Top 11 Best Jobs with a MPH Degree

If you wish to follow a career in public health, you should already know about the requisite coursework and discipline that compose this noble profession- but you may still be unsure about the precise direction that you wish to take your career to take after earning a Masters degree in Public Health. Here, we will present a number of interesting career choices you may wish to pursue after you’ve completed an MPH Degree program. Do you need to refresh your skills? Are you interested in learning more about one field in particular?

MPH Job Paths

Here are 11 of the best paying, and most rewarding career options you may choose from once you’ve earned your Master’s in Public Health.

  1. Nutrition Health Advisor – In this specialty role, you will play an essential part to help ensure optimal outcomes for people living in developing nations. You may work for organizations such as USAID, or the State Department. Your responsibilities will include making sure that people in needy and at-risk communities can gain access to a complete, healthy diet that will help to keep them disease free and healthy.
  2. Health Policy Associate – In this career path, you will be expected to perform an analysis of various health situation reports referring to many different countries and communities. You may be tasked to perform your own research on policies that affect the public health of the people living in these communities, and craft and present informative lectures to health officials working in the government.
  3. Nutritionist – As an expert trained in healthy food and proper nutrition, you will provide people with helpful advice on how to eat healthily, to lose weight, and to avoid disease and malnutrition. You will be required to explain issues surrounding dietary health that people must understand in order to have the best chance to stay healthy and maintain a proper diet.
  4. Biomedical Scientist – This exciting profession will bring you into a laboratory setting where scientific and empirical techniques that involve studying and analyzing fluids and tissue samples to help doctors achieve more effective diagnostic tools and information as they work to treat many different common and new disease conditions.
  5. International Healthcare Worker – Professionals of this variety must be familiar with situations in one or more developing countries with populations that are struggling with poverty and health hazards. To perform this job, you will obtain the knowledge needed to implement public health plans that will reduce these health hazards. You may work for such organizations as the International Rescue Committee, which provides a response and solutions to some of the worst public health crises in the world. As a vital part of such an organization, you will provide aid that is urgently needed in order to save the lives of refugees who were forced to flee their homes by a natural or man-made disaster.
  6. Health Services Administrator – In this career path, your training will combine politics, science, and business, to manage the human and fiscal resources needed to provide effectual public health services. In this role, you will work in administration as well as in resource development. You may work in either the private sector, the public sector- or both. You may choose to specialize in organization, policy analysis planning, finance or marketing.
  7. Occupational Health Specialist – As an Occupational Health Specialist, your role will be to work to prevent harm coming to workers, capital assets, the environment and the public. You will support occupational safety within your organization by providing advice to management on how best to boost productivity while safeguarding their well-being and health at the same time. You will work in environs that prevent, control and eliminate disease and injury among a workforce.
  8. Clinical Research Coordinator – These specialized professionals are a type of research expert who’s task it is to work with principal clinical investigators, who are MDs. In this role, you will mostly be responsible for designing and studying an organization’s conduct and management. You will be responsible for supporting, facilitating and coordinating the daily activities of clinical trials. You will also work side by side with a PD, sponsor, department and organization in order to support and guide the administration of these clinical trials as they progress. These clinical trials can be done in a wide variety of areas and cases, to include issues of medicine and the public welfare.
  9. Research Assistant – Research assistants are professionals who work in a public health lab and are responsible for analyzing trial and survey data. As a research assistant, you may work with chemicals in laboratory or engineering firms which depend heavily on big data, statistics and the analysis of these information resources. Many research assistants also work in numerous areas of public health. In so doing, they assist supervisors in their efforts to study disease, illness and environmental health hazards that have a direct effect on public health. Research assistants often collect and analyze data, keep and curate records and set up detailed reports for their supervisors.
  10. Non-Profit Coordinator – Non-profit coordinators work in public health-related organizations all over the country, and the world. These professionals provide leadership in various nonprofit endeavors that are related to the public health. Some may include leading campaigns to bring aid to needy people communities or to help the organization to raise funds to pay for a response program for various causes of hazards to public health. Non-profit coordinators report to an executive manager.
  11. Non-Profit Executive Director – Non-profit executive directors are generally at the top of a non-profit organization and are capable of performing many of the roles that a CEO would ordinarily perform in a private business. These professionals ordinarily work with a board of directors, who will offer guidance, important contacts, and useful resources to the non-profit organization. The board will be involved in making fundamental decisions about the direction and organization of the non-profit, but it will be the executive director who routinely makes decisions about day to day operations.
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Written by Robert Sanchez
Robert Sanchez is HealthGrad.com's Chief Editorialist. Robert Sanchez has over 10 years experience in the Healthcare field and more recently has become an avid writer advising on career and job topics in this exciting field.

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