The Center for Health and Social Issues is proud to host this Advocacy Training Lunch & Learn session with special presenter, Laura Bracci, Georgia's Government Relations director for the American Heart Association. This training lunch is Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024, from 12 p.m. until 1 p.m. in the Pat Peterson Museum Education Room in Russell Library. Please RSVP using the QR code in the flyer by Sept. 18, 2024. All are encouraged to attend!
The Center for Health and Social Issues is proud to host this Advocacy Training Lunch & Learn session with special presenter, Laura Bracci, Georgia's Government Relations director for the American Heart Association. This training lunch is Wednesday, Oct. 2, 2024, from 12 p.m. until 1 p.m. in the Pat Peterson Museum Education Room in Russell Library. Please RSVP using the QR code in the flyer by Sept. 18, 2024. All are encouraged to attend!
The Center for Health and Social Issues is partnering with the Life Enrichment Center and Public Health Student Organization to promote awareness of autism and other disabilities and to celebrate the abilities of people with disabilities. There will be food, live music, activities and more. If anyone would like to volunteer, please reach out to karli.galloway@bobcats.gcsu.edu.
The Center for Health and Social Issues wants to recognize the contribution of Georgia College & State University students by rewarding them with a medallion at graduation for completing at least 45 hours of service with our organization between their junior and senior year. Participants must be an undergraduate student at Georgia College, have maintained an overall GPA of at least 2.7 during their junior and senior year and completed one or more training in QPR, CPR, BLS, ACLS, AED...
Story and photos developed by University Communications. At a meeting on what concerns residents—a gentleman from Oconee Heights, Milledgeville, once asked Dr. Damian Francis if he’d be like all the others—doing one thing to help the community, then disappearing. “I said, ‘No, we’re here for the long haul.’ That was 2½ years ago, and we’re still here. We’re showing some benefit now, and residents are really appreciative,” said Francis, an epidemiologist and director of Georgia College...
Story, video and photos developed by University Communications. As the 15th-century historian Thomas Fuller once said: “Health is not valued till sickness comes.” That’s why students at Georgia College & State University’s Center for Health & Social Issues (CHSI) intertwine health screenings with other attractions like fun and food. Public health majors and student nurses gather wherever the populace is likely to be found. At monthly food drives, neighborhood meetings or holiday...
More than just an eye-sore, neighborhood blight brings with it a slew of social and economic issues. Rundown and dilapidated homes and buildings lead to increased crime, lower property values and are an indicator of overall poverty levels in an area. Georgia College’s Center for Health and Social Issues (CHSI) is working to address blight in one Milledgeville neighborhood with the goal of increasing the well-being of the people living there. Dr. Damian Francis, director of CHSI,...