fusion.

Dr. Maria Ospina is an associate professor with the Department of Public Health Sciences at Queen’s University, and a clinical epidemiologist, and population-health researcher in the areas of perinatal and early childhood health. Her research program (DMETRE) uses a life-course approach and a variety of epidemiological methods (observational studies, systematic reviews, GIS analysis, mixed-methods designs), to assess the developmental origins of health inequalities, and how critical periods of human development such as pregnancy and the first 1,000 days of life influence future health.

Dr. Paul Peng is a is a biostatistician with research interests in survival analysis with a focus on cure models, longitudinal and panel data modeling, statistical computation methods for big data, biostatistical methods for epidemiological and clinical trial research.

Dr. William Pickett is in the Faculty of Applied Health Sciences at Brock University and is an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Public Health Sciences at Queen’s University, and an Adjunct Professor in the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan. He is a trained epidemiologist whose research interests include: injury and violence prevention; injury and illness in rural and farm populations; and health and its social determinants in adolescent populations, with a primary focus on pediatric violence and injury. Using public health surveillance, analytical and experimental epidemiology, and mixed methods approaches, this work has provided critical insight for policy/health promotion initiatives in Canada, the US and Europe.

Dr. Amrita Roy is a family physician and MD-PhD clinician-scientist in the Departments of Family Medicine and Public Health Sciences at Queen’s. A settler ally with a research focus in Indigenous health, Dr. Roy works in close collaboration with Indigenous peoples in community-engaged research centred on the principles of Ownership, Control, Access, and Possession (OCAP). Apart from Indigenous health, Dr. Roy’s other areas of research interest include immigrant and refugee health, women’s health, youth health, and global health. Methodologically, Dr. Roy has expertise in quantitative, qualitative, mixed- and multiple-methods approaches to health research, in addition to community-based and participatory research approaches.  Fall 2023 PhD opportunity with Dr. Roy:  Opportunity for a PhD student starting fall 2023 in a CIHR-funded Indigenous health research project on sleep and mental health, in partnership with Akwesasne Mohawk Nation .

Dr. Sahar Saeed is an epidemiologist and health-services researcher. Dr. Saeed primarily investigates retention and access to health care among populations including persons living with HIV/AIDS, hepatitis C and chronic liver disease. She uses primary data collection, population-based administrative health-care data and novel surveillance tools (GPS) to answer her research questions. For more information on her research interest, visit her website at Epidemiologist | Sahar Saeed .

Dr. Bradley Stoner is Professor and Head, Department of Public Health Sciences and Professor of Medicine at Queen’s University. An infectious disease physician and medical anthropologist, Dr. Stoner’s research focuses on the epidemiology, clinical care, control and prevention of sexually transmitted infections (STI) including HIV. 

Dr. Wei Tu  is a biostatistician with research interests in data science and its application in health care. His research focuses on translating different sources of high-dimensional data into informed clinical decision-making. The topics he is working on include personalized medicine, data privacy and causal inference.  

Dr. Maria Velez is a Clinician-Scientist with research interests in reproductive and perinatal epidemiology. Her current research program focuses on infertility and pregnancy outcomes, and the reproductive health of young women with cancer. She uses population-based cohort studies including databases housed at ICES.  

Dr. Paul Villeneuve is an environmental and occupational epidemiologist. His research program is focused on quantifying the health effects from exposure to outdoor air pollution, noise, low levels of radiation, as well as the benefits of urban greenness and walkability.  In addition to carrying out spatiotemporal exposure studies in Canada and Grenada (West Indies), he also uses large population-based databases housed in Statistics Canada’s Research Data Centers, and ICES.

If you have a demonstrable interest in the work of one or more of these professors we encourage you to reach out to them to discuss the possibility of supervision.

Our PhD students are guaranteed minimum funding of $21K per year for four years with further income possibilities coming from Teaching Assistantships, Research Assistantships, or Research Fellowships. Many of our students receive national or provincial scholarships.

For further information about our PhD Program, you can contact the Reserach Program Director, Dr. Ian Janssen at [email protected]    or the Graduate Assistant at [email protected] .  Note that all applicants must meet the entry requirements to the program:  https://phs.queensu.ca/programs-courses/degree-programs/phd-public-health-sciences/how-apply  

Student Stories

Paul Boonmak's Story

Program Contacts

Affiliated Research Groups

  • Canadian Cancer Trials Group
  • Centre for Health Services and Policy Research 
  • Emergency Medicine & Injury Research Group
  • Cancer Care & Epidemiology, Queen's Cancer Research Institute
  • Queen's - ICES Health Services Research 
  • Centre for Studies in Primary Care
  • Centre for Obesity and Research Education 
  • Practice and Research on Nursing (PRN) Group
  • KFL &A Public Health

phd in public health salary in canada

  • Doctor of Philosophy in Population and Public Health (PhD)
  • Graduate School
  • Prospective Students
  • Graduate Degree Programs

Go to programs search

The School of Population and Public Health offers a research-oriented PhD program that enables students with a masters degree to advance their knowledge and skills in epidemiological and biostatistical methods. Students will further their research training by applying these methods to independent thesis research under the supervision of a faculty member. Students can pursue thesis research in a wide variety of topics related to the health of populations and the delivery of health services.

For specific program requirements, please refer to the departmental program website

The Faculty of Medicine at UBC is internationally-renowned and the School of Population and Public Health boasts world-class academic research with a diverse and interdisciplinary faculty. It also has a great cohort of students and regular opportunities to share and discuss our ongoing research projects.

phd in public health salary in canada

Emma Stirling-Cameron

Quick Facts

Program Enquiries

Admission information & requirements, 1) check eligibility, minimum academic requirements.

The Faculty of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies establishes the minimum admission requirements common to all applicants, usually a minimum overall average in the B+ range (76% at UBC). The graduate program that you are applying to may have additional requirements. Please review the specific requirements for applicants with credentials from institutions in:

  • Canada or the United States
  • International countries other than the United States

Each program may set higher academic minimum requirements. Please review the program website carefully to understand the program requirements. Meeting the minimum requirements does not guarantee admission as it is a competitive process.

English Language Test

Applicants from a university outside Canada in which English is not the primary language of instruction must provide results of an English language proficiency examination as part of their application. Tests must have been taken within the last 24 months at the time of submission of your application.

Minimum requirements for the two most common English language proficiency tests to apply to this program are listed below:

TOEFL: Test of English as a Foreign Language - internet-based

Overall score requirement : 100

IELTS: International English Language Testing System

Overall score requirement : 7.0

Other Test Scores

Some programs require additional test scores such as the Graduate Record Examination (GRE) or the Graduate Management Test (GMAT). The requirements for this program are:

The GRE is required by some applicants. Please check the program website.

2) Meet Deadlines

3) prepare application, transcripts.

All applicants have to submit transcripts from all past post-secondary study. Document submission requirements depend on whether your institution of study is within Canada or outside of Canada.

Letters of Reference

A minimum of three references are required for application to graduate programs at UBC. References should be requested from individuals who are prepared to provide a report on your academic ability and qualifications.

Statement of Interest

Many programs require a statement of interest , sometimes called a "statement of intent", "description of research interests" or something similar.

  • Supervision

Students in research-based programs usually require a faculty member to function as their thesis supervisor. Please follow the instructions provided by each program whether applicants should contact faculty members.

Instructions regarding thesis supervisor contact for Doctor of Philosophy in Population and Public Health (PhD)

Citizenship verification.

Permanent Residents of Canada must provide a clear photocopy of both sides of the Permanent Resident card.

4) Apply Online

All applicants must complete an online application form and pay the application fee to be considered for admission to UBC.

Tuition & Financial Support

FeesCanadian Citizen / Permanent Resident / Refugee / DiplomatInternational
$114.00$168.25
Tuition *
Installments per year33
Tuition $1,838.57$3,230.06
Tuition
(plus annual increase, usually 2%-5%)
$5,515.71$9,690.18
Int. Tuition Award (ITA) per year ( ) $3,200.00 (-)
Other Fees and Costs
(yearly)$1,116.60 (approx.)
Estimate your with our interactive tool in order to start developing a financial plan for your graduate studies.

Financial Support

Applicants to UBC have access to a variety of funding options, including merit-based (i.e. based on your academic performance) and need-based (i.e. based on your financial situation) opportunities.

Program Funding Packages

From September 2024 all full-time students in UBC-Vancouver PhD programs will be provided with a funding package of at least $24,000 for each of the first four years of their PhD. The funding package may consist of any combination of internal or external awards, teaching-related work, research assistantships, and graduate academic assistantships. Please note that many graduate programs provide funding packages that are substantially greater than $24,000 per year. Please check with your prospective graduate program for specific details of the funding provided to its PhD students.

Average Funding

  • 24 students received Teaching Assistantships. Average TA funding based on 24 students was $6,707.
  • 38 students received Research Assistantships. Average RA funding based on 38 students was $18,770.
  • 17 students received Academic Assistantships. Average AA funding based on 17 students was $5,352.
  • 57 students received internal awards. Average internal award funding based on 57 students was $10,782.
  • 22 students received external awards. Average external award funding based on 22 students was $28,705.

Scholarships & awards (merit-based funding)

All applicants are encouraged to review the awards listing to identify potential opportunities to fund their graduate education. The database lists merit-based scholarships and awards and allows for filtering by various criteria, such as domestic vs. international or degree level.

Graduate Research Assistantships (GRA)

Many professors are able to provide Research Assistantships (GRA) from their research grants to support full-time graduate students studying under their supervision. The duties constitute part of the student's graduate degree requirements. A Graduate Research Assistantship is considered a form of fellowship for a period of graduate study and is therefore not covered by a collective agreement. Stipends vary widely, and are dependent on the field of study and the type of research grant from which the assistantship is being funded.

Graduate Teaching Assistantships (GTA)

Graduate programs may have Teaching Assistantships available for registered full-time graduate students. Full teaching assistantships involve 12 hours work per week in preparation, lecturing, or laboratory instruction although many graduate programs offer partial TA appointments at less than 12 hours per week. Teaching assistantship rates are set by collective bargaining between the University and the Teaching Assistants' Union .

Graduate Academic Assistantships (GAA)

Academic Assistantships are employment opportunities to perform work that is relevant to the university or to an individual faculty member, but not to support the student’s graduate research and thesis. Wages are considered regular earnings and when paid monthly, include vacation pay.

Financial aid (need-based funding)

Canadian and US applicants may qualify for governmental loans to finance their studies. Please review eligibility and types of loans .

All students may be able to access private sector or bank loans.

Foreign government scholarships

Many foreign governments provide support to their citizens in pursuing education abroad. International applicants should check the various governmental resources in their home country, such as the Department of Education, for available scholarships.

Working while studying

The possibility to pursue work to supplement income may depend on the demands the program has on students. It should be carefully weighed if work leads to prolonged program durations or whether work placements can be meaningfully embedded into a program.

International students enrolled as full-time students with a valid study permit can work on campus for unlimited hours and work off-campus for no more than 20 hours a week.

A good starting point to explore student jobs is the UBC Work Learn program or a Co-Op placement .

Tax credits and RRSP withdrawals

Students with taxable income in Canada may be able to claim federal or provincial tax credits.

Canadian residents with RRSP accounts may be able to use the Lifelong Learning Plan (LLP) which allows students to withdraw amounts from their registered retirement savings plan (RRSPs) to finance full-time training or education for themselves or their partner.

Please review Filing taxes in Canada on the student services website for more information.

Cost Estimator

Applicants have access to the cost estimator to develop a financial plan that takes into account various income sources and expenses.

Career Outcomes

60 students graduated between 2005 and 2013: 1 is in a non-salaried situation; for 3 we have no data (based on research conducted between Feb-May 2016). For the remaining 56 graduates:

phd in public health salary in canada

Sample Employers in Higher Education

Sample employers outside higher education, sample job titles outside higher education, phd career outcome survey, alumni on success.

phd in public health salary in canada

Lianping Ti

Job Title Research Scientist

Employer BC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS

Enrolment, Duration & Other Stats

These statistics show data for the Doctor of Philosophy in Population and Public Health (PhD). Data are separated for each degree program combination. You may view data for other degree options in the respective program profile.

ENROLMENT DATA

 20232022202120202019
Applications3741524042
Offers1621222219
New Registrations1213161611
Total Enrolment9191918476

Completion Rates & Times

Upcoming doctoral exams, friday, 13 september 2024 - 12:30pm - 202, school of population and public health, 2206 east mall, wednesday, 25 september 2024 - 9:00am - room 200.

  • Research Supervisors

Advice and insights from UBC Faculty on reaching out to supervisors

These videos contain some general advice from faculty across UBC on finding and reaching out to a supervisor. They are not program specific.

phd in public health salary in canada

This list shows faculty members with full supervisory privileges who are affiliated with this program. It is not a comprehensive list of all potential supervisors as faculty from other programs or faculty members without full supervisory privileges can request approvals to supervise graduate students in this program.

  • Amri, Michelle (Global Health Ethics; normative nature of health equity; Health Equity; Public Policy; Governance; Global Health; International health)
  • Anis, Aslam (cost effectiveness of AIDS treatments; drug assessments – pharmacoeconomics; health care economics; health regulations, Health economics, rhematoid arthritis, biologic therapies)
  • Bansback, Nick (inform policies and practices in health through the application of)
  • Bhatti, Parveen
  • Black, Charlyn (Public and population health)
  • Brauer, Michael (Environmental and occupational health and safety; Health sciences; Public and population health; air pollution; built environment; Community Health / Public Health; environmental health; environmental epidemiology; healthy cities; remote sensing)
  • Brussoni, Mariana (Developmental psychology; Psychosocial, sociocultural and behavioral determinants of health; Population health interventions; injury prevention; Children's outdoor play; Risky play; Parenting; health behaviour change; Implementation Science)
  • Bryan, Stirling (Economics of health care, policy, from UK)
  • Cox, Susan (Other medical sciences; Sociology and related studies; Arts (arts, history of arts, performing arts, music), architecture and design)
  • Davies, Hugh William (Environmental and occupational health and safety; Health sciences; Public and population health; Antineoplastic drug hazards; Community Health / Public Health; environmental health; Exposure Assessment; Noise and Health; Occupational Health; Occupational Safety and Health)
  • Deering, Kathleen (Medical, health and life sciences)
  • Dummer, Trevor (health geography, cancer prevention, environmental exposures, health inequalities, geographic information science, obesity, risk factors, Environmental epidemiology and environment and health interactions, with specific emphasis on cancer etiology and cancer prevention)
  • Elango, Rajavel (Protein Nutrition, Maternal-Fetal Nutrition, Childhood Malnutrition, Amino Acid Metabolism, Human Nutrition )
  • Frank, Erica (Health sciences; Public and population health; Other education; Free education; Preventive Medicine; Sustainable Architecture and Landscape Architecture; Holocaust studies; Exile Reintegration; Democratization; Intervention Research)
  • Gadermann, Anne (Social determinants of health; Housing and homelessness; Quality of)
  • Gilbert, Mark (Public and population health; Development, implementation, evaluation and scale-up of innovative sexual health programs; Gay men’s sexual health, including sexual health literacy; Synergistic and integrated dynamics of infectious diseases, mental illness and other conditions)
  • Greyson, Devon (Health-related information practices of youth, parents, and families; Intersection between information practices and health behavior,; Cannabis use decision making in pregnancy and lactation; Vaccine confidence and decision making about vaccination; Disinformation in social media support communities; Online communication among young parents)
  • Guhn, Martin (Developmental psychology; Psychosocial, sociocultural and behavioral determinants of health; social context and child development/well-being; Population health; social determinants of health)
  • Henderson, Sarah (Environmental and occupational health and safety; wildfire smoke; air pollution; Extreme weather events; environmental health; radon gas; Food safety; Water quality)
  • Janssen, Patricia (Health sciences; Public and population health; Gestation / Parturition; health of marginalized women; Lifestyle Determinants and Health; maternal child health; mobile health for pregnancy and parenting; Perinatal Period; social determinants of health)
  • Joseph, K.S. (Pregnancy complications, preterm birth, fetal growth, infant mortality, neonatal)
  • Kalua, Khumbo (Population health interventions; Infectious diseases; Global health; Epidemiology (except nutritional and veterinary epidemiology); Neglected Tropical Eye Diseases; Global Eye Health; Cluster Randomized Trials; Implementation Science; International Global Health; Community Based Research; Clinical trials)
  • Karim, Ehsan (Biostatistical methods; Survey methodology and analysis; Statistical learning; Epidemiology (except nutritional and veterinary epidemiology); Public and population health, n.e.c.; Causal inference; Biostatistics; Statistics; Machine Learning; data science; Survey data analysis; multiple sclerosis)
  • Kassam, Rosemin (Medical, health and life sciences; Child Health, Malnutrition, Adult Chronic Disease, Geriatrics)
  • Kazanjian, Arminee (Cancer Survivorship, Knowledge Exchange and, Translation, Psychosocial oncology, Palliative care in cross-cultural context, Vulnerable populations, including women)

Doctoral Citations

Year Citation
2024 Dr. Gill examined how different types of childhood poverty experience affect children's development, health, and school success from kindergarten to high school graduation in British Columbia, and how these relationships differ by the child's immigration background. This work can inform intervention and policy to reduce harms related to poverty.
2024 Should patients with coronary artery disease consider stenting if they must wait for bypass surgery? Dr. Hardiman compared treatment results of delayed surgery and readily available stenting, finding that patients who underwent surgery fared better. His study will inform future treatment decisions and policy in cardiac care.
2024 Dr. Cassidy-Matthews explored how Indigenous People who use drugs in BC experienced the COVID-19 pandemic and examined influences on vaccine uptake and acceptability. She found that a few relational principles underpinned most health decisions and experiences. These included emotional and spiritual connection, environmental stability, and equity.
2024 Dr. Yuchi studied air pollution, green space and dementia risk in Canada. Her work underscores the importance of further improvements to the built environment and air quality to reduce the burden of dementia in settings where air pollution levels are relatively low. Urban planning to incorporate greenery and parks may help to reduce dementia risk
2024 Dr. Nikiforuk studied how the coronavirus which causes COVID-19 infects cells in the upper human respiratory tract to find that people's risk of infection varies. This finding will be useful in controlling coronavirus transmission and designing new treatment strategies.
2024 Dr. Randall explored long-term patient satisfaction with total knee replacement. She found that 12% of participants were dissatisfied, particularly those with ongoing symptoms and unmet expectations. The main concern for patients was how well their new knee supported their daily lives. These findings have both clinical and research implications.
2024 Dr. Musoke evaluated the impact of two interventions to improve access to medicines in Uganda. He found that the benefits of such interventions were maintained over a long duration when implemented nationally. This knowledge will aid in the design of future interventions to improve access to medicines in Uganda and other countries.
2023 Dr. Desai revealed that despite better CF prognosis in recent years, people with CF still face substantial burden from lung impairment and other complications. Rising healthcare costs due to expensive medications pose additional challenges. These findings will help improve their service planning and resource allocation in the future.
2023 Dr. Nisingizwe investigated access to Hepatitis C testing and treatment in Rwanda and internationally. Her dissertation described HCV cascade of care, and patients' barriers to HCV care in Rwanda. Globally, she highlighted countries and regions with high and low access to HCV medicines and the effect of COVID-19 on HCV drug utilization.
2023 Dr. Chen unravelled relationships between diabetes medications and breast, colorectal, and pancreatic cancer risk, suggesting potential risk variations with common diabetes medications. Her study underscores the significance of understanding the long-term health impacts of prescription medications, advocating more research.

Sample Thesis Submissions

  • Developmental profiles of children assessed for autism spectrum disorder at kindergarten and grade 4
  • Promoting equitable access to digital sexually transmitted and blood borne infection testing interventions in British Columbia, Canada
  • Evaluating access to medicines interventions in public and private not for profit health facilities in Uganda
  • Investigating access to hepatitis C testing and treatment in Rwanda and beyond
  • Improving referrals to rheumatologists for patients with inflammatory arthritis
  • The social and economic impacts of cervical cancer on women and children in Uganda
  • Exploring long-term patient satisfaction with total knee arthroplasty : a mixed methods study
  • The Cedar Project : an exploration of Indigenous survivance, connection, and vaccine uptake amid concurrent public health emergencies experienced by urban Indigenous People who use drugs in British Columbia
  • Examining childhood poverty and future developmental and academic outcomes of children in British Columbia : differences by poverty type and immigration background
  • Assessing access to medicines in Canada and beyond before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
  • Air pollution, green space and dementia risk in Canada
  • Involvement of nasopharyngeal angiotensin converting enzyme 2 in severe acute respiratory coronavirus 2 infection and transmission
  • Coronary revascularization and timing of treatment : comparative effectiveness of PCI and CABG in British Columbia
  • Muddy molecules for pandemic protection : investigating the use of wetland sediment as a tool for the surveillance of avian influenza virus in wild waterfowl birds
  • Methamphetamine use among people who use opioids : longitudinal patterns and the role of opioid agonist therapy

Related Programs

Same specialization.

  • Master of Global Health (MGH)
  • Master of Public Health (MPH)
  • Master of Public Health and Master of Science in Nursing (MPH/MSN)
  • Master of Science in Population and Public Health (MSc)

Same Academic Unit

  • Master of Health Administration (MHA)
  • Master of Health Science (MHSc)
  • Master of Science in Occupational and Environmental Hygiene (MSc)

Further Information

Specialization.

The School of Population and Public Health (SPPH) offers both research-oriented and professional/course-based graduate programs.

Professional programs

  • The Master of Public Health focuses on illness prevention and health promotion and integrates learning in epidemiology; biostatistics; the social, biological and environmental determinants of health; population health; global health; disease prevention and health systems management with skill-based learning in a practicum setting.
  • The Master of Health Administration is a professional program for clinicians, administrators, researchers and managers who are seeking solutions to today’s complex health delivery issues. Take courses with a multi-disciplinary perspective in health systems, policies and management along with foundational business skills
  • The Master of Science in Occupational and Environmental Hygiene (MSc OEH) program provides the skills and knowledge to anticipate, recognize, evaluate, and control chemical, physical and biological hazards in workplace and community environments.

Research-based Programs

  • Master of Health Science (MHSc) applicants must have an MD or equivalent, including dentistry or veterinary medicine, and will learn skills that can be applied to their academic and clinical interests, bolstering their research abilities and opportunities.
  • The Master of Science in Population and Public Health program teaches core knowledge and skills in epidemiological and biostatistical methods and allows students to gain research experience by applying methods to a thesis under the supervision of a faculty member. Students can pursue thesis research in a wide variety of topics related to the health of populations and the delivery of health services.
  • The PhD program at SPPH is intended for students who wish to obtain advanced research training that will enable them to conduct independent investigative research.

UBC Calendar

Program website, faculty overview, academic unit, program identifier, classification, social media channels, supervisor search.

Departments/Programs may update graduate degree program details through the Faculty & Staff portal. To update contact details for application inquiries, please use this form .

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Jorden Hendry

My experience with the Centre for Excellence in Indigenous Health solidified my decision to choose UBC for my graduate studies, as it offers a unique environment that values Indigenous perspectives and fosters meaningful research and leadership opportunities.

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Hebah Hussaina

I completed both my Bachelor's and Master's degrees at UBC, and throughout those experiences, I became embedded within the community here. It was an easy choice to continue studying at UBC because of the love that I have for my community. Through my research, I want to give back to this community...

phd in public health salary in canada

Zeina Waheed

UBC’s School of Population and Public Health provides excellent training in health economics, healthcare systems analysis, data analysis, statistics, epidemiology, and qualitative methods. Studying at UBC also provides me with the opportunity to work with my supervisor, Dr. Stirling Bryan, who is...

phd in public health salary in canada

Katherine Hastings

Vancouver is home to one of the leading IYS networks internationally. When I sought out to learn more about IYS and their potential (something that did not exist in the States at the time), it felt like a perfect fit for my interests in youth mental health and health services research. The more...

phd in public health salary in canada

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University of Manitoba Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada, R3T 2N2

Community Health Sciences (PhD)

The Community Health Sciences (PhD) program prepares you for a career teaching community health sciences, training other researchers, designing and executing major research projects and serving as a senior advisor or consultant in health care policy and planning. Gain broad multidisciplinary training in the concepts and methods of population-based health sciences and their application in the practice of population and public health and preventative medicine.

Program details

Admission requirements.

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• Rady Faculty of Health Sciences • Faculty of Graduate Studies

• Doctor of Philosophy

Expected duration

Program options.

• Full-time and part-time

Study with us

In 1987, the Department of Social and Preventive Medicine (SPM) and the Division of Community and Northern Medicine (CNM) merged to form the Department of Community Health Sciences. Merging these two units and combining their interests and activities, created a well-rounded, innovative department with a national reputation for excellence in teaching, research and service.

The Department of Community Health Sciences aims to create, preserve and communicate knowledge with respect to the health of populations and thereby contribute to the physical, psychological, cultural, social and economic well-being of the people of Manitoba, Canada and the world.

Internationally recognized research programs

Units, programs and Centres within the department focus on particular areas of research and service, including the Manitoba Centre for Health Policy and the Centre for Global Public Health.

Ongomiizwin – the Indigenous Institute of Health and Healing

The Department of Community Health Sciences maintains a close relationship with Ongomiizwin – the Indigenous Institute of Health and Healing. Ongomiizwin supports the department in the development of its undergraduate and graduate teaching programs to enhance the incorporation of Indigenous health.

Access both internationally regarded researchers and award winning teachers.

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The Faculty of Graduate Studies and the Rady Faculty of Health Sciences offer a four-year program of study leading to a Doctor of Philosophy in Community Health Sciences.

Expected duration: 4 years

Tuition and fees:  Tuition fees are charged for terms one and two and terms four and five. A continuing fee is paid for term three, term six and each subsequent term. (Refer to Graduate tuition and fees .)

In addition to the minimum course requirements of the Faculty of Graduate Studies, found in the Graduate Studies Regulations Section , students must complete:

  • A minimum of 18 credit hours of coursework at the 7000-level

Sample course offerings

  • CHSC 7200: Current Concepts in Global Health: Populations, Policies and Programs
  • CHSC 7212: Critical Perspectives on Gender and Health
  • CHSC 7270: Epidemiology of Chronic (Non-Cancer) Diseases
  • CHSC 7320: Organization and Financing of the Canadian Health Care System
  • CHSC 7510: Problem Solving in Public Health
  • CHSC 7520: Principles of Epidemiology
  • CHSC 7710: Social Aspects of Aging
  • CHSC 7860: Methods and Concepts for Community Health Sciences

For full course descriptions, please visit the Academic Calendar .

The following are minimum requirements to be considered for entry into the Community Health Sciences (PhD) program. Meeting these requirements does not guarantee acceptance into the program.

To be considered for admission, you must meet the following minimum requirements:

  • Thesis-based master’s degree in Community Health Sciences or Public Health with content equivalent to that offered by the department.
  • Thesis-based master’s degree in Basic Medical Sciences, Biological Sciences, or Social Sciences.
  • Thesis-based professional master’s degree, such as Nursing, Education, or Social Work.
  • IELTS : Overall score of at least 7, with no component below 7 (listening, reading, writing, speaking).
  • TOEFL (iBT) : Minimum total score of 92, with a writing score no lower than 21.
  • If you do not meet these writing score requirements, you can complete the Intensive Academic English Program (IAEP) before starting the PhD program.

Note: Meeting these requirements does not guarantee acceptance into the program. All applicants must also meet the minimum admission and English language proficiency requirements of the Faculty of Graduate Studies .

How to apply

Application Deadlines: This program accepts applications for Fall entry only.

Application Components:

  • Application fee (non-refundable)
  • Unofficial Copies of Transcripts and Degree Certificates.
  • Curriculum Vitae/Resumé.
  • Three letters required (must be requested within the application).
  • If your Community Health Sciences (MSc) Supervisor has agreed to supervise your PhD program, only two letters are required.
  • Supervisor Support Letter.
  • Publication or Writing Sample.
  • Proof of English language proficiency , if required

Note: For the most up-to-date information on the program, consult the Academic Calendar . Please review the Faculty of Graduate Studies' online application instructions before beginning your application.

Application deadline

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Architecture reviews applications in March.

Applications open up to 18 months prior to start term.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) January 15
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) December 1

Applicants must submit their online application with supporting documentation and application fee by the deadline date indicated.

Start or continue your application

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for City Planning reviews applications in March.

Winter applications are accepted on a case-by-case basis.

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Design and Planning reviews applications in March.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) January 10

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Interior Design reviews applications in March.

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Landscape Architecture reviews applications in March.

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) January 15

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Anthropology reviews applications in March/April.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . Please contact the department for admission committee review timelines.

Applications open September 1 of year prior to start term.

Application deadlines

Applications open   up to 18 months prior  to start term.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) May 1
Winter (January) September 1
Term Annual application deadline
Winter (January) June 1
Fall (September) January 15
Term Annual application deadline
Winter (January) June 1
Fall (September) January 15

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for History reviews applications in February.

Applications are reviewed on a  rolling basis .

Applications open July 1 of year prior to start term.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) March 15
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) February 1

Applications are reviewed on a  Committee basis . The Committee for German and Slavic Studies reviews applications in February/March.

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) May 1
Winter (January) September 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Winter (January) June 1
Fall (September) February 1

Applications are reviewed on a rolling basis .

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) May 1
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) March 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) May 1
Winter (January) October 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) March 1
Winter (January) July 1

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Management reviews applications in February / March.

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Physical Therapy reviews applications in April / May.

Applications open  August 1 of the year prior to start term.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (August) November 15
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) June 1
Winter (January) October 1
Summer (May) February1
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) March 1
Winter (January) July 1
Summer (May) November 1

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . Please contact the department for admission committee review timelines.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) June 1
Winter (January) October 1
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) March 1
Winter (January) July 1
Term Annual application deadline
Summer (July) September 1

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Orthodontics reviews applications in August/September and holds interviews in September/October.

Term Annual application deadline
Summer (June) August 1

Program currently undergoing review, applications will not be opening at this time.

Term Annual application deadline
Summer (July) August 15

Select Preventive Dental Science in the Program drop-down on the application form.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (August) June 1 (year prior to start term)
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) August 1

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Educational Administration, Foundations and Psychology reviews applications in March / April.

Canadian and US applicants
TermAnnual application deadline
Fall (September)January 8
Summer (May)January 8
International applicants
TermAnnual application deadline
Fall (September)January 8

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Education reviews applications in February / March.

Canadian, US and International applicants
TermAnnual application deadline
Fall (September)December 1
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) May 1
Winter (January) September 1
Summer (May) January 4
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) February 1
Winter (January) June 1
Summer (May) October 1

Applications are reviewed after the deadline, with decisions issued in March - April.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) June 1
Winter (January) October 1
Summer (May) February 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) June 1
Winter (January) October 1
Summer (May) February 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) March 1
Winter (January) July 1
Summer (May) November 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) May 1
Winter (January) September 1
Summer (May) January 4
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) February 1
Winter (January) June 1
Summer (May) October 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) May 1
Winter (January) September 1
Summer (May) January 15

Currently not accepting applications to this program.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . Please contact the department for admission committee review timelines.

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) March 1
Winter (January) June 1

Applicants must submit their online application with supporting documentation and application fee by the deadline date indicated. Applications received by the March 1 deadline for a September start-date will receive first consideration for any available funding. Late applications will be considered on a case-by-case basis for any available funding, please contact the department for further information.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Human Rights reviews applications in January - March.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Law reviews applications in January - March.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) December 15

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Nursing (MN) reviews applications in April / May.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) November 1

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Nursing PhD reviews applications in February / March.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee reviews applications as per the timelines noted below each table.

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) May 15
Winter (January) September 15
Summer (May) January 15

Winter applications reviewed in October Summer applications reviewed in February Fall applications reviewed in June

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) January 15
Winter (January) May 15
Summer (May) September 15

Winter applications reviewed in June Summer applications reviewed in October Fall applications reviewed in February

Applicants must submit their online application with supporting documentation and application fee by the deadline date indicated. This includes having the support of a faculty supervisor before you apply.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Natural Resources Management reviews applications in March - June.

Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) June 1

After the annual application deadline (see below), applications are reviewed on a committee basis by the Faculty of Social Work internal admissions committee. Once this process is complete, decisions are sent to all applicants in March / April. 

Applications open  July 1 of year prior to start term.

Term Applications open Annual application deadline
Fall (September) July 1 December 1

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Social Work reviews applications in March / April.

Term Applications open Annual application deadline
Fall (September) July 1 January 15
Term Applications open Annual application deadline
Fall (September) July 1 October 15

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Music reviews Fall term applications in December / January, and Winter term applications in July.

Term Annual application deadlines Audition dates
Fall (September) December 1 January 22-27, 2024
Winter (January) Winter intake currently suspended  
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) June 1
Winter (January) October 1

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Occupational Therapy reviews applications in May / June.

Master of Occupational Therapy regular program  applications open September 15 of the year prior to deadline .

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (August) February 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (August) January 15

Master of Occupational Therapy accelerated program  applications open October 1  of the year prior to deadline .

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (August) May 1
Winter (January) October 1

The name of your confirmed supervisor is required at the time of application. To identify a prospective thesis research supervisor on your application, please  contact Immunology Faculty members .

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Community Health Sciences reviews applications in March / April.

Canadian, US and International applicants

TermAnnual application deadline
Fall (September)January 10

The name of your preferred supervisor is required at time of application.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . Students selected for in-person interview will be notified in February.

Term Applications open Annual application deadline
Fall (September) November 15  January 11

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Physician Assistant Studies reviews applications in April.

Offers of admission will be released to successful applicants on May 17, 2024 from the University of Manitoba Master of Physician Assistant Studies, the same day as the University of Toronto BScPA Program and McMaster University Physician Assistant Education Program. The three institutions are pleased to provide applicants their offers on the same day to help with the decision-making process.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Pharmacology and Therapeutics reviews applications one month after the application deadline.

Applications for Pathology MSc are reviewed on a  rolling basis .

Applications for Pathologist Assistant are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Pathologist Assistant reviews applications in April / May. 

The Pathologist Assistant program only admits Canadian and US students every two years. The next intake is tentatively scheduled for Fall 2026.

Canadian and US applicants

TermApplications openAnnual application deadlines
Fall (September)April 1 (Pathology MSc)
October 1 (Pathologist Assistant)
March 31 (Pathologist Assistant)
June 1 (Pathology MSc)

International applicants

TermApplications openAnnual application deadlines
Fall (September)April 1March 1 (Pathology MSc)
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) February 1
Winter (January) May 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) February 1
Winter (January) June 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Summer (May) February 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) February 15
Winter (January) June 15
Summer (May) October 15

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Statistics reviews applications in March / April.

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) February 1
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) February 15
Winter (January) Winter intake currently suspended.

Applications are reviewed on a  committee basis . The Admissions committee for Biological Sciences reviews applications one month after deadline.

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions committee for Indigenous Studies reviews applications in February and June.

Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) January 15
(for scholarship consideration)

May 15

Applicants must submit their online application with supporting documentation and application fee by the deadline date indicated. For those who wish to be considered for scholarships, applications must be received by January 15 of the year in which you're seeking admission.

Applications are reviewed on a committee basis . The Admissions Committee for Applied Human Nutrition reviews applications in February.

Term Applications open Annual application deadline
Fall (September) October 1 January 6
Term Annual application deadlines
Fall (September) March 1
Winter (January) July 1
Term Annual application deadline
Fall (September) February 15

Les demandes d’admission sont évaluées par un comité . Le comité d’admission évalu les demandes durant les mois de Mars et Avril.  

Les demandes peut être surmise jusqu’à concurrence de 18 mois avant le début de premier trimestre.

Session

date limite

automne (septembre) 1 juin
hiver (janvier) 1 octobre
été (mai) 1 février
Session date limite
automne (septembre) 1 mars
hiver (janvier) 1 juillet
été (mai) 1 novembre

Toute demande d’admission en ligne doit être déposée, avec documents à l’appui, au plus tard aux dates indiquées.

Soumettre ou continuer votre application

Department of Community Health Sciences

Community Health Sciences is an interdisciplinary department focusing on the creation, preservation and communication of knowledge with respect to the health of populations.

Tuition and fees

Learn about the tuition and fee requirements associated with graduate studies at UM.

Financial aid and awards

There are a variety of awards and funding options to help you pay for school as a student in the Max Rady College of Medicine.

Explore program requirements and detailed descriptions of required and elective courses offered in Community Health Sciences (PhD) program.

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Explore the Max Rady College of Medicine

For over 125 years, the Max Rady College of Medicine has contributed to education, research and clinical service. Western Canada’s first medical school, the College develops qualified medical graduates who distinguish themselves through excellence in clinical care, health system innovation and leadership, and internationally recognized research.

  • Programs of study
  • Student experience
  • Community and partners

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Explore the Faculty of Graduate Studies

Discovery happens here. Join the graduate students and researchers who come here from every corner of the world. They are drawn to the University of Manitoba because it offers the opportunity to do transformational research.

  • Funding, awards and financial aid
  • Graduate student experience

Keep exploring

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Discover more programs

With over 140 graduate programs across multiple faculties, schools and colleges, the University of Manitoba offers more learning, teaching and research opportunities than any other post-secondary institution in the province.

  • Master of Science in Community Health Sciences (MSc)
  • Master of Public Health in Community Health Sciences (MPH)

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Join students from around the world in a diverse and supportive community.

What it's like to be a UM undergraduate

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Be adventurous, challenge yourself and make a difference.

Opportunities for Indigenous students

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Experience a world-class education in the heart of Canada

Why international students study with us

The University Of Manitoba Fort Garry campus.

We offer state-of-the-art facilities with 140 years of history.

Admission and application inquiries

Faculty of Graduate Studies Room 500 UMSU University Centre 65 Chancellors Circle University of Manitoba (Fort Garry campus) Winnipeg, MB R3T 2N2 Canada

[email protected] Phone: 204-474-9377

Monday to Friday 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

Program inquiries

Department of Community Health Sciences Max Rady College of Medicine, Rady Faculty of Health Sciences S111, Medical Services Building, 750 Bannatyne Avenue University of Manitoba Winnipeg, MB R3E 0W3 Canada

[email protected] Phone: 204-789-3655

phd in public health salary in canada

We acknowledge that the UBC Vancouver campus is situated on the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam).

phd in public health salary in canada

  • Director’s Message
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Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

  • Master of Health Science (MHSc)
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  • Associate UBC Faculty
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Strengthen your independent research skills with a PhD in Population and Public Health

The spph phd in population and public health is an advanced research degree that prepares graduates to become independent researchers and contribute to the development of health research in canada and around the world. phd students conduct research in a wide variety of topic areas related to population and public health, ranging from epidemiology to global health..

The Doctor of Philosophy program provides students with a strong foundation in population and public health research methods, including the core competencies for independent research. Students develop further knowledge and skills in their research area by completing a dissertation with the guidance of a faculty supervisor. SPPH Faculty are leaders in their fields who can connect students with world-class research and career development opportunities. Graduates of the SPPH PhD program continue their independent research work in a variety of positions, including as professors, government health officials, and leaders of private health organizations.

+ Admission Requirements

+ program details, + tuition and funding, + careers and alumni.

Need more information about the Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) ?

Fully Funded PhD Programs in Public Health

University of Michigan Fully Funded PhD Programs in Public Health

Last updated March 30, 2023

Next in my series on  How To Fully Fund Your PhD , I provide a list below of PhD programs in Public Health that offer full funding to all admitted doctoral students.

Although there are many competitive, external fellowships in the ProFellow database for graduate and doctoral study, the best approach to funding your doctoral studies is to seek out PhD programs that offer full funding to all admitted students. When a doctoral program indicates that they provide “full funding” to their Ph.D. students, in most cases this means they provide students full tuition and an annual stipend for living expenses for the three to the six-year duration of the student’s doctoral studies. Not all universities provide full funding to their doctoral students, which is why I recommend researching the financial aid offerings of all the potential PhD programs in your academic field, including small and lesser-known schools both in the U.S. and abroad.

To view more than 2300 professional and academic fellowships, including fellowships for graduate and doctoral study and pre- and post-doctoral research, sign up to view ProFellow’s fellowship database.

List of universities offering fully funded PhD Programs in Public Health.

Would you like to receive the full list of more than 1000+ fully funded programs in 60 disciplines? Download the FREE Directory of Fully Funded Graduate Programs and Full Funding Awards !

Columbia University, PhD in Environmental Health Sciences

(New York, NY): All PhD students receive full tuition, a stipend, and health insurance coverage. The amount of the stipend is set by Columbia University. Support is provided throughout the entire five years the student is in the program.

Harvard University, PhD in Biological Sciences in Public Health

(Cambridge, MA): All admitted students to the PhD Program in Biological Sciences in Public Health, including international students, are guaranteed full funding, which includes a stipend, as well as tuition and health insurance.

Indiana University-Purdue University, PhD in Health Policy and Management

(Indianapolis, IN): For full-time students only, the program will typically provide funding support in the form of tuition remission, a stipend to cover living expenses, and health insurance. This support typically requires a 20-hour-per-week work assignment.

University of Michigan, PhD in Public Health

(Ann Arbor, MI): Many doctoral students at Michigan Public Health are fully funded. All students admitted to one of our doctoral programs are considered for financial support. There are four types of financial support offered to students: graduate student instructor (GSI) positions, graduate student research assistant (GSRA) positions, training grants, and fellowships.

University of Toronto, PhD in Public Health

(Toronto, Canada): The University of Toronto has committed to a guaranteed minimum level of financial support to all its eligible, full-time doctoral stream students in the funded cohort, equivalent to $15,000 per year plus tuition for the first 5 years of study.

Yale University, PhD in Public Health

(New Haven, CT): All admitted PhD students are guaranteed four years of 12-month stipend and tuition support. In addition to grants and fellowships for tuition and living costs, students receive a Health Award, which covers the full cost of single-student Yale Health Plan Hospitalization/Specialty Coverage. Here is financial info

Brown University, PhD in Public Health

(Providence, Rhode Island): Admitted doctoral students receive up to five years of guaranteed financial support through Brown’s Five-Year Guarantee. Financial support includes a stipend, tuition remission, a health services fee, and health and dental insurance subsidies as well as four summers of support. This financial support applies to domestic and foreign students.

Johns Hopkins University, PhD in Public Health

(Baltimore, Maryland): All full-time PhD students receive support for all years of the program. Funding includes full tuition and fees, health insurance, and a stipend for living expenses for students who remain in good academic standing. PhD students are required to serve as teaching assistants.

New York University, PhD in Public Health

(New York, NY): Students who are admitted to the program will be fully funded by a fellowship or a combination of fellowship and Research Assistantship for five years. During fellowship years, students will engage with their mentors and develop their scholarships and portfolio.

Pennsylvania State University, PhD in Health Policy and Administration

(University Park, PA): Students entering the Health Policy and Administration doctoral program are funded through graduate assistantships and have opportunities for additional funding.

Texas A&M University, PhD in Health Services Research

(College Station, TX): All graduate students offered assistantships must complete human resources and other training modules before they are processed into the payroll system. Total compensation for both types of assistantships includes a monthly salary of $2,008 plus payment of tuition and fees to cover the minimum enrollment requirement.

University of South Carolina, PhD in Public Health

(Columbia, SC): All PhD students are offered an assistantship for 3 or 4 years, in-state tuition, a minimum stipend of $5,000-$6,000 / semester, minimum $15,000 tuition supplement over three years, In addition, doctoral applicants are eligible for some competitive fellowships.

Boston University, PhD in Public Health

(Boston, Massachusetts): Students admitted to the Ph.D. program as full-time students will receive four to five years of financial aid in the form of fellowship or assistantship support. The financial-aid package will consist of a stipend as well as a scholarship to cover tuition, mandatory fees, and individual basic health insurance.

Oregon State University, PhD in Public Health

(Corvallis, OR): Most public health doctoral students are funded through teaching or graduate research assistantships, which include tuition remission and a stipend. Others are funded through scholarships and fellowships.

University of Florida Health, PhD in Public Health

(Gainesville, FL): Students are only accepted to our Ph.D. program if the department can provide a stipend and tuition waiver. Funding for Ph.D. students may come from intramural (fellowships, department funds, etc) or extramural (Grants) sources.

University of North Texas Health Science Center, PhD in Public Health Sciences

(Fort Worth, Texas): All students admitted to the Ph.D. program are provided a financial support package that includes four fully funded years of tuition & fees, a living stipend currently valued at $30,000 annually, and health insurance.

Vanderbilt University Fully Funded PhD in Epidemiology

Vanderbilt University, based in Nashville, Tennessee offers a fully funded PhD in Epidemiology. Upon completing the Doctoral Program in Epidemiology, graduates will be prepared to develop an independent research portfolio in academia, research, or industry. All students offered admission to the doctoral program in Epidemiology receive a full tuition scholarship, stipend, health insurance, and coverage of fees. All students, both domestic and foreign, receive the same financial support. The stipend rate is $36,500 annually.

Washington University, PhD in Public Health Sciences

(St. Louis, MO): They are dedicated to providing our doctoral students with full-tuition scholarships, four-year stipends, and professional development accounts. Base stipends for students are $30,000 per year, and additional funding is possible through paid research, teaching fellowships, and other internal and external support sources.

University of California Berkeley, PhD in Public Health

(Berkeley, CA): Doctoral students (PhD and DrPH) typically receive funding by soft-money grants, such as working as a Graduate Student Researcher (GSR) or teaching as a Graduate Student Instructor (GSI). Both options not only cover a fee remission but also provide a monthly stipend.

University of Kansas, PhD in Health Policy and Management

(Kansas City, KS): Population Health doctoral students are enrolled full-time and are funded either through half-time employment in the healthcare or related field, through assistantships in the private sector, or through departmental assistantships.

For application tips on applying to a PhD program, see  How To Get Into a Fully Funded PhD Program: Contacting Potential PhD Advisors .

Hopefully, you will find your desired university from this list that offer fully funded PhD Programs in Public Health. You can search for more than 2300 professional and academic fellowships by signing up to view ProFellow’s fellowship database.

© Victoria Johnson 2020, all rights reserved.

Related Posts:

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Dalla Lana School of Public Health

  • PhD: Epidemiology
  • Our Programs
  • Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Degree Overview

This program aims to develop excellent epidemiologists, able to work, teach and conduct research on contributors to health; disease, disability and death; and effective measures of prevention.

The overall goal of the program is to enable graduates to acquire the necessary scientific knowledge and methodological skills to become independent researchers in epidemiology.  Graduates with a PhD in epidemiology are expected to have developed the skills which enable them to:

  • evaluate the scientific literature with respect to epidemiologic concepts, theoretical hypotheses, designs, methods, analyses and interpretation;
  • develop theoretical formulations and testable hypotheses from concepts in the literature or epidemiological observations, and propose research questions and design and write research proposals;
  • understand the practical and scientific implications of epidemiological research designs and the associated methodological and analytical techniques;
  • identify and evaluate available data for addressing specific research questions;
  • evaluate strengths and weaknesses of data collection methods, develop methods appropriate for answering specific research questions, and assess the measurement properties of data collection tools;
  • address ethical issues related to epidemiologic studies;
  • appreciate the policy implications of epidemiologic research; and,
  • write and defend a doctoral dissertation which makes a contribution to the scientific literature.

Click here to view PhD Competencies

Admission Requirements

  • Applicants generally are expected to hold a master’s degree in epidemiology or a master’s degree in a related field with strong course work in epidemiology and biostatistics.
  • Applicants are expected to have prior research experience which may be demonstrated through the completion of a master’s thesis, supervised research practicum, or other research experience, and which includes independent contributions to scientific publications.
  • Applicants should have practical experience and reasonable expertise using standard statistical software packages.
  • Click here for information regarding the application process.

Successful applicants will have research interests congruent with those of one or more members of faculty, and may have identified a possible primary or co-supervisor, prior to admission.  Admission may otherwise be conditional upon identifying a supervisor.  Thus, applicants are strongly encouraged to seek out potential supervisors, and discuss with them the possibilities, prior to applying to the degree program.  Applicants should note that identifying a potential supervisor does not guarantee admission.

Course Requirements

Course Requirements (3.5 FCE)

Required Courses (3.0)

0.5
0.5
0.5

  This course requires enrollment during the first 2 years of study
to achieve credit. After the second year, upper year students and faculty
supervisors are expected to attend and participate.

0.5
0.5
0.5

Elective Courses (0.5)

Students are best served if their elective courses form part of a coherent package of experience. In this light, students are encouraged to choose elective courses that relate to the theme of their dissertation. For example, advanced methodological courses might be appropriate for a dissertation which involves highly complex statistical analysis; pathology courses for a dissertation which focuses more on disease process; bioethics courses for a dissertation on genetic epidemiology. Electives also may fill gaps in overall training and experience: A student with a largely social sciences background might benefit from health professional level pathology courses; a student with substantial bench-sciences training, who is interested in disease screening, might consider courses in behavioural sciences, health economics, or health policy. Students are encouraged to discuss the selection of appropriate electives with their Supervisory Committees.

Emphasis in Artificial intelligence and Data Science

Students in the PhD program in the Epidemiology field of study have the option to complete an emphasis by completing appropriate coursework in a given area. The emphasis requirements will also count toward, but may exceed, the 4.0 full-course equivalent (FCE) field requirement.

Course Requirements: Emphasis in Artificial Intelligence and Data Science (1.5 FCE)

0.5
0.25
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.5
Other course(s) approved by the Program Director

Qualifying Examination

The qualifying examination is an in-class written exam:

  • This examination is held June of the first academic year and details are provided to students during the first year.
  • The examination is designed to test competence in the concepts, principles, data sources, and content of epidemiology, and the ability to apply these concepts and principles critically.
  • The examination may include multiple choice and short answer questions.
  • An Examination Committee will mark the examination, blind to the identity of the student. A passing grade is 70%. Students who achieve higher percentages will be informed that they have received grades of Honours (90%+) or High Pass (80-89%).

The written qualifying can be fulfilled after the following required courses are complete:

CHL5404H: Research Methods I (0.5) CHL5406H: Quantitative Methods for Biomedical Research (0.5) CHL5408H: Research Methods II (0.5) CHL5424H: Advanced Quantitative Methods in Epidemiology (0.5)

PhD Proposal Defense

The PhD proposal defense is a requirement for candidacy and should be completed by December of the second year.  The proposal defense can be done during the first year of study  with the approval of the Program Director. The purpose of the proposal defense is to:

  • Ensure that proposed research will result in a successful PhD dissertation.
  • Strengthen the thesis question, design, and methods through critical feedback.
  • Assess the students’ ability to conduct independent and original research.
  • Assess sufficient content/substantive knowledge base relevant to their thesis topic.
  • Provide a formal approval to proceed with the dissertation research.

Format: The proposal will include a brief and cogent review of the literature, justification of the research question, the objectives and hypotheses, design, data collection or data sources, proposed analysis strategies, timetable, ethics, and potential problems or issues. The proposal will conclude with references in proper bibliographic format. The proposal also will include a concise statement of the student’s role in the development and conduct of the research. A title page, with word count, will include the names of the Supervisor and other Supervisory Committee members. The proposal will be printed using a 12-point font, and limited to 10 single-spaced pages. The bibliography and title page are not included in the page or word counts. Appendices should be kept to a minimum.

Defense for approval of PhD proposal:

The proposal defense consists of a written outline of the dissertation proposal and an oral presentation. The completion of this process also counts as the protocol approval, which is required for candidacy. The following elements will be assessed:

  • The literature review is comprehensive and specific to the content area;
  • The proposed work demonstrates scholarly impact and innovation with respect to methods and/or substantive contribution;
  • Clarity of research question/objectives
  • Completeness and relevance to study design/research plan
  • Rationale for approach and methodology
  • Appropriateness of research design
  • Appropriateness of research methods and statistical analyses
  • Feasibility of research approach including power calculation as appropriate
  • Requirement, timeline, preliminary data etc.
  • Anticipation of difficulties/limitations and plans for management
  • Ethical considerations
  • The project is adequate and appropriate for a PhD dissertation and manageable within the time-frame and expectations of the PhD program.

The proposal presentation must be attended by the student, the Supervisory Committee and one external reviewer approved by the Program Director. The presentation will be advertised within the Graduate Department of Public Health Sciences, and students and faculty are encouraged to attend.  The external reviewer must be a Full or Associate member of SGS, ideally has research supervisory experience at the doctoral level, and must have specific research expertise in the dissertation topic or methods. The reviewer should have had no previous involvement with the development of the proposal under review.

Process for evaluation:

  • The student’s Supervisory Committee approves the written proposal at least three weeks before the anticipated date of proposal defense.
  • The student contacts the Program Director, with a copy to the Administrative Assistant, to give notice that the proposal is ready for defense, together with the name, email and brief rationale for the external reviewer. As a reminder, the reviewer must have an SGS appointment at the University of Toronto. The Program Director will approve the external reviewer via email.
  • The Supervisor contacts reviewer and committee to arrange the date/time of the presentation, and informs the program Administrative Assistant of the arrangements.
  • The Administrative Assistant reserves a room and any required audiovisual equipment specified by the student, and posts notices on bulletin boards and e-mail, including a confirmatory e-mail to the reviewers and Supervisory Committee.
  • The student distributes the proposal to the external reviewer, Supervisory Committee members, and Administrative Assistant, three weeks before the date of the proposal defense.
  • The proposal defense will begin with a 20-minute presentation of the research proposal by the student, followed by a period of questions and discussion. Presentation questions are posed to the student in two rounds, with approximately 10 minutes allotted to each reviewer per round, with the reviewer taking the lead in the questions. The Supervisor will chair the proceedings and act as timekeeper. The question period will typically be expected to last 60 to 80 minutes. The Supervisor will take notes of all issues raised.
  • At the end of formal questioning, the student and other attendees not part of the review panel will leave the room, and the reviewer and Supervisory Committee will have a general discussion of four elements (I – IV) outlined above. The reviewers will rate the performance of the student using a standardized form and an Accept/Provisional Acceptance/Not Accepted decision will be reached. The Supervisor and external reviewer will take note of the feedback and prepare a summary of the recommendations to share with the student.  Typically, the Supervisor will take notes, on the form during the defense, and email to the external reviewer for final review before sending to the student.

The following outline the implications for the evaluation:

Approval: The student may proceed with dissertation work and remaining program progression, taking note of all feedback received during the protocol defense and in consultation with the Supervisor considering minor amendments to their doctoral research accordingly. This candidacy requirement has been met.

Provisional Approval: The student must create a point-by-point response to the concerns/issues raised and make changes to the proposal within 60 days of the proposal defense. Once the Supervisory committee has approved the revisions, the proposal must be submitted to the Program Director and Administrative Assistant as a final record. An approval will then be recorded for candidacy.

Not approved: Non-approval indicates that the performance was inadequate and/or the protocol has major deficiencies according to the IV domains. In the event that the student is not approved on the first attempt, the student will be permitted one more attempt. Failure of the second attempt will result in a recommendation for program termination.

  • At the conclusion of the discussion, the student will be invited into the room to learn the general outline of the committee’s decision. The decision and the completed form must be conveyed to the Program Director and Administrative Assistant within 1 week of the defense.

Supervision

Click here to view the SGS Supervision Guidelines for Students.

Beginning prior to admission, and with the assistance of the Program Director, the applicant will explore supervisory possibilities: a faculty member with an appointment in the Division of Epidemiology who has a Full appointment in the School of Graduate Studies (SGS), and who conducts epidemiological research. In some instances, the student and the Program Director will identify both a primary and a co-supervisor. The co-supervisor generally will be a faculty member with an Associate appointment in the SGS. The faculty supervisor may be confirmed prior to beginning the program, and generally will be in place by the end of the first year.  students are encouraged to explore broadly and have wide-ranging discussions with potential supervisors.  The Program Director must approve the selection of the primary supervisor and the co-supervisor.

Role and Responsibilities

The Supervisor is responsible for providing mentorship to the student through all phases of the PhD program. Thus; to the extent possible, the Supervisor will guide the selection of courses, dissertation topic, supervisory committee membership, and supervisory committee meetings; will assist with applications for funding; will make every effort to provide funding to the student directly; and will provide references for the student on a timely basis. The Supervisor also will comment on the student’s plan for preparation for the comprehensive examination. The Supervisor will guide the development of the student’s research proposal, and the implementation and conduct of all aspects of the research; advise on writing the dissertation; correct drafts and approve the final dissertation; and attend the defense.

Supervisory Committee

With the assistance of the Supervisor, and with the approval of the Program Director, the student will assemble a Supervisory Committee within the first year of study.

The Supervisory Committee, chaired by the Supervisor, will contribute advice regarding course selection; preparation for the comprehensive examination; selection of the dissertation topic; preparation and defense of the proposal; and implementation of the research plan. The Supervisory Committee also will provide timely and constructive criticism and guidance regarding data analysis, writing the dissertation, and preparing for its defense.

Composition

The Supervisory Committee generally will comprise the Supervisor and at least two members who hold either Full or Associate appointments in the SGS and may or may not hold a primary appointment in Epidemiology. Between these individuals and the Supervisor, there should be expertise in all content and methodological areas relevant to the student’s research focus and dissertation proposal. At times, when the student’s Supervisory Committee extends beyond the requisite Supervisor plus two SGS-qualified members, additional members may not necessarily hold SGS appointments (e.g., community members).  Non-SGS members, however, may participate only as non-voting qualified observers at the SGS Final Oral Examination (i.e., observer who has been approved by the student, the Supervisor, and the SGS Vice-Dean, Programs).

Supervisory Committee meetings will be held at least every six (6) months throughout the student’s PhD program. Under certain circumstances (e.g., during times of very rapid progress), the student and the Supervisory Committee may decide there is a need for more frequent meetings.

At the end of every meeting of the Supervisory Committee, the student and the Committee will complete the Supervisory Committee Meeting Report . All present must sign the report, which will be delivered to the Program Director and filed in the student’s progress file in the Graduate Department of Public Health Sciences.

The Report of the Graduate Department of Public Health Sciences Oral Defense Committee Meeting will be completed at the end of the Departmental Defense during which the Oral Defense Committee makes the recommendation for the student to proceed to the SGS Final Oral Examination (FOE).  The Report will also be signed and delivered to the Program Director and filed in the student’s progress file in the Graduate Department of Public Health Sciences.

Progress Through the PhD

The phases of the PhD program are identified by a set of accomplishments which the student generally will attain in order, and within a satisfactory time. These phases, which will be monitored by the Program Director of the PhD program, are the identification of the Supervisor and the Supervisory Committee, completion of required and elective course work, completion of the comprehensive examination, defense of the research proposal, and defense of the dissertation (both Departmental and SGS ). Full-time students are expected to complete the PhD within four (4) years. Flex-time students may take longer, but not more than eight (8) years; they must submit a revised list of milestones, for approval by the Supervisor and the Program Director.  Click here to view the PhD Epidemiology Timeline .

Research Ethics Board Approval

All research projects in which University of Toronto students are involved at any stage must have approval from the University of Toronto Research Ethics Board (REB). This includes ongoing research projects of the Supervisor which has previously received REB approval and where REB approval is already held from a University affiliated hospital or research institute. Preliminary work necessary to prepare the proposal may also require an original REB application or amendment to the original study. 
See details of the REB application and review process at Office of Research Ethics ( www.research.utoronto.ca/for-researchers-administrators/ethics/ ).

The dissertation proposal, as approved by the Program Director, must have University of Toronto Research Ethics Board approval as a supervised research study. An application for initial REB approval (or amendment to approval for an ongoing study), will therefore follow the approval of the dissertation proposal.

Dissertation

A dissertation in epidemiology must have relevance to the health of human populations. Within that broad framework, the dissertation may deal with any topic in the areas of medicine, public health and, health care services; and the research designs and statistical methods used in these fields. A doctoral dissertation in epidemiology may involve new data, collected for the purpose of the study, or the use of data previously collected. In the latter case, the analysis must be suitably complex, and must be driven by theoretical considerations and a specific research or methodological question. The dissertation result should be new knowledge and should include findings suitable for publication in peer-reviewed epidemiology journals. It may include both methodological and substantive advances in knowledge.

The dissertation topic must include clearly posed research questions amenable to study by appropriate epidemiologic methods. The student must have contributed substantially to the identification of the research question and must have played an integral part in the planning of the investigation. Wherever appropriate, the student will also be expected to participate directly in the collection of the data. Students will be expected to analyze their own data using appropriate analytic approaches.

Format Options for Dissertation

Students may choose one of two options for preparation of the dissertation: a monograph or a series of journal articles. The monograph is the default option. It is a single report, divided into chapters: introduction, literature review, methods, results, and discussion. A reference list would be followed by various appended material, which might include data collection instruments, additional related findings, and the like.

The journal article option varies from the monograph in that the main body of the dissertation comprises approximately three (3) complete, stand-alone manuscripts; these may already have been published, or may be ready to submit for peer-review. The manuscripts should be preceded and followed by material that unites them. So, for instance, an introduction and literature review, and possibly methods, more global in scope than those included in the manuscripts themselves, would precede the manuscripts; likewise, a discussion would follow, and would tie the manuscripts together, describing how they – as a group – make a contribution to the literature. Appended material might include the methodological details that would not be present in the methods sections of the manuscripts.

Regardless of format, the student should identify and follow appropriate style guides for the preparation of the dissertation.

Dissertation Defense

The student should aim to defend the dissertation within four years of entry into the PhD program. The defense of the dissertation will take place in two stages: first, a Departmental defense, second, a formal defense (the Final Oral Examination) before a University committee according to procedures established by the School of Graduate Studies (SGS). The two defenses generally are separated by about eight weeks.

Departmental Defense

The Departmental defense will be held after the completed dissertation has been approved by all members of the student’s Supervisory Committee, and the completion of the final Supervisory Committee meeting report. The purpose of this defense is to rehearse the oral presentation for the SGS defense and to determine whether the student is ready for the SGS defense.

The student should expect constructive criticism about the clarity and length of the presentation and the quality of visual materials, as well as about the dissertation itself. In particular, the Departmental defense will confirm that:

  • The student has adequately met the requirements for a dissertation; and,
  • The student has the required level of understanding of the scientific issues involved in the dissertation work.

The Departmental defense is attended by the student, the Supervisor and other members of the Supervisory Committee, and two reviewers with full SGS appointments. At least one reviewer should have supervisory experience in epidemiology at the doctoral level. The second reviewer may be a substantive expert from another discipline. Eligible reviewers will have had no prior involvement with the design or conduct of the research, with the exception of providing references or other background material, and generally will not be the faculty who served as reviewers at the proposal defense. The presentation will be advertised within the Graduate Department of Public Health Sciences, and other students and faculty are encouraged to attend.

  • The Supervisory Committee approves the dissertation, at least four (4) weeks before the anticipated date of the defense.
  • The Supervisory Committee identifies at least two potential reviewers.
  • The student contacts the Program Director (copy to the Administrative Assistant) to give notice that the dissertation is ready for defense, together with the names and email addresses of potential reviewers. If necessary, the Program Director suggests alternative reviewers. The Program Director approves the reviewers, and will nominate one of them to be the Program Director’s representative.
  • The Supervisor contacts reviewers and arranges the date/time of the defense, and informs the Administrative Assistant of the arrangements.
  • The Administrative Assistant reserves a room and any required audiovisual equipment, as specified by the student, and posts notices on bulletin boards and e-mail, including a confirmatory e-mail to the Supervisory Committee and reviewers.
  • The student distributes a copy of the dissertation to reviewers and to Supervisory Committee members four (4) weeks before the date of the defense, with an extra copy to the Supervisor (or designate) which may be made available to other faculty or students who may wish to read it.
  • The Oral Defense Committee comprises the external reviewers, the Supervisor and the other Supervisory Committee members.
  • Before the Oral Defense Committee convenes, the student and non-committee attendees may be asked to leave the room to permit discussion of the defense process among the Oral Defense Committee members.
  • The defense will begin with a 20-minute presentation by the student of the research findings, followed by a period of questions and discussion among those present, with the two reviewers taking the lead in the questions. The Supervisor will chair the proceedings and act as timekeeper. The question period will typically be expected to last 60 to 80 minutes. The Supervisor will take notes of all issues raised.
  • At the end of formal questioning, the student and other attendees will generally be asked to leave the room, and the Oral Defense Committee will discuss any issues of concern, to provide focused, constructive, and detailed feedback to the student, Supervisor, and other members of the Supervisory Committee on the dissertation and its oral defense. The Program Director’s Representative will take note of the feedback with respect to whether the dissertation work is generally adequate for the Final Oral Examination (FOE); changes that should be made to the dissertation prior to arranging for the FOE, and improvements that could be made to the oral presentation and defense; and will prepare a summary of the recommendations. If revisions to the text of the dissertation are recommended, there will also be discussion of the timing of the FOE. The student may be invited to be present at these discussions at the discretion of the Oral Defense Committee.
  • At the end of the Departmental Defense, the Oral Defense Committee  will complete the Report of the Graduate Department of Public Health Sciences Oral Defense Committee Meeting. The options for proceedings are:

a) Dissertation is acceptable: ____    as is ____    with corrections/modifications as described in report to be prepared by the Program Director’s Representative

b) Another Supervisory Committee meeting required to see final dissertation: ____ Yes ____ No

c) If no, Committee member to see that changes are made: __________________________

d) Dissertation recommended for examination in: ______ months.

The Report will be delivered to the Program Director and filed in the student’s file in the Graduate office of Public Health Sciences.

School of Graduate Studies Final Oral Examination (FOE)

  • Click here to view Policies & Procedures, PhD
  • Click here to view the Procedures for Arranging PhD Defences

Current Student Profiles

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: Infectious disease epidemiology, genetic epidemiology

“Genetic variants associated with new onset autoimmune disease following SARS-CoV-2 infection”

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“An examination of the impact of infection on survival and prognosis in cancer populations”

Cardiovascular epidemiology, sports medicine, mental health, cardiac arrest, health services research, social determinants of health

: Machine Learning, Artificial Intelligence, Predictive Modelling, Imaging and Big Data.

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and

: Infectious disease modelling, emerging infectious diseases, mpox, real-world vaccine effectiveness

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: Emerging infectious diseases, HIV/STI epidemiology, community-based participatory research, mathematical modelling, global health security

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and : COVID-19, pediatric epidemiology, machine learning, predictive modelling, pediatric interventions

 

: Intersection of social demographic factors and infectious disease epidemiology.

The Unequal Landscape of COVID-19 in Toronto

: Global mental health, psychiatric epidemiology, excess mortality due to suicide

and

Chronic disease epidemiology, population health intervention research, social epidemiology, health equity, public health policy

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: Global health, HIV/AIDS, implementation science, social epidemiology, housing and homelessness

 

&

: Infectious disease epidemiology, vaccine-preventable diseases, global health

“Waning measles immunity in Ontario: A population-based cohort study”

and

Measuring the burden of respiratory syncytial virus among older adults living in Ontario

Infectious diseases; vaccine policy, effectiveness, and communication; health equity research

 

&

: Environmental toxicants, neurocognitive development, fetal exposures, child health, global health

“The role of environmental toxicant exposure on neurodevelopment in children: examining cognitive and behavioural symptoms among mother-child pairs from two environmental birth cohort studies.”

: Mental health, sexuality, health services research, predictive modelling, machine learning, psychometric evaluation

and : Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Spatial Epidemiology, Artificial Intelligence, Predictive Analytics

: Health services research, remote patient monitoring, population health, modifiable risk factors, molecular epidemiology, machine learning

: Polypharmacy, pharmacoepidemiology, health administrative data

: Infectious disease epidemiology, HIV, sexually transmitted infections, sexual health research, community-based research

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“Addressing the single-risk factor framework through deep learning methods: applications in multimorbidity”

: Infectious disease epidemiology, hepatitis C, HIV, and other sexually transmitted and blood-borne infections, harm reduction, and health disparities research

“Measuring uptake and effectiveness of direct-acting antiviral treatment for hepatitis C among key populations in Ontario: a population-based retrospective cohort study.”

&

Understanding the mechanisms of how estradiol loss at menopause leads to knee pain: A population-based longitudinal study of postmenopausal women

Chronic disease epidemiology, causal inference, aging, and women’s health

Ijeoma Itanyi

 

and Non-communicable disease epidemiology, Multimorbidity, Population health, Electronic Medical Records, Machine learning

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&

: Maternal and child health, global health, methodology – observational cohort studies, infectious disease epidemiology

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chronic disease epidemiology, disability studies, child health, health services research

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: Antimicrobial resistance, antimicrobial utilization, big data

: Prediction Modelling, Machine Learning, Environmental Health, Health Services Research, Premature Mortality

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: Environmental epidemiology, neurologic outcomes, methods & app data

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Twitter:

and

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Twitter:

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Participate in this research by downloading the . More information here:

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phd in public health salary in canada

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Health Services and Policy Research Doctoral Training Programs in Canada

Table 1 is an inventory of university-based health services and policy research (and related) doctoral training programs in Canada. A HSPR doctoral training program is defined as a program that is authorized to award a degree, concentration or specialization in HSPR or a related field, such as health economics, health technology assessment, health services organization and management, health services outcomes and evaluation, etc.). *Related assets are doctoral training programs in related fields, like public policy, epidemiology, and biostatistics that do not indicate a specialization or concentration in HSPR. Table 1 was compiled based on a 2014 analysis of Canada’s assets and resources in HSPR (full report is available upon request), a 2016 search of university websites in all provinces and territories across the country, and validation with key informant experts. It is possible that some programs were missed and that the list is comprehensive but not exhaustive.

School Faculty/Division Program(s)

University of British Columbia

Faculty of Medicine, School of Population and Public Health

concentrations in:

Simon Fraser University

Faculty of Health Sciences

interdisciplinary research areas in:

University of Northern British Columbia

School of Health Sciences


Interdisciplinary (with PhD courses in financing health care, epidemiology)

University of Victoria*

School of Health Information Science*

in Health Informatics*
(Related asset)

University of Alberta

School of Public Health

University of Calgary

Faculty of Medicine, Department of Community Health Sciences

:

University of Regina*

Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy (Joint School between U of S and U of R)*

*
(Related asset – no areas of HSPR-related specialization noted on website)

University of Saskatchewan*

University of Saskatchewan

College of Medicine, Department of Community Health and Epidemiology


(Related asset – no areas of HSPR-related specialization noted on website)

School of Public Health


(Related asset – no areas of HSPR-related specialization noted on website)

University of Manitoba

Faculty of Health Sciences, Community Health Sciences

with the

University of Toronto

Dalla Lana School of Public Health, Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation

, with primary concentrations in:

Dalla Lana School of Public Health

:

McMaster University

Collaboration between: Faculty of Health Sciences, Faculty of Humanities, DeGroote School of Business, Faculty of Social Sciences and Faculty of Science.

, with specialization in:

Department of Clinical Epidemiology & Biostatistics

, with fields of specialization:

Queen’s University

Department of Public Health Sciences

University of Ottawa

Faculty of Medicine, School of Epidemiology, Public Health and Preventive Medicine

, with three broad areas:

Telfer School of Management

PhD in Management, with specialization in:

University of Western

Schulich Medicine & Dentistry

University of Waterloo

School of Public Health and Health Systems

York University

Faculty of Health, School of Health Policy & Management

McGill University

Faculty of Medicine, Department of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health

: specialization in:

Université de Montréal

École de santé publique,
Département de gestion, d'évaluation et de politique de santé

, specialization in:

Laval

N/A*
Related asset:
(only in French)
(only in French)

ENAP*

ENAP*

PhD Public Administration*
(Related asset - no areas of HSPR-related specialization noted)*

University of New Brunswick*

N/A*

N/A*
(Related asset:

Dalhousie

Faculty of Medicine, Department of Community Health & Epidemiology

Faculty of Health Professions

, three main areas of concentration:

Memorial University

Faculty of Medicine, Division of Community Health & Humanities

, specialization in:

*Related asset

University of PEI*

Faculty of Science*

N/A*
(Related asset:
(ARTC))

Doctorate (PhD) Degree

Doctorate (PhD)

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Years of Experience

Gender breakdown for doctorate (phd), job satisfaction.

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phd in public health salary in canada

A  PhD degree in Human Nutrition is suitable for students with a MSc degree in Nutritional Sciences or related areas who wish to become independent researchers and/or leaders in the field of nutritional sciences. The School offers a stimulating research environment in which students can pursue a PhD degree from a wide variety of research themes due to the great diversity of research interests by the faculty members that provides opportunities in basic science, clinical research with our many hospital clinicians, as well as population health in Canada and abroad. Careers include academic positions, senior government and industry positions within in Canada and internationally.

Each graduate student has a supervisor and two members of a supervisory committee to guide the student. The supervisor will be defined at the time of admission to the program and committee members thereafter. Students are free to take many different courses to enhance their expertise but the only required course is the Doctoral comprehensive examinations unless there are courses required by the admissions committee.

The PhD thesis allows for the in-depth research in a broad range of areas in nutrition from genetic through to population health. Clinical research, population health in many areas of the world and animal models of nutritional problems are all of interest to our broad range of academics in human nutrition.

NOTE: Contacting potential supervisors in conjunction with applying will strengthen applications (see Applying for Graduate Studies in Human Nutrition ).

PhD in Human Nutrition - see program details

Doctor of philosophy (ph.d.) human nutrition, program requirement:.

A thesis for the doctoral degree must constitute original scholarship and must be a distinct contribution to knowledge. It must show familiarity with previous work in the field and must demonstrate ability to plan and carry out research, organize results, and defend the approach and conclusions in a scholarly manner. The research presented must meet current standards of the discipline; as well, the thesis must clearly demonstrate how the research advances knowledge in the field. Finally, the thesis must be written in compliance with norms for academic and scholarly expression and for publication in the public domain.

Required Courses

Nutrition and Dietetics: Orientation to graduate studies in nutrition including research ethics and safety training, library and literature search skills.

Offered by: Human Nutrition

  • Restriction(s): Open to graduate students in Human Nutrition only.
  • Grace S Marquis

Nutrition and Dietetics: An examination that must be passed by all doctoral candidates in order to continue in the doctoral program.

  • See Faculty Regulations
  • Winter 2025
  • Stephanie Chevalier

Nutrition and Dietetics: Presentation of advanced thesis research in Colloquium towards the end of the program.

  • Chelsia A Gillis

Program Requirements

The general requirements for graduate studies at McGill University are described in the Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies website .

Students must complete NUTR 695 within the first year of study and NUTR 701 by the end of the second year of study (PhD III), and NUTR 796 near the end of their program.

Additional Courses

Additional courses may be required, such as courses prescribed by the Admissions Committee as a condition of admission into the program, or courses prescribed by the supervisory committee as part of the training program.

Thesis Supervisory Committee

The School requires students registered in the PhD program to have a supervisory committee comprised of the student's supervisor (or the student's co-supervisors) plus two additional members who will normally be full-time members of the School's faculty.

Students are advised to work together with their supervisors to establish a thesis supervisory committee within 3 months of starting the program.

Important: Supervisory committee members must respect the University's Policies on Conflict of Interest . See also Recognizing Conflicts

Doctoral Comprehensive Examination

Thesis submission procedure.

Important: Note that there are critical deadlines associated with the submission of a thesis.

Students are advised to familiarize themselves of the University's Guidelines for the Preparation and Submission of theses several months prior to submission.

Thesis submission is made through myThesis platform MSc and PhD where all required information is provided to students and their supervisor(s).

In brief, students initiate the process by completing an "Intent to submit thesis" approximately 2 months prior to submission. Supervisors must confirm that the suggested external reviewers have agreed before the student enters their names on myThesis. Examiners will then receive an automated invitation and accept/decline. Once the advisory committee agrees that the thesis is ready for submission, the student submits. The thesis will then be reviewed by the GPD for proper content and format. Allow 2 weeks prior to deadline in case the thesis has to be returned to students for corrections and resubmitted.

See also Requirements and Policies on Graduate Studies

Department and university information, school of human nutrition.

School of Human Nutrition

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  1. PhD Public Health Sciences

    PhD students in the School of Public Health Sciences can pursue a designated field to exemplify an area of expertise within their broader program. Fields include epidemiology and biostatistics, health evaluation, health informatics, health and environment, global health, aging and health and work and health . The University of Waterloo's unique ...

  2. PhD Public Health jobs in Canada

    Research Analyst, Health Economics and Outcomes Research (HEOR) Broadstreet Health Economics and Outcomes Research. Hybrid work in Vancouver, BC. $60,000-$75,000 a year. Full-time. Monday to Friday. Easily apply. 1-2 years of health research experience in a consultancy (ideal) or academic work environment.

  3. PhD Public Health Sciences

    OUR PhD PROGRAM 2023. The Department of Public Health Sciences has broadened its PhD program to include all areas of research expertise represented in our faculty including, but not limited to, epidemiology, biostatistics, qualitative, mixed- and community-based methods, the use of health and public-health services, program evaluation, clinical epidemiology, health equity, global health ...

  4. Doctor of Public Health

    Theodore Witek. The Dalla Lana School of Public Health (DLSPH) at the University of Toronto is pleased to announce the implementation of a Doctor of Public Health (DrPH) program - the first ever offered by a Canadian university. The program is aligned with the School's Academic Plan 2019-2024 and will serve to bolster and strengthen public ...

  5. Doctor of Philosophy in Population and Public Health (PhD)

    The School of Population and Public Health offers a research-oriented PhD program that enables students with a masters degree to advance their knowledge and skills in epidemiological and biostatistical methods. Students will further their research training by applying these methods to independent thesis research under the supervision of a faculty member. Students can pursue thesis research in ...

  6. Community Health Sciences (PhD)

    Winnipeg, MB R3E 0W3 Canada. [email protected]. Phone: 204-789-3655. The Community Health Sciences (PhD) program prepares you for a career teaching community health sciences, training other researchers, designing and executing major research projects and serving as a senior advisor or consultant in health care policy and planning. Gain broad ...

  7. PhD Programs

    PhD Specializations. Choose from four specializations to increase your ability to generate new knowledge in the field of public health: PhD in Epidemiology. PhD in Health Promotion and Socio-behavioural Sciences. PhD in Health Services and Policy Research. PhD in Public Health.

  8. PHS Doctoral Degrees

    Who will advance public health in Canada and around the world? It could be you! More than 800 graduate students are enrolled in doctoral and master's programs across many areas of study in one of the best schools of public health in the world. ... PhD: Social and Behavioural Health Sciences.

  9. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

    The SPPH PhD in Population and Public Health is an advanced research degree that prepares graduates to become independent researchers and contribute to the development of health research in Canada and around the world. PhD students conduct research in a wide variety of topic areas related to population and public health, ranging from ...

  10. Public Health in Canada: 2024 PhD's Guide

    Why Study Public Health in Canada. Studying Public Health in Canada is a great choice, as there are 12 universities that offer PhD degrees on our portal. Over 323,000 international students choose Canada for their studies, which suggests you'll enjoy a vibrant and culturally diverse learning experience and make friends from all over the world.

  11. Fully Funded PhD Programs in Public Health

    University of South Carolina, PhD in Public Health. (Columbia, SC): All PhD students are offered an assistantship for 3 or 4 years, in-state tuition, a minimum stipend of $5,000-$6,000 / semester, minimum $15,000 tuition supplement over three years, In addition, doctoral applicants are eligible for some competitive fellowships.

  12. PhD Public Health

    PhD Public Health. Doctoral level education is designed to provide advanced knowledge and skills to conduct independent research in public health, particularly for individuals interested in pursuing careers in academic settings, government, industry, consulting and community health agencies. The PhD specialization in public health provides the ...

  13. PhD: Epidemiology

    Degree Overview This program aims to develop excellent epidemiologists, able to work, teach and conduct research on contributors to health; disease, disability and death; and effective measures of prevention. Objective The overall goal of the program is to enable graduates to acquire the necessary scientific knowledge and methodological skills to become independent researchers in epidemiology

  14. What Can You Do with a Doctorate in Public Health?

    Epidemiologists, on the other hand, earn a median annual age of $75,690. The top-paying PhD in public heath jobs for this particular position pay $112,600 per year or more. Career opportunities for a PhD in public health as a public health advisors can earn a person an average of $99,730 per year. However, if a person chooses PhD public health ...

  15. 166 Phd public health jobs in Canada

    Search Phd public health jobs. Get the right Phd public health job with company ratings & salaries. 166 open jobs for Phd public health.

  16. PhD in Public Health jobs

    Postdoctoral Fellow in Public Health. University of Alberta. Hybrid work in Edmonton, AB. From $39,763.80 a year. Full-time. PhD in public health, epidemiology, environmental studies, Indigenous research, or related field. Examine current climate-food-health nexus in policies related…. Posted 30+ days ago ·.

  17. phd position in public health jobs

    Postdoctoral Fellow in Public Health. University of Alberta. Hybrid work in Edmonton, AB. From $39,763.80 a year. Full-time. PhD in public health, epidemiology, environmental studies, Indigenous research, or related field. Examine current climate-food-health nexus in policies related…. Posted 17 days ago ·.

  18. 14 Ph.Ds in Public Health in Canada

    Find the best Ph.D in the field of Public Health from top universities in Canada. Check all 14 programmes. Explore; Decide; Apply; Explore. View disciplines. Agriculture & Forestry ; ... Public Health Sciences - Aging, Health and Well-Being. Ph.D. / Full-time, Part-time / On Campus. 9,815 EUR / year. 4 years.

  19. PhD programmes in Public Health in Canada

    Find the best PhD programmes in the field of Public Health from top universities in Canada. Check all 15 programmes. Explore; Decide; Apply; Explore. View disciplines. ... Canada. Ranked top 4%. View Programme Information. Add to compare. Public Health Sciences. Ph. D. / Full-time / On Campus. 4,154 EUR / year.

  20. Health Services and Policy Research Doctoral Training Programs in Canada

    Overview. Table 1 is an inventory of university-based health services and policy research (and related) doctoral training programs in Canada. A HSPR doctoral training program is defined as a program that is authorized to award a degree, concentration or specialization in HSPR or a related field, such as health economics, health technology ...

  21. Doctorate (PhD) Salary in Canada

    Avg. Salary C$60k — C$131k. Certificate (Cert), Information Security. Avg. Salary C$42k — C$118k. Doctor of Psychology (PsyD) Avg. Salary C$57k — C$93k. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Avg ...

  22. PhD Program

    PhD in Human Nutrition - see program details [program long PHD-HNUTRI-T X HNU4 MAJOR] Program Requirements The general requirements for graduate studies at McGill University are described in the Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies website. Students must complete NUTR 695 within the first year of study and NUTR 701 by the end of the second year of ...

  23. Public Health average salary in Canada, 2024

    How much does a Public health make in Canada? $84,013. / Annual. Based on 3022 salaries. The average public health salary in Canada is $84,013 per year or $43.08 per hour. Entry-level positions start at $69,469 per year, while most experienced workers make up to $112,833 per year. Median.

  24. #1051

    With a rich background in public health and nutri. Join us as Sally Norton, MPH, delves into the often-overlooked dangers of oxalates found in common superfoods. With a rich background in public health and nutri ... MD-PhD. Frequency. Updated Weekly . Published. August 30, 2024 at 3:12 PM UTC . Length. 11 min ... The United States and Canada ...