PhD in Health Policy and Management
The PhD in Health Policy and Management program at the IU Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health is ideal for students who are interested in developing the analytical, methodological and professional skills needed to tackle the many health policy and management challenges facing Indiana, our nation, and the world. As a core discipline within the field of public health, health policy and management focuses on the creation of new knowledge that informs the advancement of health services delivery within and across the public, private, and non-profit sectors. With a PhD degree in HPM, students will be well-prepared to take on independent research roles as academic faculty members.
Students pursuing this degree must complete at least 90 credit hours that include advanced graduate coursework, passing a qualifying examination, and researching and defending a dissertation that makes an original contribution to the field. The department’s distinguished faculty members instruct, mentor, and collaborate closely with students. You’ll benefit from working with faculty members who are nationally recognized for their research in health information technology, healthcare organizations, health policy and law, health impact assessment, and more. To support this research, faculty members have a diverse research funding portfolio that includes grants and contracts from the NIH, AHRQ, SAMHSA, NCAA, CDC, and numerous Indiana state agencies. Students have access to outside expertise through the department’s longstanding close collaborations with the IU School of Medicine, the Regenstrief Institute, the IU Kelley School of Business, the IU McKinney School of Law, the Indiana Clinical and Translational Sciences Institute, the Indiana Hospital Association, the Indiana State Department of Health, and top health systems and professional organizations throughout the state and nation.
PhD in Health Policy and Management Curriculum
The Health Policy and Management PhD program consists of ninety (90) credit hours and can be completed on a full-time or part time basis.
Public Health Foundations
Take all three courses for a total of nine credit hours. Some students will be able to transfer credit for these courses.
- P506 Population and Public Health (3 credits)
- H641 Ethics in Public Health (3 credits)
- B551 Biostatistics for Public Health I (3 credits)
Health Policy and Management Foundations
12 credits
- H786 Healthcare Organizations Research (3 credits)
- H670 (future H787) Health Policy Research (3 credits)
One of the following two:
- H658 Methods in Health Services and Policy Research (3 credits)*
- S510 Introduction to Research Methods in Public Health (3 credits) *
One of the following two:
- H619 Health Economics (3 credits)
- H514 Health Economics (3 credits)
*PhD students may be expected to register for a different section of these courses and/or complete additional assignments/tasks commensurate with the expectations of a doctoral course. PhD students with prior equivalent coursework will be expected to substitute a more advanced course in a related area.
PhD Seminars
13 credits
Students will be expected to take the HPM Research Seminar course during four times for a total of 12 credit hours. These courses do not build on one another and need not be taken in order.
- H747 Health Policy and Management Research Seminar (12 credits)
- S725 Preparing for Academics in Public Health (1 credit)
Methods and Skills Courses
24 credits
Required Courses
- B562 Biostatistics for Public Health II (3 credits)
- H644 Health Impact Assessment (3 credits)
- H781 Research Design in Health Policy and Management Research (3 credits)
- H782 Health Services Empirical Methods (Quantitative Methods) (3 credits)
- H783 Qualitative Methods for Health Services Research (3 credits)
- H657 Application of Cost-Effectiveness Analysis in Pub Health (3 credits)
Elective Courses
Choose two of the following. Other courses may be substituted with program director approval.
- E606 Grant Writing for Public Health (3 credits)
- E710 Advanced Public Health Survey Methods (3 credits)
- E670 Systematic Reviews and Meta-analysis in Health Sciences (3 credits)
Minor Area
12 credits
Students must complete a PhD minor. The minor must contain at least four graduate courses (12 credit hours) and comply with the requirements of the minor department/unit. Students wishing to complete a minor outside of the following should consult with the program director for guidance: Epidemiology, Biostatistics, Social and Behavioral Sciences, Health Informatics, Sociology, Policy Analysis.
Dissertation
20 credits
- H799 Dissertation Proposal (4 credits)
- H800 Dissertation Research (16 credits)
Other Requirements for the PhD in Health Policy and Management
Public Health Coursework
Health Policy and Management PhD students without a graduate degree, certificate or coursework in public health will be required to complete online introductory modules on Environmental Health and Social and Behavioral Science to ensure they have basic competencies in all five core public health areas. This is a requirement of the Council on Education in Public Health (CEPH), the Fairbanks school’s accrediting body.
PhD Advisory Committee
The Department of Health Policy and Management will assign the student to an advisory committee after completion of the first year in the PhD program. The advisory committee will include at least two Health Policy and Management faculty; one member may be from another discipline. The advisory committee will approve the student’s program of study and counsel the student until he or she passes the qualifying examination. The chair of the PhD advisory committee will be a full-time faculty in the Department of Health Policy and Management. Faculty who meet the IUPUI Graduate School guidelines will be eligible to serve as dissertation advisors.
Maintaining Academic Progress
Minor Area
The student will select at least one minor from outside the department of Health Policy and Management. The PhD minor typically includes four graduate level courses, complies with requirements of the respective minor department or program, and must be approved by the student’s advisory committee. Examples of minors include: bioethics, international research ethics, biostatistics, epidemiology, health economics, medical sociology, medical anthropology, nursing administration, business administration, and bioinformatics.
Qualifying Examinations
The written qualifying examination is designed to assess the student’s attainment of the stated Health Policy and Management PhD competencies and is taken after the coursework for the PhD has been completed. Students who fail the qualifying examination are normally allowed to retake it once.
Students who have passed the qualifying examination must enroll each semester (excluding summer sessions) for dissertation credits. Once students have accumulated 90 credit hours in completed course work and dissertation credits, they may maintain continuous enrollment by enrolling in G901 for six credit hours at a cost of $150. Students can enroll in G901 for no more than six semesters.
The department of Health Policy and Management will monitor the students’ progress toward the PhD degree and will make recommendations to the University Graduate School regarding the nomination to candidacy, the appointment of a research committee, the defense of the dissertation, and the conferring of the PhD degree.
Dissertation
The dissertation will be written on an original topic of research and presented as one of the final requirements for the Health Policy and Management PhD degree. The student’s dissertation research committee will be comprised of members of the graduate faculty. The chair of the dissertation research committee must be a regular faculty member in the Department of Health Policy and Management, and a full member of the Graduate Faculty. The student will submit to the IUPUI Graduate Office, acting for the University Graduate School, a two-page prospectus of the dissertation research and the membership of the research committee at least six months before the defense of the dissertation.
After the committee has reviewed the dissertation, the decision to schedule the defense will be made. The student will then present and defend the dissertation orally in a public forum before the committee. Following the dissertation defense, all deficiencies must be adequately addressed to obtain approval by the dissertation research committee.
Competencies
The PhD in Health Policy & Management focuses on 10 core competencies that serve as a measure of growth and criteria for assessment.
- Demonstrate in-depth knowledge of the history, structure, and operation of health care systems domestically and internationally.
- Understand and apply bioethical principles and theories, and utilize them in research, policy, and practice.
- Design and conduct health policy and services research studies.
- Access, manage, and utilize administrative and other secondary data sources in research studies.
- Prepare grant applications and manage research projects.
- Analyze and evaluate policies and programs.
- Utilize and report the results of advanced quantitative and qualitative data analysis.
- Interpret and report the findings of original research for scholarly audiences.
- Translate and apply findings from original and existing research in policy and practice.
- Educate and train students and professionals about health policy and management.
Admissions
Students start the PhD program in the Fall semester. The application deadline for Fall admission is May 1 (April 1 for international students). Applications will be reviewed as they are received. The deadline to receive priority for financial support is January 5.
It is strongly recommended that all transcripts be submitted no later than four weeks prior to the application deadline to allow sufficient time for the required transcript verification process.
Admission Requirements
Admission to the Health Policy and Management PhD program at the IU Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health is based on completion of a baccalaureate degree, although it is anticipated that many applicants will have completed a post-baccalaureate degree in public health or other health-related discipline.
- Personal Statement
- Resume
- Transcripts
- Recommendations
- Sample of Scholarly Writing
- Proof of English Proficiency (applicants whose native language is not English)
- Graduate Record Examination (GRE)
Graduation Record Examination (GRE)
GRE scores, while not required for admission, if you plan to attend the PhD program as a full-time funded student, you are strongly encouraged to submit GRE scores with your application, since some funding sources require current GRE scores (less than 5 years old) in order for students to be eligible. Applicants must submit GRE scores to SOPHAS using the following designation DI Code 0167.
International Applicants
Applicants who have attended post-secondary institutions outside of the U.S. are also required to submit the following supporting documentation to SOPHAS with their application:
World Education Services (WES) ICAP evaluation of foreign academic credentials
The Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health requires all applicants with foreign academic credentials to provide a World Education Services (WES) ICAP course-by-course evaluation of those credentials. Applicants should submit their transcripts to WES at least 1 month in advance of the application deadline to ensure that the evaluation is completed in time.
Through special arrangements with SOPHAS, WES will deliver its credential evaluation report directly to SOPHAS by secure electronic transmission. This expedites the delivery of the evaluation report — as well as images of the applicant’s verified transcripts — to SOPHAS and allows SOPHAS to process the report most efficiently. Go to www.wes.org/sophas for more information.
U.S. applicants who have attended post-secondary institutions outside of the U.S. as part of a study-abroad program at a U.S. college or university, do not need to provide a WES evaluation of their foreign coursework as long as it is noted on their U.S. transcript.
Updated February 11, 2022