Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
Promoting public health through environmental & workplace safeguards.
About
At the forefront of today’s most critical public health challenges
Whether addressing workplace safeguards during a pandemic or mitigating the threats of extreme weather, aging urban infrastructure, and food-borne outbreaks, those working in environmental health and occupational safety inform the health policies that impact where we live and work.
Faculty expertise and leadership span industry, government and academia. Along with interactive curricula, students obtain hands-on learning and research opportunities that produce tangible results for contemporary public health problems. Specifically, our students investigate the relationship between environmental/occupational exposures and human health impacts to inform safe worksites and healthy communities. The environmental and occupational health degree programs are managed by the Department of Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences (EOHS).
Get to know the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences
Latest Department News
Guillot-Wright receives Beasley Award for Research Efforts to Improve Health of Commercial Fishing Populations
Through the Docside Clinics: Connecting Docs to Docks, a mobile clinic that offers health services and resources to commercial fisherman, Guillot-Wright has provided over 2,000 encounters and meets these vulnerable populations where they are.
Latest Department News
- UTHealth Houston professor earns national lifetime achievement honor
- Learning Beyond the Classroom: Occupational Health Field Trips Bring Real-World Safety to Life at UTHealth Houston
- UTHealth Houston ranks among nation’s best in NIH funding
- Hang contributes to the 2025 Lancet Countdown on Health and Climate Change
Message from Chair

Message from Chair
Kristina Mena
Professor, El Paso Regional Dean, Chair and Jane Dale Owen Chair in Environmental Health Protection
"No matter your interest in public health, some aspect is related to the environmental and occupational sciences field. Find your niche in this ever-evolving public health discipline so that you can lead your community’s response when the next environmental challenge is upon us."
EOHS by the Numbers
3
Fully-funded training programs supported by NIOSH
10+
Scholarship Opportunities
3:1
Department student to faculty ratio
Careers in Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences
- Academic or Private Research
- Federal, State, or Local Government
- Oil & Gas
- Manufacturing
- Transportation
- Non-profits
- Military