Hi all,
I have been offered places on the MSc Epidemiology/ Modern Epidemiology at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine/ Imperial respectively and am in the process of making a decision as to which to pursue. They're clearly both good universities and I'm looking at the research being undertaken at each to see if I find myself more interested in one than the other, but if possible I'd also like to hear from anyone who has first hand experience of either of the courses.
Is anyone able to offer me any insight - any perceived pros and cons or an opinion on which is the "better" option to pursue.
Alternatively, as I've been writing this message it occured to me whether I could contact the unis and ask if they could put me in touch with a current student to speak to - any thoughts on this approach?
Many thanks,
Magster
What are your research/topic interests? Non-communicable or communicable disease? Do you want to go into theoretical research or maybe something more applied like field work/ applying public health interventions?
Both programmes have their strengths but which is best may depend on what you're looking to do next (and what your background is).
Hi Hazy Jane,
I am currently leaning more towards non-communicable disease, though I initially got interested in epidemiology from the infectious side during my undergraduate degree – genetics.
I’ve been out of science for a couple of years now so would like something that gives me a chance to get quite a broad overview the first term before specialising further.
I saw you posed a question a couple of years ago regarding public health/ epidemiology – if you don’t mind me asking, which did you decide to pursue and where?
You say both have their strengths, what do you think these are?
Thanks for your help.
I did the MSc in Epi at LSHTM. I loved it. It's a great place to study with a very interesting mixture of people from different countries and academic disciplines. The course is very well designed and delivered and the core epidemiology/statistics teaching is excellent. I would highly recommend it.
I don't know the programme at Imperial in detail, nor do I know anyone who has done it. My impression of the MSc there at the time I was applying was that it had a heavy emphasis on infectious disease modelling, which wasn't my cup of tea. I notice now that they have pathways within the masters so if I were to have gone there I would have opted for the biostats or chronic disease pathway, but I don't think those were explicitly available at the time I was looking. I think Imperial are increasing the size/scope of their public health department at the moment.
I do have one gripe with the LSHTM course which is that my interests are non-communicable/chronic diseases, and the way the optional modules were organised worked far better if you were into infectious diseases. That said, If I had my time again, I would go to LSHTM, just because it's such a great place to be, and I learnt a lot from my fellow students and all the extra seminars and events that go on there. I think also the course was going to be restructured a bit in terms of modules so maybe a clearer chronic disease pathway will feature in that.
If you want to contact current students I know that LSHTM are amenable to those kind of requests and I'm sure Imperial would be too. You might also like to read this:
http://careers.bmj.com/careers/advice/view-article.html?id=20002805
Good luck with your decision.
I would say LSHTM because of it's research links both UK and worldwide- if you are looking for a PhD afterwards there are plenty of research group links. LSHTM is in Bloomsbury rather than Kensington like Imperial, both expensive areas of London but Bloomsbury is more student focused than Kensington so you can find some lower priced food than in the more tourist-y area of Kensington.
Plus LSHTM is more specialist in tropical medicine (which I assume you are interested in) whereas Imperial has an fairly good sized tropical medicine department. My PhD supervisor is already telling me to get connections to LSHTM so I could hopefully (fingers crossed I even pass my PhD) find a post-doc!
Sorry to Hijack this thread, but HazyJane, what do you recommend if my interests are non-comm (obesity) and interested in the applied science, probably doing public health interventions? i came from a research background (biological sciences) but I dont think doing a PhD is what I want to do in the future. Do you mind sharing their strengths? I actually applied for Public Health then Epi in both universities, as I thought the former gives me a more rounded perspective for interventions.
And since we are on that topic, what do you know about the reputation of Karolinska Institute for public health? It is my other option and since there is no ranking of publiv health schools worldwide, it makes selection a bit tough.
Thanks!
======= Date Modified 30 Jan 2012 15:37:43 =======
Thanks for your insightful reply HazyJane. I feel more secure about my decision to do PH :) But it is true what you mentioned about LSHTM focusing more on Lower-Middle Income countries, as I have heard about that from past students too. I shall take up your advice to email the tutors for more information :)
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