UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health

UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health At the UNC Gillings School, we're on the front lines of public health. Through the years, the School has grown into seven departments and one program.

From disease prevention to promoting equity and engineering a healthier planet: We're on it. In 1936, the School’s departments and programs were part of the School of Medicine at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In 1940, the UNC Board of Trustees approved public health as a separate school within the university, and the School awarded its first degrees in 1940. The current departme

nts of epidemiology, environmental sciences and engineering, and health policy and management grew from the areas of study that were in place when the School was founded. These included public health administration, sanitation and sanitary engineering, epidemiology, communicable diseases, child hygiene, vital statistics, public health laboratory methods and preventive medicine. The Department of Health Behavior was added in 1942; public health nursing (now part of the public health leadership program) grew out of the work on the health administration department; nutrition (which began as part of the School of Medicine) became part of the public health school in 1946; the biostatistics department was founded in 1949; and the maternal and child health department was added in 1950. In September 2008, the School was named the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health in recognition of a generous gift from Dennis Gillings and Joan Gillings. Dennis Gillings was a biostatistics professor at the School from 1971 to 1988 and is the founder, chairman and chief executive officer of Quintiles. Joan Gillings was a beloved philanthropist and community volunteer. The $50 million donation was, at the time, the largest single gift in the history of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Overcoming social and health injustices has been an anchoring focus throughout the history of the Gillings School. Faculty, students and staff continue this tradition of working collaboratively in communities across North Carolina to overcome barriers to good health for all.

“From its earliest days, the School has had a strong moral compass,” said Dr. Barbara K. Rimer, the current dean. “That’s why it was a hospitable place for a group of South African anti-apartheid faculty who emigrated here in the 1960s. That’s why Dan Okun (the late environmental sciences and engineering professor) and other faculty members marched for civil rights in that era. And that’s why a great deal of our research was and is focused on overcoming health inequities.”

Faculty members have been coming and going across the world since the School began. For example, Bernard Greenberg, first a chair of biostatistics and later dean of the School, collaborated with colleagues in Egypt and in other countries, and our biostatisticians for years have trained their counterparts in Chile. Today, the Gillings School continues to award doctoral, master’s and undergraduate degrees and certificates to students who take courses on campus or via the Internet as distance learners. The School is ranked the top public school of public health ( #2 overall) by U.S. News and World Report (ranked in 2021 for the 2022 edition).

In a new story from The Atlantic about algae in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, Dr. Hans Paerl of the Gillings Sch...
06/23/2026

In a new story from The Atlantic about algae in the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, Dr. Hans Paerl of the Gillings School of Global Public Health explains what water testing revealed about the bloom — and why efforts to suppress one type of algae created conditions for another to take over.

“The guys dealing with peroxide treatment can pat themselves on the back,” Dr. Paerl said, “But it doesn’t really solve the overall problem. What’s happened is they’ve just switched the players, and the green algae are just taking over.”

Read more at this gift link:

Testing reveals that efforts to suppress one algal bloom seem to be fueling another.

Most older adults want to age in place, but aging well at home takes more than individual determination. It requires coo...
06/23/2026

Most older adults want to age in place, but aging well at home takes more than individual determination. It requires coordinated support for mobility, chronic disease management, cognitive health, caregiving, and the everyday services that help people live safely and independently.

In the spring issue of Carolina Public Health magazine, Gillings faculty explore what it means to build an ecosystem of care for older adults — from training leaders in home and community-based services to improving diabetes technology access, supporting physical function and studying Alzheimer’s disease trajectories.

The throughline is clear: complex needs require connected systems and individualized support. Or, as Dr. John Batsis puts it: “We shouldn’t be using a one-size-fits-all approach with anyone, but especially not with older adults who are dealing with complexity upon complexity.”

As Americans grow older, more face complex chronic conditions. Gillings faculty support them across the full ecosystem of geriatric care, from home to hospital.

What if everyday consumer actions could help expand access to safe water?Water.org, the nonprofit co-founded by actor Ma...
06/22/2026

What if everyday consumer actions could help expand access to safe water?

Water.org, the nonprofit co-founded by actor Matt Damon and Gillings alum Gary White, has launched Get Blue, a new campaign with partners including Gap, Starbucks, Amazon and Ecolab. The campaign builds on Water.org’s model of connecting families to small, affordable loans for water and sanitation solutions — an approach designed to move beyond traditional charity and help more people finance the pipes, pumps and plumbing they need.

White, an engineer and innovator, earned a master’s degree from the Gillings School in environmental sciences and engineering with an emphasis on water supply and sanitation in developing countries. We are proud that his work continues to shape global efforts to address the water crisis at scale.

Read more from Fortune: https://fortune.com/2026/06/09/matt-damon-gap-water-amazon-starbucks-campaign/

Matt Damon teamed up with Water.org and companies like Starbucks, Gap and Amazon to donate portions of their profit to the organization.

Global health is built through sustained relationships — across countries, institutions, disciplines and communities.Dr....
06/22/2026

Global health is built through sustained relationships — across countries, institutions, disciplines and communities.

Dr. Vivian Go, professor in UNC Gillings' Department of Health Behavior, has been named the School’s new associate dean for global health.

She brings deep experience in international partnership, implementation science and student mentorship to the role. Her work includes more than two decades of leadership in Vietnam, where she co-established UNC-Vietnam, now one of UNC’s flagship international research hubs.

As global public health faces a difficult and uncertain moment, Dr. Go will help guide Gillings’ global engagement by supporting faculty and students, raising the visibility of their work, and strengthening partnerships that connect research, practice and communities around the world.

Read more:

May 21, 2026 Dr. Vivian Fei-ling Go, professor in the Department of Health Behavior, has been named the School’s new associate dean for global health. She takes over this role from Dr. Suzanne Maman, who was recently named chair of the health behavior department.

💧 The UNC Water and Health Conference returns October 26–30 at the Friday Center!Hosted by The Water Institute at UNC, t...
06/22/2026

💧 The UNC Water and Health Conference returns October 26–30 at the Friday Center!

Hosted by The Water Institute at UNC, this annual gathering brings together global leaders in water, sanitation and hygiene ( ) — including researchers, practitioners, policymakers and advocates — for a week of exchanging ideas focused on translating science into action.

Register by June 30 to lock in the lowest rates of the year. Student discounts are available for currently enrolled students! https://tinyurl.com/WHC-learn-more

What infectious disease threats should public health teams watch for during the 2026 FIFA World Cup?A Gillings-led team ...
06/20/2026

What infectious disease threats should public health teams watch for during the 2026 FIFA World Cup?

A Gillings-led team recently tackled that question in a rapid analysis featured in the news section of Science.

Researchers with the Atlantic Coast Center for Infectious Disease Dynamics and Analytics (ACCIDDA) analyzed more than 70 infectious disease threats to help public health workers in host cities prioritize preparedness around the surge in travelers for game days.

The team identified 14 pathogens or pathogen groups of interest, including mosquito-borne diseases, out-of-season respiratory infections, measles, norovirus, some chronic infections that are rare in the United States but more common globally, and “Disease X” wildcards.

The key takeaway: Some increased attention is warranted, but the World Cup represents a relatively small increase compared with routine global travel to and from the US — meaning the incremental increase in risk is likely small.

Read more:

Don’t expect pathogens to steal the show, says research group that studied the risk of visiting fans spreading infections

Medical codes may sound technical, but they shape how conditions are tracked, studied, reimbursed and understood.In a ne...
06/20/2026

Medical codes may sound technical, but they shape how conditions are tracked, studied, reimbursed and understood.

In a new Bloomberg Law story, Dr. Noel Brewer of the Gillings School weighs in on a CDC proposal that would create medical codes to track adverse effects from COVID-19 vaccines.

His concern: Codes are most useful when they describe clearly defined clinical conditions. Without that clarity, a new code could create confusion instead of improving care, research or surveillance.

“The push for new vaccine harm codes appears to serve injury lawyers and not doctors or patients,” Dr. Brewer said.

The debate offers a reminder that public health data systems are only as strong as the definitions behind them — especially when science, policy, medicine and public trust are all moving at once.

Read more:

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is gathering feedback on a proposal that would create a medical code to track adverse effects from the Covid-19 vaccine.

Juneteenth is a celebration of freedom — and a reminder of how long freedom was delayed.Today, we honor the generations ...
06/19/2026

Juneteenth is a celebration of freedom — and a reminder of how long freedom was delayed.

Today, we honor the generations of Black Americans whose resilience, leadership and labor have shaped this country, including the field of public health.

At Gillings, we also recognize that freedom and health are deeply connected. Building healthier communities means confronting the systems and inequities that shape access to care, safety, opportunity and the conditions people need to thrive.

🏆 The Gillings School's Dr. Carmina Valle has received a Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prize for Artistic and Scholarly Ach...
06/18/2026

🏆 The Gillings School's Dr. Carmina Valle has received a Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prize for Artistic and Scholarly Achievement — one of Carolina’s top honors for exceptional early-career faculty.

Her research combines behavioral science, health communication and technology to design programs that support cancer prevention and survivorship, including interventions using social media, mobile health tools, personalized messaging and emerging AI approaches.

Overall, Dr. Valle's work shows how digital tools can help people build healthier habits before and after cancer treatment, while expanding access to evidence-based support.

Read more:

June 11, 2026 The annual Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prizes for Artistic and Scholarly Achievement have been awarded to five faculty members who exemplify groundbreaking and innovative research — including UNC Gillings' Dr. Carmina Valle.

Address

135 Dauer Drive, Campus Box #7400
Chapel Hill, NC
27599

Opening Hours

Monday 7am - 7pm
Tuesday 7am - 7pm
Wednesday 7am - 7pm
Thursday 7am - 7pm
Friday 7am - 7pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share