UTHealth Houston School of Public Health, Austin TX Location: Assistant or Associate Professor

The Austin location of UTHealth Houston School of Public Health (SPH) is currently broadening its interdisciplinary research and training programs, particularly in youth and family health research. Our primary emphasis lies in the early prevention of chronic diseases (such as obesity or mental health), improper nutrition, physical inactivity, tobacco use.

We are actively inviting applications for a year-round, tenure-track position for either an Assistant or Associate Professor within any of our four public health departments: (1) Epidemiology, Human Genetics, Environmental Sciences, (2) Management, Policy & Community Health; (3) Health Promotion & Behavioral Sciences, and (4) Biostatistics & Data Science. The candidate’s home department will be determined based on their specific expertise, interests, and how well they align with a department’s existing projects (further information can be found at https://sph.uth.edu/dept/).  We offer a competitive salary and startup resources.

The School of Public Health at UTHealth Houston spans six Texas locations, Austin, Brownsville, Dallas, El Paso, San Antonio, and Houston. It employs a diverse faculty (>180 members) and more than 1,700 MPH, MS, PhD, and DrPH graduate students. MS Teams and WebEx platforms allow these students to engage in courses across all campuses, fostering an interactive educational environment and enhancing cooperation between faculty and students. Faculty members at the Austin branch specialize in research on children and families. They conduct surveillance studies on youth health risk factors, design and evaluate school and community public health initiatives and policies, explore implementation science, and perform secondary data analysis. Key areas of study at the Austin location encompass obesity prevention and treatment, public health nutrition, promotion of physical activity, tobacco control and regulatory sciences, health policy and health economics research, oral health promotion, and the impact climate on public health.