HSC - Health Science
A study of wellness and concepts for developing healthy lifestyles. Covers lifestyle risk factors associated with chronic and communicable diseases.
Credit Hours: 2
This course introduces the student to common word roots, prefixes and suffixes used by the medical and allied health professions. Upon completion of this course, students should be able to define common medical terminology by deciphering its parts.
Credit Hours: 3
This course provides cognitive and practical training for those working in and around the allied health professions. Skill sets include advanced first aid, one-and two-responder CPR with AED training, administering supplemental oxygen, and prevention of infectious disease transmission. This course is required of those accepted into the athletic training education or pre-professional allied health program. Red Cross certification(s) in First Responder may be earned. Permission is required to enroll in this course. Lab fees for durable equipment and certification required.
Credit Hours: 3
This course is required of all students enrolled in the pre-professional allied health concentration. This is an introductory course examining the various career opportunities (as recognized by the American Medical Association) within allied health. Content includes professional foci, educational requirements and career outlook, and philosophical issues in allied health. Instructor consent is required to enroll in this course.
Credit Hours: 2
A study of nutritional status and the effect of eating habits and food consumption on society, families and individuals.
Credit Hours: 3
This is a one-semester course without lab that covers the structure and function of the human body on the cellular, systemic and organismal levels. Special emphasis is given to the skeletal, nervous, cardiovascular and respiratory systems.
Credit Hours: 3
A study of the structures and functions of the body, with special emphases on histology and the integumentary, skeletal, muscular and nervous systems.
Credit Hours: 3
A study of the structure and functions of the body, with special emphases on the endocrine, circulatory, digestive, respiration, urinary and reproductive systems.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
HSC 230 or permission of instructor.
This laboratory course introduces the students to hands-on exercises related to the structure and function of tissues, and the skeletal, muscular, and nervous systems (including dissections of cats and brains as well as physiological concepts).
Credit Hours: 1
Corequisites
HSC 230 or permission of instructor.
This laboratory course introduces students to hands-on exercises related to structure and function of the endocrine, circulatory, digestive, respiratory, urinary and reproductive systems (including dissections of cats, hearts, and kidneys as well as physiological concepts).
Credit Hours: 1
Prerequisites
HSC 230.
Corequisites
HSC 231 or permission of instructor.
This course provides the student with a clear understanding of public health: the science and art of preventing disease, prolonging life, and promoting health.
Credit Hours: 3
This course provides the student with an overview of health science research and data analysis, the organization and summarization of data, and drawing inferences about the characteristics of sample data. Conceptual topics include study design, descriptive statistics, probability, confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, power and sample size, inferential statistics, and decision-making. Statistical techniques include prevalence, incidence, odds ratio, relative risk, sensitivity, specificity, measures of central tendency, dispersion, and variability, measures of bivariate association (Pearson, Spearman, Chi-square), independent samples and paired samples (t-tests), between groups design and repeated measures factor (one-way and two-way ANOVA), and linear and multiple regression.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
ESC 110 or
HSC 200 or
HSC 236
This course provides the student with an overview of morbidity and mortality surveillance by understanding disease etiology, distribution, and control. The course focuses on disease surveillance related to exercise, rehabilitation, public and community health through both descriptive and analytical methods. Cohort, case and experimental studies will be examined in relation to prevalence, outbreak, rate adjustment and study design.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
ESC 110 or
HSC 200 or
HSC 236
Lecture/discussion course emphasizing an understanding of the basic principles of pharmacology specifically aimed at the needs of allied health professionals. The application of these principles to drug categories commonly encountered by allied health professionals is covered.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
CHE 150 or 152 and permission of the instructor.
This course provides a strong social and behavioral theoretical foundation within the context of public health. The course will focus on critical thinking about public health issues, social determinants of health, health risk behaviors and intervention strategies. The course includes long-term trends in morbidity and mortality, social factors that correlate with these trends, and theories that attempt to explain disparities in health and status across sub-populations. The course introduces data on health risks associated with specific behaviors such as smoking, poor diet, sedentary lifestyle and substance abuse and introduce various strategic approaches for developing individual-, group- and community-based behavioral interventions.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
SOC 100,
HSC 236.
This course addresses contemporary issues in the usage of dietary supplements and sports performance aids, including vitamin and mineral supplements, herbs and botanicals promoted to the general public and to the athlete. The focus is to use the scientific method to evaluate product and research literature and health claims, when it is known that data are often likely to be incomplete or inconclusive. The course also reviews safety data, adverse event reports, and legal issues involving dietary supplements.
Credit Hours: 2
Prerequisites
One of the following,
HSC 203,
HSC 230,
NUR 432,
CHE 232,
BIO 330,
BIO 360, or permission of the instructor.
This course provides key concepts and knowledge regarding how health policy is formulated, enacted, and implemented. The course analyzes health policy by focusing on how and why health policy is developed at the federal, state and local levels. The course begins with a brief overview of the concepts and theories associated with public policy development in the health sector. The main emphasis will be upon providing the tools with which to understand how both public and private institutions produce health policy in its various forms. This course should provide a practical background to the study of health policy.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
HSC 236.
This course will introduce students to the development, implementation and evaluation strategies that address health promotion issues at multiple levels. The course will provide a strong foundation of theories and conceptual frameworks used to develop, implement and evaluate health promotion from an ecological perspective - encompassing the individual, interpersonal, organizational, community, social and policy levels.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
HSC 236,
HSC 375.
This course develops the student's ability to: 1) work with organizations and communities; 2) develop skills to mobilize resources and the organizational and community capacity to address public health challenges and achieve the national health objectives; and 3) enable participation and leadership in a network that fosters the future of public health. The course exposes students to concepts and theories of leadership, performance improvement, organizational behavior, marketing, operations, organizational strategy and continuous quality improvement. The general management perspective is emphasized.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
HSC 236.
This is an instructional, field-based experience in the allied health occupations for the pre-professionals. Both directed and self-directed experiences are required under the supervision of a certified/licensed allied health care practitioner in an approved health care setting. Students must earn program coordinator approval, provide documentation of current immunizations, health screening and CPR certification, and make provisions for transportation to the clinical affiliation site. Minimum allowable number of clinical contact hours is 120. This course may be repeated for credit for a maximum of 12 credit hours.
Credit Hours: 2-12
Prerequisites
Junior or senior status, minimum cumulative GPA of 2.75, permission of instructor and departmental approval.
This course integrates public health theory and practice in a professional setting. Students have the opportunity to apply concepts from core and concentration courses, conduct projects and interact with a range of health professionals. The student works with both faculty adviser and an academically and professionally qualified preceptor. This course may be repeated for credit for a maximum of 12 semester hours.
Credit Hours: 6-12
Prerequisites
Instructor permission.
This course encompasses professional topics and current issues in the allied health professions. A seminar style class including discussions, reviews of current literature, case studies, and journal article critiques will be conducted.
Credit Hours: 3
A course offered at the discretion of the Health Science and Human Performance Department. Subjects may focus on topics of current interest in the field or a topic that is of interest to a particular group of students.
Credit Hours:
This course will cover research designs and research methods for exercise and health related studies. In particular, this course will focus on qualitative, quantitative and mixed method research designs, data collection techniques and statistical analyses. This course builds on the basic knowledge of biostatistics to explore more advanced research analysis techniques with both parametric and nonparametric data. This course will enable the student to develop instruments that align with specific research questions/hypotheses. Students will become knowledgeable of mixed methods research and a greater understanding of the usage of one design informing the other for more robust research endeavors.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
HSC 350 or equivalent. Graduate students or by instructor permission.
This course encompasses professional topics and current issues in exercise and nutrition science. A seminar style class including discussions, reviews of current literature, case studies, and journal article critiques will be conducted.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
Must be admitted in the Master of Science in Exercise and Nutrition Science Program, or by special instructor permission.
This course provides the student with a comprehensive overview of nutritional supplementation as it applies to body composition, performance (strength, endurance, power), and general health. The course will cover the major supplements touted to enhance energy, fat loss, strength, muscle, endurance, inflammatory status, and the overall hormonal milieu.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
HSC 203 and
ESC 380. Graduate students or by instructor permission.
This course is an exploration of one or more special topics in Exercise and Nutrition Science. This course provides the student with a comprehensive overview of a specialized field in sports and/or nutrition as provided by a visiting professor to University of Tampa. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
ESC 380 and
ESC 460. Must be admitted in the Master of Science in Exercise and Nutrition Science Program, or by instructor permission.
The purpose of this course is to provide students with an advanced understanding of the role that nutrition plays in the acute and chronic response to exercise. In depth discussion of the macro and micro nutrients are discussed as they relate to exercise and sport.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
ESC 380 and
HSC 200. Must be a graduate student in the Masters of Science in Exercise and Nutrition Science program or by instructor permission
The practicum provides clinical field based experiences in preparation for employment in the exercise and nutrition science related professions. Graduate students will gain insight into various practices, disciplines, techniques, administrative duties and clinical processes related to exercise and nutrition science. Graduate students will provide documentation of their experience. Graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory basis.
Credit Hours: 3
Prerequisites
By permission of the Instructor.
This course includes the master’s program comprehensive exam which must be satisfactorily completed to graduate with the MS Exercise and Nutrition Science degree. The course also includes review for the comprehensive exam. Satisfactory completion of this course will also help prepare those students who plan to take Certified Sports Nutritionist Exam (CISSN) offered by the International Society of Sports Nutrition but passage of the CISSN exam is not required for graduation from the MS program.
Credit Hours: 1
Prerequisites
Satisfactory completion of all core courses in the MS Exercise & Nutrition Science program with a cumulative GPA of 3.0 or greater. By permission of the Program Director.