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1 - 10 of 61 results for: PEDS

PEDS 60Q: United Nations Peacekeeping (INTNLREL 60Q)

Focus is on an examination of United Nations peacekeeping, from its inception in 1956 in the wake of the Suez Crisis, to its increasingly important role as an enforcer of political stability in sub-Saharan Africa. Examines the practice of "classic" peacekeeping as it developed during the Cold War, the rise and fall of "second-generation" peacekeeping, and the reemergence of a muscular form of peacekeeping in sub-Saharan Africa more recently. Topics include the basic history of the United Nations since 1945, he fundamentals of the United Nations Charter, and the historical trajectory of U.N. peaeckeeping and the evolving arguments of its proponents and critics over the years.
Last offered: Winter 2022 | UG Reqs: WAY-EDP

PEDS 65N: Understanding Children's Health Disparities

The social and economic factors that affect children and their health status. The principal sources of disparities in the health of children in the U.S. are not biologic, but social and economic. Topics include ethnic, cultural, and behavioral factors that affect children's health, both directly and indirectly; lack of health insurance; and current proposals for health care reform, focusing specifically on how they will impact existing health disparities among children.
Last offered: Winter 2022 | UG Reqs: GER:DB-SocSci, GER:EC-AmerCul, WAY-EDP, WAY-SI

PEDS 102: Pre-field Course for Ghana Impact Abroad in Public Health and Children's Health

Enrollment restricted to undergraduates participating in Impact Abroad's Ghana Program. Focus is on understanding service-learning principles and the historical, social and political context of Ghana's health system.
Last offered: Spring 2021

PEDS 116: Peer Education and the Campus Culture

This class prepares you to become a PEER (prevent, educate, empower, refer) educator.Multidisciplinary perspectives of public health, health psychology, sociology, and practice as it relates to substance use, sexual citizenship, and well-being. Students apply theoretical frameworks to health topics and outreach projects with attention to the reality of students¿ lived experiences. Participation in this course is required for prospective PEERs, but does not guarantee a future position as a PEER. Learn more: https://vaden.stanford.edu/super/programs/peers
Terms: Spr | Units: 2-3

PEDS 124: Global Child Health (HUMBIO 124C, MED 124)

This course introduces students to key challenges to the health and well being of children worldwide. We explicitly focus on child and public health problems in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) to reflect the global burden of disease among children. We will review the scope and magnitude of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality, as well as examine regional variations. We will then identify both medical and non-medical causes, effects of, as well as interventions to address, some of the biggest child health problems. The course will also prevent an overview of the role of culture, gender, and non-state actors (NGOs, foundations, etc.) on health and health policy. Enrollment limited to juniors, seniors and and graduate students or the consent of the instructor. HUMBIO students must enroll in HUMBIO 124C. Med/Graduate students must enroll in MED 124 or PEDS 124
Terms: Aut | Units: 3

PEDS 126: Design for Health: Building Early Relational Health (DESIGN 263)

We aim to address key challenges in early relational health, which is defined as healthy and positive and nurturing parent/caregiver child relationships, in the context of safe and secure communities. One in 4 adults in the US has an adverse child experience, which is associated with lifetime risks of mental and physical chronic health conditions. By applying "health literacy" as a lens in the constraint of pediatric primary care, we aim to develop key insights and to design solutions to these key challenges - with a focus on children, families and communities that have been historically and systematically undeserved. To do so, we will listen deeply to expert perspectives from healthcare workers, community leaders, and family members. We will apply human-centered design and related methodologies in real-world settings (hospital, clinics and homes), responsive to problems prioritized by system leaders. We will address questions that arise when seeking to address literacy and language ba more »
We aim to address key challenges in early relational health, which is defined as healthy and positive and nurturing parent/caregiver child relationships, in the context of safe and secure communities. One in 4 adults in the US has an adverse child experience, which is associated with lifetime risks of mental and physical chronic health conditions. By applying "health literacy" as a lens in the constraint of pediatric primary care, we aim to develop key insights and to design solutions to these key challenges - with a focus on children, families and communities that have been historically and systematically undeserved. To do so, we will listen deeply to expert perspectives from healthcare workers, community leaders, and family members. We will apply human-centered design and related methodologies in real-world settings (hospital, clinics and homes), responsive to problems prioritized by system leaders. We will address questions that arise when seeking to address literacy and language barriers to highly efficacious care for those in greatest need. Parents will be trained alongside Students with design skills to tackle this challenge. Results of this work will inform redesign across the >3000 pediatric clinics serving low-income communities through the Reach Out and Read National Network.
Terms: Spr | Units: 2
Instructors: Sanders, L. (PI)

PEDS 144: Biosocial-Biocultural Perspectives on Disability in Education (EDUC 144B, EDUC 474B)

Disability is a complex phenomenon contested along biopolitical and sociopolitical vectors in the field of education and other attendant fields such as humanities, history, and biosciences. These contestations influence the ways in which disabled lives are supported and understood in schools and other public institutions. Students will be able to critically evaluate the biosocial, biopolitical, and sociopolitical nature of disability and attend to intersectionality in relation to education systems, as well as build strong repertoires of transdisciplinary knowledge that can be applied in their fields of interest.
Terms: Win | Units: 1-3

PEDS 150: Social and Environmental Determinants of Health (HUMBIO 122H, PEDS 250)

Race, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status are just a few of the social determinants that contribute to health disparities. Apply a racial equity lens to drive a deeper understanding of how vulnerable populations are uniquely at risk for poorer health outcomes. Explore how where we live, work, learn, and play influences health status, and examine the processes through which social and environmental determinants adversely affect health and drive inequities across the lifespan. With experts from multiple sectors, this course will discuss innovative clinical, public health, policy, advocacy, and community engaged solutions to advance health equity. Explore the unique role of health professionals in addressing health inequities. HUMBIO students should enroll in HUMBIO 122H. Undergraduates may enroll in PEDS 150. Graduate/Med Students should enroll in PEDS 250. (Cardinal Course certified by the Haas Center).
Terms: Win | Units: 3 | UG Reqs: WAY-EDP

PEDS 199: Undergraduate Directed Reading/Research

Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-18 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Aby, J. (PI) ; Addala, A. (PI) ; Agarwal, R. (PI) ; Alexander, S. (PI) ; Almond, C. (PI) ; Alvira, C. (PI) ; Amieva, M. (PI) ; Ammerman, S. (PI) ; Amylon, M. (PI) ; Anand, S. (PI) ; Anderson, C. (PI) ; Anoshiravani, A. (PI) ; Ariagno, R. (PI) ; Arvin, A. (PI) ; Avila, J. (PI) ; Aye, T. (PI) ; Bacchetta, R. (PI) ; Bachrach, L. (PI) ; Balagtas, J. (PI) ; Barr, D. (PI) ; Bass, D. (PI) ; Benitz, W. (PI) ; Bentley, B. (PI) ; Bergman, D. (PI) ; Bernstein, D. (PI) ; Bernstein, J. (PI) ; Berquist, W. (PI) ; Bhargava, S. (PI) ; Bhutani, V. (PI) ; Blankenberg, F. (PI) ; Blankenburg, R. (PI) ; Bonifacio, S. (PI) ; Bressack, M. (PI) ; Browne, M. (PI) ; Buckingham, B. (PI) ; Buckway, C. (PI) ; Burgos, T. (PI) ; Butte, A. (PI) ; Campbell, C. (PI) ; Carlson, J. (PI) ; Carmichael, S. (PI) ; Castillo, R. (PI) ; Castro, R. (PI) ; Castro, R. (PI) ; Ceresnak, S. (PI) ; Chamberlain, L. (PI) ; Chang, K. (PI) ; Chen, S. (PI) ; Cheng, A. (PI) ; Chin, C. (PI) ; Chinthrajah, S. (PI) ; Chiu, B. (PI) ; Cho, M. (PI) ; Chock, V. (PI) ; Cohen, H. (PI) ; Cohen, R. (PI) ; Conrad, C. (PI) ; Contag, C. (PI) ; Contopoulos-Ioannidis, D. (PI) ; Cornfield, D. (PI) ; Cox, K. (PI) ; Crain, L. (PI) ; Crawley, L. (PI) ; Czechowicz, A. (PI) ; DOSSANTOS, L. (PI) ; Dahl, G. (PI) ; Darmstadt, G. (PI) ; Davis, K. (PI) ; Dekker, C. (PI) ; Dorenbaum, A. (PI) ; Druzin, M. (PI) ; Dubin, A. (PI) ; Ebel, N. (PI) ; Edwards, M. (PI) ; Egan, E. (PI) ; El-Sayed, Y. (PI) ; Enns, G. (PI) ; Feinstein, J. (PI) ; Feldman, B. (PI) ; Feldman, H. (PI) ; Fisher, J. (PI) ; Ford, J. (PI) ; Frankel, L. (PI) ; Frankovich, J. (PI) ; Franzon, D. (PI) ; Gans, H. (PI) ; Garcia-Careaga, M. (PI) ; Geertsma, F. (PI) ; Gifford, C. (PI) ; Glader, B. (PI) ; Glasscock, G. (PI) ; Gloyn, A. (PI) ; Golden, N. (PI) ; Gomez-Ospina, N. (PI) ; Goodyer, W. (PI) ; Gould, J. (PI) ; Govindaswami, B. (PI) ; Grady Jr., S. (PI) ; Grimm, P. (PI) ; Gruber, T. (PI) ; Gutierrez, K. (PI) ; Haileselassie, B. (PI) ; Halamek, L. (PI) ; Halpern-Felsher, B. (PI) ; Hammer, G. (PI) ; Hammer, L. (PI) ; Harris, S. (PI) ; Hintz, S. (PI) ; Hong, D. (PI) ; Hood, K. (PI) ; Horwitz, S. (PI) ; Hsu, J. (PI) ; Hudgins, L. (PI) ; Huffman, L. (PI) ; Hurwitz, M. (PI) ; Imperial, J. (PI) ; Ismail, M. (PI) ; Jameson, S. (PI) ; Jeng, M. (PI) ; Joshi, S. (PI) ; Kache, S. (PI) ; Kahana, M. (PI) ; Kapphahn, C. (PI) ; Kaufman, B. (PI) ; Kay, M. (PI) ; Kerner, J. (PI) ; Kharbanda, S. (PI) ; Kim, J. (PI) ; King, B. (PI) ; Koltai, P. (PI) ; Kraus, E. (PI) ; Krawczeski, C. (PI) ; Krensky, A. (PI) ; Kumar, M. (PI) ; Kuo, C. (PI) ; LaBeaud, D. (PI) ; Lacayo, N. (PI) ; Lee, H. (PI) ; Lee, T. (PI) ; Leonard, M. (PI) ; Lewis, D. (PI) ; Limon, J. (PI) ; Lin, M. (PI) ; Link, M. (PI) ; Lock, J. (PI) ; Loe, I. (PI) ; Longhurst, C. (PI) ; Loutit, C. (PI) ; Lowe, H. (PI) ; Lowe, J. (PI) ; Luna-Fineman, S. (PI) ; Maahs, D. (PI) ; Magnus, D. (PI) ; Majzner, R. (PI) ; Maldonado, Y. (PI) ; Manning, M. (PI) ; Maric, I. (PI) ; Marina, N. (PI) ; Mark, J. (PI) ; Marsden, A. (PI) ; Mathur, M. (PI) ; McCarty, J. (PI) ; McGhee, S. (PI) ; McNamara, N. (PI) ; Mellins, E. (PI) ; Mendoza, F. (PI) ; Milla, C. (PI) ; Misra, S. (PI) ; Moss, R. (PI) ; Murphy, D. (PI) ; Murphy, J. (PI) ; Nadeau, K. (PI) ; Nadimpalli, S. (PI) ; Namjoshi, S. (PI) ; Narla, A. (PI) ; Neely, E. (PI) ; O'Brodovich, H. (PI) ; Oghalai, J. (PI) ; Olson, I. (PI) ; Pageler, N. (PI) ; Park, K. (PI) ; Pasca, A. (PI) ; Patel, L. (PI) ; Peng, L. (PI) ; Penn, A. (PI) ; Perry, S. (PI) ; Pertofsky, C. (PI) ; Phibbs, C. (PI) ; Pico, E. (PI) ; Pizzo, P. (PI) ; Porteus, M. (PI) ; Potter, D. (PI) ; Priest, J. (PI) ; Prober, C. (PI) ; Profit, J. (PI) ; Punn, R. (PI) ; Rabinovitch, M. (PI) ; Ragavan, N. (PI) ; Rangaswami, A. (PI) ; Reddy, S. (PI) ; Rhine, W. (PI) ; Robinson, T. (PI) ; Robinson, T. (PI) ; Rodriguez, E. (PI) ; Roncarolo, M. (PI) ; Rosen, M. (PI) ; Rosenthal, D. (PI) ; Roth, S. (PI) ; Ruiz-Lozano, P. (PI) ; Russell, C. (PI) ; Sage, J. (PI) ; Sakamoto, K. (PI) ; Sandborg, C. (PI) ; Sanders, L. (PI) ; Sarwal, M. (PI) ; Scheinker, D. (PI) ; Schrijver, I. (PI) ; Schroeder, A. (PI) ; Seidel, F. (PI) ; Shah, A. (PI) ; Sharek, P. (PI) ; Shaw, G. (PI) ; Shaw, R. (PI) ; Shepard, E. (PI) ; Shin, A. (PI) ; Sibley, E. (PI) ; Sivakumar, D. (PI) ; Smith, A. (PI) ; Song, D. (PI) ; Sourkes, B. (PI) ; Spunt, S. (PI) ; Stevenson, D. (PI) ; Stirling, J. (PI) ; Stuart, E. (PI) ; Sutherland, S. (PI) ; Tacy, T. (PI) ; Thienemann, M. (PI) ; Tierney, S. (PI) ; Twist, C. (PI) ; Van Meurs, K. (PI) ; Wall, D. (PI) ; Wang, C. (PI) ; Weinacht, K. (PI) ; Weinberg, K. (PI) ; Willert, J. (PI) ; Wilson, D. (PI) ; Wiryawan, B. (PI) ; Wise, P. (PI) ; Wong, C. (PI) ; Wright, G. (PI) ; Wu, S. (PI) ; Wusthoff, C. (PI) ; Yen, S. (PI) ; Contag, C. (SI)

PEDS 202A: Practical Applications for Qualitative Data Analysis

Terms: Aut | Units: 3
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