Environmental Health Advocate

Public Health

Researchers are learning more every day about the steps we can take to protect our health and extend our lives. New studies are revealing how changes in diet and lifestyle can help reduce the risk of many health problems such as cancer and heart disease.

Environmental health advocates are public health officials who work to identify potential threats to public health, increase awareness about the situation and give people the facts they need to protect their health. Environmental health advocates partner with health care professionals to establish health guidelines, which they then promote through local, state and national awareness campaigns. Think about some of the health care tips you’ve read about in newspapers or seen on T.V.

Environmental health advocates have helped increase awareness in the United States about the health effects caused by texting while driving, smoking, eating trans fats and not wearing seatbelts. When new health threats emerge, as AIDS did in the early 1980s, environmental health advocates try to reduce public fear and overreaction by giving people the facts they need to reduce their risk.

Around the world, environmental health advocates educate pregnant women about proper prenatal care, distribute mosquito nets to guard against malaria and vaccinate children against preventable diseases.

Environmental health advocates can be specialists in infectious diseases, epidemiology, statistics or communication. They may focus on a specific health issue or on a narrow aspect of the advocacy process, from analyzing research to monitoring statistics to planning public health campaigns.

A National Strategy to Revitalize Environmental Public Health Services, developed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lists these priorities for environmental health advocates:

  • Environmentally related diseases, such as foodborne or waterborne illnesses
  • Emerging threats, including West Nile Virus, “bird flu” and MRSA, a bacteria that can cause serious and even deadly “staph” infections that are resistant to antibiotics.
  • Complex public health issues, including health conditions that have not been conclusively linked to specific environmental factors and situations where debate about appropriate public health policy is ongoing

The National Environmental Health Science and Protection Accreditation Council reviewed this profile.

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  • Average Salary

    $45K - 110K

  • Years Higher Education

    4 - 6

  • Job Outlook

    Very Good