魅影直播

HSC's School of Public Health associate dean Dr. Emily Spence named as incoming ASPPH practice section chair

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

, associate dean for community engagement and health equity at The at Fort Worth鈥檚 , has been elected as incoming chair for the Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health鈥檚 .

Spence will serve in this role from March 2024 to June 2025, moving to the position of chair from June 2025 to June 2026. She will serve as immediate past chair from June 2026 to June 2027.

supports and facilitates the practice efforts of schools and programs of public health, including the application of research to practice, and the collaboration between the academic and practice communities. ASPPH enhances members鈥 abilities to recruit, train, retain and graduate a diverse and inclusive student body while advancing the professional development and lifelong learning of the public health workforce. The organization partners with many practice organizations and agencies to support and develop the public health workforce. The ASPPH vision is improved health and well-being for everyone, everywhere.

Spence is a community-engaged scholar in the areas of health inequities, program evaluation, interpersonal violence, poverty, homelessness, women鈥檚 health, lifestyle interventions and community assessment. She collaborates with community groups and organizations on the design of new programs, as well as the collection and analysis of data used to improve or develop solutions for a healthier community. As a program evaluator, she has assessed numerous public health concerns, including breast cancer, asthma, cradle to career development, violence, trauma, economic well-being, post-incarceration re-entry and women鈥檚 wellness.

She has served on the board of directors for local non-profit organizations and as the community outreach core director for the at HSC, a National Institutes of Health Center of Excellence.

鈥淲e congratulate Dr. Spence on her election to this national public health leadership position,鈥 said , School of Public Health dean. 鈥淗er experience and commitment to advancing public health through community-engaged participatory research, education, practice and mobilizing the collective power of community partnerships will help guide the efforts of ASPPH into the future as well as further our work within the School of Public Health and across the communities we serve.鈥

Spence has recently been working with a local task force to develop a Community Corps model that will be implemented in 2024.

The Community Corps will include a registry of organizational and individuals who partner with the School of Public Health to synergize community-driven research, intervention, education and service initiatives. This initiative is a part of the SPH strategic plan, IMPACT 2030: Commitment to Community, prioritizing collaborative and enduring partnerships to advance health equity and eradicate health disparities.

鈥淲e believe that when we mobilize the collective expertise and lived experiences of our community partners, faculty, staff and students, we will be best equipped to transform lives and make substantive progress toward our vision of health equity in every community,鈥 Dr. Spence said.
 

 

From by Sally Crocker