杏吧性世界

杏吧性世界

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Student Emily Walsh standing with an APHA 2025 sign.

USF students lead innovations in youth health and disease monitoring at APHA

Several students from the (COPH) shared their work at the American Public Health Association鈥檚 (APHA) Annual Meeting and Expo, one of the field鈥檚 most influential gatherings. Among those presenting, three students Emily Walsh, Molly Joyce and Spuritha Bhandaru were highlighted for their innovative research addressing public health priorities affecting communities locally and nationally.

student Emily Walsh and student Molly Joyce were selected to present on behalf of , the national public health honor society, recognizing their outstanding academic achievement and service to the profession.

Student Emily Walsh standing to the right of her poster presentation, titled Tampa Bay Youth Reproductive Wellbeing Needs Assessment

Emily Walsh presenting her poster at APHA. (Photo courtesy of Walsh)

Walsh, a maternal and child health scholar, presented her poster, 鈥淭ampa Bay Youth Reproductive Well-Being Needs Assessment.鈥 Her project, conducted with the Tampa Bay Reproductive Well-Being Collaborative and Power to Decide, elevates youth perspectives at a time of rapidly shifting reproductive health policies and services.

鈥淩ecent policy changes at the local, state and federal levels have dramatically reshaped the reproductive health landscape for young people,鈥 Walsh said. 鈥淢any of the effects of these changes are still not fully understood.鈥

Walsh stressed that including youth directly in research is essential to understanding solutions that will actually improve their health and well-being.

鈥淲e heard over and over from teens that they want accurate information,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey want someone they trust to talk to and they want to feel respected in the process.鈥

Walsh described presenting at APHA as a defining moment in her development as a public health scholar.

鈥淚t helped me grow more confident in sharing my work with a wider audience,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd it reinforced that research should translate into practice. Hearing professionals say, 鈥楾his needs to be shared with policymakers,鈥 confirmed the importance of taking this project beyond the academic space.鈥

Joyce presented her research analyzing dengue virus serotypes reported in Florida. Her surveillance work aims to improve situational awareness and guide rapid responses as the state continues to face increases in mosquito-borne disease activity.

Student Spuritha Bhandaru standing beside the APHA conference sign.

Spuritha Bhandaru inside the Washington Convention Center at APHA. (Photo courtesy of Bhandaru)

Alongside these Delta Omega scholars, student Spuritha Bhandaru presented her spatial modeling project focused on identifying tuberculosis (TB) hot spots in Kansas City. Her work highlights how place-based inequities can shape disease vulnerability.

鈥淚 was curious about how spatial modeling and geostatistics could reveal hidden geographic patterns and identify high-risk areas,鈥 Bhandaru said. 鈥淭he more precise we are, the better we can direct outreach and screening, especially where resources are limited.鈥

Bhandaru said presenting at APHA not only expanded her technical communication skills, but also validated the real-world importance of her work.

鈥淚t was motivating to hear experts say how needed this type of predictive modeling is,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t made me even more excited to scale up the project and make it state-wide.鈥

Student Spuritha Bhandaru standing beside her poster for presentation at APHA.

Spuritha Bhandaru presenting her poster at APHA. (Photo courtesy of Bhandaru)

Conversations at APHA also helped deepen her understanding of the human factors behind the data.

鈥淎 PhD candidate familiar with TB outbreaks in my study area helped explain why one socioeconomic factor emerged as such a strong predictor,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat insight has the potential to directly shape programmatic decisions.鈥

For Bhandaru, the end goal is clear.

鈥淢y hope is that this model becomes an early warning framework,鈥 she said. 鈥淚f we can predict risk sooner, we can prevent more illness 鈥 and do so more equitably.鈥

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Welcome to the USF COPH news page. Our marketing and communications team is entrusted with storytelling. Through written stories, photography, video and social media we highlight alumni, faculty, staff and students who are committed to passionately solving problems and creating conditions that allow every person the universal right to health and well-being. These are our stories.