UA Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health and Diné College Award First Certificates in Public Health
May 15, 2009
The UA Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health at The University of Arizona in Tucson and Diné College, a Navajo tribal college in Tsaile, Ariz., awarded the first Certificates in Public Health to nine Native American students during a May 7 commencement ceremony at Diné College.
These certificates mark an academic achievement that has been more than seven years in the making for both colleges. The nine students who received the Certificate in Public Health are all Community Health Representatives (CHRs) for the Navajo Nation.
Navajo Tribal Community Health Representatives (CHRs) are important health-care workers who live and work in the Navajo community and provide the tribe’s citizens with hands-on care and information on current medical topics and staying healthy. As full-time, paid employees of the Navajo Nation government, CHRs help meet the need for increased basic health care and instruction in Native American homes and communities, greater involvement in their own tribes’ health programs and more participation by Native Americans in identifying and solving their health problems.
CHRs are a “widely recognized and widely appreciated personnel whose function is to get the health-care knowledge and education out into the community,” said Ed Garrison, MD, MPH, a faculty member at Diné College since 1983. Dr. Garrison’s academic background includes degrees in biology, anthropology and public health – a combination he considers ideal for his work among the Navajo people. He also worked to establish the public health program at Diné College in 1998.
CHRs serve as professional health personnel who stay up-to-date on public health issues that affect the Navajo. For example, with the current swine flu cases spreading, Dr. Garrison pointed out that the CHRs are out in the Navajo community explaining the situation and teaching people how to protect themselves.
“CHRs are the first-line responders,” said Dr. Garrison, “whether it’s swine flu, a weather emergency or a forest fire. They are the ones out there in the community, knowing what is going on and what people are thinking and feeling.” CHRs function as the “eyes and ears of the federal government, tribal health system and Navajo Nation,” educating the tribe about health care issues and communicating health care information from the tribal members to their government.
This new certification is a “stepping stone” for CHRs and shows that a CHR has taken the 12 college credits which cover the basics of public health. These college hours may be used later as the foundation for a two-year associate’s in public health degree or a four-year bachelor’s of science in public health degree from Diné College.
For CHRs already employed by the Navajo tribe, the federal government contract for their scope of work now has specified that they must complete the certification within a reasonable amount of time.
Credit hours ensure that all CHRs have the same knowledge base and that they all have successfully completed an overview of public health. These highly skilled community members and background first responders now will have the opportunity to integrate all their health-care experience into a public health perspective. This particular joint certification program specifically is tailored to the Navajo nation’s public health needs and concerns. Presenting this information in a culturally appropriate way is part of the work of CHRs in the community.
For more information about the Certificate in Public Health, visit the UA Zuckerman College of Public Health Web site, www.publichealth.arizona.edu/news/CHR_Certificate/, or contact Lorraine Varela,(520) 626-5664, e-mail varelal@email.arizona.edu.
For more information about Diné College, visit the Web site www.dinecollege.edu/
For more information about Ed Garrison, MD, visit the Web site www.mcb.arizona.edu/careers/garrison.html
