Research Signature Areas
Health Promotion and Disease Prevention
Health and Well-Being for All
College of Health Strategic Plan, 2025-2030
We believe that health is a human right, essential to the ability of individuals to function and flourish in society.
Cancer, heart disease, diabetes, dementia, mental health, and substance use disorders are leading causes of death and disability in the United States.
As populations age, acute and chronic diseases create social, medical, and economic burdens.
In addition, racial and ethnic minoritized groups are at disproportionate risk of experiencing negative health outcomes from preventable and treatable conditions.
Faculty expertise contributes to all three levels of disease prevention.
Many focus on primary prevention to avoid the occurrence of disease or injury.
Faculty address the impact of social and economic determinants of health (e.g., work-family policies, health care reforms, behavioral and mental health services, school physical education policies) and promote healthy and safe behaviors (e.g., nutritious eating, physical activity, cancer screenings, smoking and substance use cessation, vaccine uptake).
Others focus on secondary and tertiary prevention to reduce the progression and effects of disease and injury and to manage health problems and injuries (e.g., osteoporosis, fall prevention, cognitive decline and dementia, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes).
Faculty are uniquely positioned to integrate environmental and biological information with social, policy, and behavioral data to promote health, prevent disease, and improve quality of life and life expectancy.
Recent publications
Recent health promotion and disease prevention publications
(This is not an exhaustive list. Visit individual faculty profiles for more extensive lists of their publications.)
2025
News and stories
Recent health promotion and disease prevention news and stories.
Associate Professor Sam Logan is a co-author of a chapter in "Seating and Wheeled Mobility: A Clinical Resource Guide," published in December 2024. A valuable resource for both new and experienced practitioners.
Discover how Dave Dallas, endowed director of the Moore Family Center, studies milk’s bioactive components to optimize infant health, improve donor milk processing, and advance nutrition science.
Global health professor Chunhuei Chi shared COVID-19 policy insights at the Vatican, contributing to Pope Francis’ initiative to promote health equity around the world.
New OSU-led study finds planned home births are as safe as birth center births for low-risk pregnancies, challenging traditional views and prompting calls for better hospital transfer experiences.
Meet Jill Hoxmeier, OSU public health instructor and MPH program director, whose journey from Peace Corps volunteer to sexual violence prevention expert shapes her teaching approach.
The research shows that Medicare beneficiaries who used home health care at the end of life were less likely to die in a hospital setting without hospice.