May 2008
News & Announcements
ECU’s mission is to foster a learning environment in which students,
faculty, staff and community interact to educate students for life
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Amy Ford
Susan Ingram
East Central University
Communications and Marketing
(580) 559-5650 or (405) 812-1428 (cell)
Or Dr. Patrick Bohan, Environmental Health Science Dept., 580-559-5658

Starting internship assignments in May with the U.S. Public Health Service
Commissioned Officer Student Training Extern Program (COSTEP) are East
Central University students Brandon Parker of Lawton (from left), who will
work in Bethel, Alaska; Elizabeth Cookson of Muskogee, assigned to
Albuquerque, N.M.; and Brook Burrows of Ada who will work in Fort Defiance,
Ariz. They are environmental health science majors at ECU.
ECU ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH SCIENCE STUDENTS HEAD
FOR U.S. PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE SUMMER INTERNSHIPS
Three environmental health
science majors at East Central University have been selected to participate
in federal internships and will be assigned to the U.S. Public Health
Service (USPHS) Commissioned Officer Student Training Extern Program
(COSTEP).
Starting their assignments in
May will be Elizabeth Cookson, a junior from Muskogee, assigned to the
Indian Health Service in Albuquerque, N.M.; Brandon Parker, a junior from
Lawton, assigned to the Native Health Corporation in Bethel, Alaska; and,
Brook Burrows, a senior from Ada, assigned to the Navajo Area Indian Health
Service in Fort Defiance, Ariz.
An internship is one of ECU’s
requirements for completing a degree in environmental health science.
The Commissioned Corps is one of
the seven uniformed services and is led by the surgeon general of the United
States. Selection into the COSTEP program for environmental health science
students is highly competitive. Only students from accredited undergraduate
programs in environmental health science like ECU’s are eligible to
participate.
Dr. Patrick O. Bohan, a retired
captain in the USPHS, an ECU assistant professor of environmental health
science and a student adviser, said being selected into these programs
demonstrates the quality of the students and the excellent reputation of
ECU’s Environmental Health Science program.
In fact, 44 of the nearly 350
officers in the environmental health category of the Commissioned Corps are
graduates of ECU’s environmental health science program. ECU has placed more
graduates in the environmental health category than any other institution in
the country, Bohan said.
“Our students have a
well-rounded education in the field of environmental health science that
includes much of what employers need,” Bohan said. “Our students learn about
theory and practice in such areas as occupational health and safety, food
protection, air and water quality, hazardous waste, toxicology, community
health and epidemiology.”
The Commissioned Corps is made
up of approximately 7,000 professionals who carry Navy equivalent ranks. The
three students assigned to the USPHS will be commissioned as ensigns during
their three-month tours.
“Each of these students has an
excellent opportunity to gain first-hand experience in their discipline
while working for a top-notch agency. We are very proud of their
accomplishments and know they will represent ECU very well. This opportunity
also has excellent career possibilities for them,” said Bohan who completed
a 26-year career with the USPHS before moving to Ada from his last duty
assignment with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Commissioned Corps includes
a broad range of disciplines besides environmental health such as medicine,
nursing, pharmacy, engineering, dentistry and veterinary medicine.
Officers are assigned to such
federal agencies as the Indian Health Service, Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, Food and Drug Administration, National Institutes of Health,
National Park Service, Immigration and Naturalization Service, Coast Guard,
and the Bureau of Prisons.
To learn more about the
Environmental Health Sciences program at ECU, contact Dr. Doug Weirick,
department chair, at 580-559-5548.
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