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| Since its modest beginning more than 40 years ago, the Department of International Health has developed a renowned, multidisciplinary faculty and grown into a global leadership role in health research, policy analysis, and program implementation. International Health was acknowledged as a distinct academic discipline in 1961, when the first formal program of its type was introduced at Johns Hopkins. The program grew out of longstanding interests at the School of Public Health in the global health problems of developing countries and in relevant research and program management by international agencies and national governments. In 1967, the Division of International Health within the Department of Public Health Administration became the independent Department of International Health. Under the leadership of Carl Taylor, the Department focused its research and training on the delivery of global health care at the community level and on health services planning for developing countries. In 1985, Robert Black became chair. Since then, the Department has added and strengthened subject areas, which now include: - prevention and control of disease
- vaccine development, evaluation, and policy
- human nutrition
- behavioral and community interventions
- health systems policy, planning, and management
- humanitarian assistance
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