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Project EARTH: Lessons from 10 Years of Teaching Public Health Skills for Resource-Limited Settings
Wilderness & Environmental Medicine
  • James M. Stoots, East Tennessee State University
  • Dara C. Young, East Tennessee State University
  • Randolph Wykoff, East Tennessee State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
4-6-2022
Description

The College of Public Health at East Tennessee State University started a program in 2011 to teach the skills needed to protect and promote health and well-being in resource-limited settings. The need to provide public health services in resource-limited settings exists in both wilderness and isolated settings and when a disaster disrupts basic societal infrastructure. In these settings, lives may depend on the ability to provide water, sanitation, hygiene, shelter, first aid, and other basic services. Over the last decade, the college expanded the program considerably into what is now known as Project EARTH (Employing Available Resources to Transform Health) that now includes several different academic courses as well as programs designed to develop innovative solutions to address the needs of people in resource-limited settings. Working in a resource-limited setting requires effectively utilizing locally available resources to improve and protect people's health and well-being. Project EARTH focuses on teaching students to design and create specific products for these situations while progressively honing those cross-cutting skills necessary to work effectively in these settings-notably teamwork, creativity, and resilience. To this end, Project EARTH implements a sequential learning process that includes significant hands-on training and simulated experiences with debriefing opportunities at the end of each activity. Project EARTH may serve as a useful model for others considering a similar training program.

Citation Information
James M. Stoots, Dara C. Young and Randolph Wykoff. "Project EARTH: Lessons from 10 Years of Teaching Public Health Skills for Resource-Limited Settings" Wilderness & Environmental Medicine Vol. 33 Iss. 2 (2022) p. 219 - 223 ISSN: 1080-6032
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/jmichael-stoots/7/