CVEN 5119: Introduction to Global Health for Engineers & CVEN 5149: Applied Global Health for Engineers
8:45-11:15, Wednesdays, SEEC 265, Spring 2026, 5-Week Sessions 1 & 2
Global Health for Engineers CVEN 5119-001 (5-Week Session 1)
Global Health, a multidisciplinary academic and professional discipline, works to address the unequal distribution of disease determinants and burden in low income communities. In this course, engineering students engaged in Global Engineering, poverty reduction efforts, technology and intervention design will be introduced to the conditions, context, and professional activities and standards of global health practice. Recommended restrictions of enrollment in Mortenson Center graduate program or instructor approval.
Applied Global Health for Engineers CVEN 5149-001 (5-Week Session 2)
Global Health, a multidisciplinary academic and professional discipline, works to address the unequal distribution of disease determinants and burden in low income communities. In this course, engineering students engaged in Global Engineering, poverty reduction efforts, technology and intervention design will be introduced to the conditions, context, and professional activities and standards of global health practice. This course is a 5-week, 1 credit module is designed to follow泭, Introduction to Global Health for Engineers. Recommended prerequisite: enrollment in Mortenson Center graduate program or instructor approval.
Learning Outcomes
By the end of the course, students will be able to:
- Explain the major global health challenges and the role of engineering in addressing them.
- Analyze global health data and metrics, and use them to inform engineering design.
- Assess how environmental, social, and technological determinants interact to shape health outcomes.
- Critically evaluate case studies of engineering interventions in low-resource settings.
- Propose an innovative engineering solution to a pressing global health problem.
Course Requirements
- Participation and weekly discussion contributions泭(20%)
- Short reflection papers泭(5 2 pages; 25%)
- Case study presentation (group)泭(20%)
- Final project proposal (individual)泭(35%)
Weekly Schedule
Session 1 Foundations of Global Health for Engineers
- Topics: History of global health; burden of disease; role of engineers in shaping health outcomes.
- Case study: Water supply, sanitation, and cholera.
- Readings:
- Farmer, P.泭Pathologies of Power泭(selected chapters).
- WHO. What is Global Health? (overview).
- Assignment:泭Reflection paper: How should engineers define their role in global health?
Session 2 Global Burden of Disease and Health Metrics
- Topics: DALYs, QALYs, mortality/morbidity indicators; IHME and WHO datasets.
- Hands-on: Critique a Global Burden of Disease visualization.
- Readings:
- Murray CJL et al., Global Burden of Disease 2019.泭The Lancet泭(棗措梗娶措勳梗滄).
- IHME Data Portal (students explore data).
- Assignment:泭Short analysis of a health metric relevant to an engineering challenge.
Session 3 Environmental Determinants of Health
- Topics: WASH, air quality, household energy, climate change impacts.
- Case study: Tubeho Neza Rwanda
- Readings:
- Pr羹ss-Ust羹n A. et al., Preventing disease through healthy environments. WHO.
- Case study handout (provided).
- Assignment:泭2-page memo: Propose an engineering intervention targeting an environmental health determinant.
Session 4 Health Systems and Technology in Low-Resource Settings
- Topics: Health system structures; frugal innovation; biomedical engineering challenges.
- Guest discussion: Designing technologies for constraints.
- Readings:
- 兜晨倏.泭Primary Health Care Systems Framework.
- 詁紼勞幛.泭Global Grand Challenges in Health Technologies.
- Assignment:泭Group discussion prep: Identify a failed health technology and analyze why.
Session 5 Infectious Diseases and Engineering Responses
- Topics: Malaria, TB, HIV, diarrheal diseases; diagnostics; cold chain and vaccines.
- Case study: Ebola outbreak response.
- Readings:
- Piot, P.泭No Time to Lose泭(selected chapters).
- M矇decins Sans Fronti癡res. Ebola: Pushed to the Limit.
- Assignment:泭Reflection: How can engineers design resilient health technologies for epidemics?
Session 6 Non-Communicable Diseases and Urban Health
- Topics: CVD, diabetes, cancers, mental health; built environment; urbanization.
- Group activity: Engineering solutions for NCD risk reduction.
- Readings:
- Beaglehole R. et al., Priority actions for NCDs.泭The Lancet.
- 惚捧-晨硃莉勳喧硃喧.泭Urbanization and Health.
- Assignment:泭Short paper: Propose an engineering solution to reduce an urban health risk.
Session 7 Data, Sensors, and Remote Sensing in Global Health
- Topics: IoT health monitoring, environmental sensors, satellite data for outbreak prediction.
- Hands-on: Explore Sentinel-2 imagery for water quality and vector habitats.
- Readings:
- Thomas, E. et al., Sensor-informed models for water quality and health.
- NASA Earth Science Applied Sciences case study.
- Assignment:泭Data exercise: Use remote sensing data to analyze a health-related environmental trend.
Session 8 Humanitarian Engineering and Global Health Emergencies
- Topics: Disaster and conflict settings; rapid deployment infrastructure; refugee health.
- Workshop: Design a rapid-deployment WASH system for emergencies.
- Readings:
- Sphere Handbook (selected standards).
- Harvard Humanitarian Initiative.泭Engineering in Emergencies.
- Assignment:泭Group design exercise write-up (23 pages).
Session 9 Global Health Financing, Policy, and Ethics
- Topics: WHO, World Bank, Global Fund, Gavi; donor vs. local ownership; equity and ethics.
- Debate: Scalable solutions vs. high-integrity pilots.
- Readings:
- Ooms, G. et al., Global health financing: Past, present, and future.
- Ethical case studies (provided).
- Assignment:泭Policy memo: Ethical considerations in deploying a new health technology.
Session 10 Integration, Innovation, and Future Directions
- Topics: Climate-health-engineering nexus; AI and predictive modeling.
- Student presentations: Final project proposals.
- Wrap-up: Careers at the nexus of engineering and global health.
- Readings:
- Kickbusch, I. & Szabo, M. Global health diplomacy.
- Recent papers on AI and digital health in LMICs (provided).
- Assignment:泭Final project proposal due (810 pages).