Title
Category
Credits
Event date
Cost
- Vector Control for Environmental Health Professionals (VCEHP)
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:VCEHP106: Toxicology of Pesticides for Environmental Health Professionals is sixth in a eleven-course learning series. In this course, learners will about current usage, health and environmental problems, and proper usage of pesticides.
- Vector Control for Environmental Health Professionals (VCEHP)
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:VCEHP107: Rodent Management is seventh in a eleven-course learning series. This course will provide environmental health professionals with basic knowledge about rodent biology and management.
- Vector Control for Environmental Health Professionals (VCEHP)
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:VCEHP108: Public Health Insect Pests in Food and Housing Environments is eighth in a eleven-course learning series. This course will provide environmental health professionals with the basic knowledge needed to understand and control different types of insect pests that pose a risk to human health in commercial food and housing environments.
- Vector Control for Environmental Health Professionals (VCEHP)
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:VCEHP109: Pest Management Considerations for Schools is ninth in a eleven-course learning series.
- Vector Control for Environmental Health Professionals (VCEHP)
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:VCEHP110: Risk Communication Basics for Environmental Health Professionals is tenth in a eleven-course learning series.This course will help environmental health professionals in the interactive process of information exchange with the communities they serve. It will also help them understand how to identify solutions and respond to public concerns.
- Vector Control for Environmental Health Professionals (VCEHP)
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:VCEHP111: Bed Bugs: Identification, Biology, and Control is last in a eleven-course learning series. This course will provide environmental health professionals with knowledge that can assist them in the management and control of bed bugs. An awareness of bed bug biology and behavior will provide insight to methods of control, particularly using an IPM approach.
- Tribal Behavioral Health
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:Tribal Behavioral Health 101: Overview of American Indian/Alaska Native Behavioral Health is the first in a four-course learning series. This course will present an overview of behavioral health in the American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) populations. Behavioral health is inherently multi-faceted and affected by many factors including culture, socioeconomic status, family, the built environment, and historical factors.
- Tribal Behavioral Health
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:Tribal Behavioral Health 102: Health Issues for American Indian/Alaska Native Men is the second in a four-course learning series.This course will examine American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) Men’s Health. We will review men’s specific health issues, healthcare access and utilization, social determinants of health, and organizations that are working to support AI/AN men. The specific sources of data will be footnoted.
- Tribal Behavioral Health
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:Tribal Behavioral Health 103: The Opioid Epidemic and American Indian/Alaska Native Communities is the third in a four-course learning series. This course will provide Tribes and Tribal Serving Organizations and public health professionals with information about a very important problem that our country is facing—the opioid epidemic—and, more specifically, how the opioid problem is impacting tribal or American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) communities.
- Tribal Behavioral Health
- 1.00 Participation/CE
$0.00
Course Description:Tribal Behavioral Health 104: Culture is Prevention! is the last in a four-course learning series. This course will inform Tribes, Tribal Serving Organizations and public health professionals about the use of culturally appropriate programs and practices for substance abuse prevention. Examples of success stories from the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes’ Tradition Not Addiction Prevention Program will be used to provide valuable examples.