
Our processes support schools by recognising their qualities and encouraging continuous improvement. Rather than imposing rigid, highly prescriptive standards, ICAPHE encourages reflective practice and peer-led dialogue, ensuring that accreditation is a meaningful, developmental experience.
This community-driven model allows institutions to showcase their strengths both internally within their own organisations and also externally to prospective students and stakeholders, enhancing their reputations and visibility while also benefiting from shared learning.
Accreditation by ICAPHE serves not only as a mark of quality but also as a catalyst for ongoing growth, ensuring relevance and responsiveness to public health challenges across diverse contexts. We believe quality assurance should empower, not constrain, and our services are designed to build capacity, encourage innovation and support excellence in public health education worldwide.
GOALS
PROCESSES
Despite their fundamental role in strengthening population health, Schools of Public Health remain largely undefined. There is, however, broad consensus that their remit spans education, research and service, which are widely regarded as core pillars of their function (1, 2). These functions may also be delivered within faculties, departments, colleges, institutes: terms subject to variable vocabulary and application across regions and institutions (3).
In the United States of America, for example, the accreditation of a school of public health requires the delivery of a minimum number of Master’s-level courses in specified core public health disciplines and a seperation from medical academic units . This is a prerequisite both for accreditation whcih leads to membership in the Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health (ASPPH). In contrast, the European landscape has no such standardised threshold. Some institutions are recognised as schools of public health while offering only a single programme (4) and within the Association of Schools of Public Health in the European Region (ASPHER), although being an “association of schools” there are members that do not offer any dedicated public health degrees at all! (5).
Early efforts to define such institutions are found in WHO’s 1961 report, which described a school of public health as an institution that, “in addition to research in public health and service to the community, provides a full-time course lasting not less than one academic year” (6).
Later, in 1985, the World Health Organization adopted a broader and more inclusive interpretation, stating that schools of public health include “institutions that provide full-time postgraduate courses lasting at least one academic year. Other institutions, such as schools of medicine, that have a department of public health, community health, or the like, offering postgraduate programmes in public health, are also included” (7).
The challenge of definition remains. As noted in the Lancet Commission report by Frenk et al., found challenges in contextualising a clear definition of what constitutes a “school of public health”. The authors acknowledged that “because of definitional ambiguity, [our] estimation of public health institutions was incomplete.” (8)
For the purposes of ICAPHE accreditation, we have adopted the 1985 WHO definition, which remains one of the few formal attempts to articulate the expected functions of such schools and notably uses the plural “courses” and “programmes” to define and delineate the educational remit of a “school.”
On this basis, ICAPHE recognises a School of Public Health as an entity that integrates two or more academic public health courses or programmes lasting more than one year.
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