This seminar course provides a survey of critical events in the development of epidemiology as a scientific discipline. It includes weekly interactive presentations by the course directors and guest faculty, and it encompasses key people, critical public health issues, and seminal writings that have helped to shape the discipline. Topics include John Snow's observations on the London cholera epidemic of 1854, the development of the polio vaccine, the central role of smoking in lung cancer, and the AIDS epidemic. Students will be asked to prepare a short oral classroom presentation accompanied by a written abstract on a relevant topic of their choosing.
2 units · Medical Satisfactory/No Credit
This seminar course provides a survey of critical events in the development of epidemiology as a scientific discipline. It includes weekly interactive presentations by the course directors and guest faculty, and it encompasses key people, critical public health issues, and seminal writings that have helped to shape the discipline. Topics include John Snow's observations on the London cholera epidemic of 1854, the development of the polio vaccine, the central role of smoking in lung cancer, and the AIDS epidemic. Students will be asked to prepare a short oral classroom presentation accompanied by a written abstract on a relevant topic of their choosing.
Offered in Winter 2026 at Stanford University.