In the April session of Hot Topics in Practice, Emily York, MPH, Oregon Health Authority, presents the state’s new climate resilience plan.
Read more »In this one-hour webinar, Public Health Nurse Deborah Giedosh, EdD, shares how her team developed and delivered public health curriculum to support incarcerated dads and their reentry from the Goose Creek Correctional Center.
Read more »NWCPHP's new online training is a revised and updated Evidence-Based Public Health series, a nine-part course offering a comprehensive guide to incorporating evidence into public health practice.
Read more »In the next session of Hot Topics in Practice, representatives from the North Sound Accountable Community of Health discuss unintended pregnancies and expanding contraception access in their area.
Read more »NWCPHP's new online training helps health professionals work with communities to address vulnerability in public health settings.
Read more »In the next Hot Topics webinar, government affairs specialists discuss a statewide plan to build public support for funding essential public health services in Washington State.
Read more »Photo courtesy of the Washington State Public Health Association.
Public health students Madeline Frost and Elly Riser used funding from NWPHTC to help public health leaders in Mason County, Washington address the rise in opioid-related deaths in their area.
Read more »Public health students Elly Riser and Madeline Frost.
In this one-hour webinar, representatives from Public Health - Seattle and King County describe their work investigating and preventing death among young people and offer lessons for other jurisdictions interested in this approach.
Read more »NWCPHP's latest online course is designed to help public health professionals pull together the key elements needed to secure funding for public health projects and programs.
Read more »In the November session of Hot Topics in Practice, speakers share the results of NWCPHP's 2016 regional public health training needs assessment and discuss how one health department in Washington State is acting on the findings.
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