Causes of Human Disease: Understanding Causes of Disease

Posted 2 years ago by University of Leeds

Study Method : Online
Duration : 2 weeks
Subject : Healthcare & Medicine
Overview
Learn the epidemiological methods used to understand the causes of diseases and how social factors influence their development.
Course Description

Discover epidemiology: the study of diseases.

What causes human disease? Why do some people get a disease but others don’t? Through this course, you’ll learn how epidemiologists are helping to find answers to these complex questions and how the health of a population is measured and analysed. By looking at stimulating case studies, you’ll explore how the social determinants of health contribute to human disease and how health inequalities exist. You will then look at health inequalities across the globe and investigate how and why different socioeconomic factors determine human health.

The course is suitable for anyone with a general interest in the science behind causes of human disease. No previous knowledge or experience is required. If you are working in nursing, healthcare or social care, or just wish to learn more, this course is designed to support you as a professional. By completing all aspects of the course you will have achieved 14 hours of CPD time.

Requirements

The course is suitable for anyone with a general interest in the science behind causes of human disease. No previous knowledge or experience is required. If you are working in nursing, healthcare or social care, or just wish to learn more, this course is designed to support you as a professional. By completing all aspects of the course you will have achieved 14 hours of CPD time.

Career Path
  • Explain how evidence is gathered through epidemiology to measure the health of the population and understand causes of human disease.
  • Discuss the social and environmental factors that contribute to causes of disease and poor health.
  • Summarise key features and differences of global patterns of disease with a focus on health inequalities.