M-1 Behavioral Science


Overview and Contact Information

Health is a product of the interactions among biology, genetics, behavior, relationships, cultures, and environments. Some of medicine’s most promising frontiers for improving health explore the realms of human behavior and social science. More and more disease states cannot be addressed without attention to the behavioral or social factors that cause them, erect barriers against treating them, or can ameliorate or even cure them. Hence, a complete medical education must include, alongside the physical and biological sciences, the perspectives and findings that flow from the behavioral and social sciences.

This course presents information about the wide variety of behavioral, social, and psychological disciplines that comprise the behavioral sciences that are relevant to health and illness. The course endorses a universally held public health concept. This concept explains that behavior – including that of patients, physicians, and the community-plays a central role in the incidence, prevalence, prevention, symptom presentation, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis of illness.