Health Communication | UniSC | University of the Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia

Accessibility links

Non-production environment - edittest.usc.edu.au
This page was archived on 25 March 2022 and is no longer updated.

Health CommunicationMajor

If you’re creative and love to communicate, then a career in health communication could be for you. You’ll study the role and use of behavioural science and communication strategies to promote public health and improve the delivery of health care; the connections between health and the behaviour of people; health education and behaviour change theories, frameworks and strategies; health promotion; and the use of media to communicate health information.

You’ll also get practical experience through a work placement in your final year of study, helping you to be job-ready.

This extended major will prepare you for a career in health communication, behavioural science research, health education, health promotion, public health, health media and public relations in health.

Extended major

Available in the Bachelor of Health Science

Career opportunities

Health communication specialist, health writers, health education officer, health promotion officer, health marketer, health editor, health public relations officer/manager

Membership

Australian Health Promotion Association; Public Health Association of Australia; International Union for Health Promotion and Education.

Extended major lead

Dr Rachel Cole

Extended Major (11)

For an extended major in Health Communication, students must successfully complete the following 11 courses:

Required courses (11)

CourseSemester of offerUnitsRequisites
CMN120 Songwriting 2
CMN207 Performance 3
CMN276 Music Video on Location
CMN231 Intro to Songwriting and Performance
PUB210 Performance 2
PUB252 Music and Pop Culture
PUB271 Music and Sound for Screen
PUB272 What Makes Australia? History of Australian Popular Culture: The Twentieth Century and Beyond
CMN308 Heritage: Australian and Global Contexts
PUB305 Explorations in Environmental History
PUB351 Nationalism and Identity in the 20th Century: Themes and Tensions