Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
OpenCourseWare (OCW)

The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health's OPENCOURSEWARE (OCW) project provides access to content of the School's most popular courses. As challenges to the world's health escalate daily, the School feels a moral imperative to provide equal and open access to information and knowledge about the obstacles to the public's health and their potential solutions.

Visit the new OCW Image Library

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The Bloomberg School's OCW

  • Does not require that participants register
  • Does not grant degrees or certificates
  • Does not provide access to JHSPH faculty
  • Requires acceptance of conditions of use

To receive the upcoming free OCW newsletter via email, please click here to register. We will not share your information with any third party.

We have provided Frequently Asked Questions to assist you in navigating the site, and we welcome your Feedback to help us increase and improve the courses we will publish.

Foundation Support

JHSPH OCW is funded by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.

Visit other OpenCourseWare sites from around the world

Chinese translation of the OpenCourseWare site:

To learn more about the School and for-credit classes, we invite you to explore our website: www.jhsph.edu

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
OpenCourseWare (OCW) User Profiles

Photo of Sartaj Alam

"A great effort yields its fruit worldwide. I live in the Himalayan valley of Yasin but it doesn't hamper me to learn from Johns Hopkins University from around the globe. I salute the people involved." - Sartaj Alam
Pakistan

Read more OpenCourseWare user profiles
Photo of Michael J. Klag, MD, MPH '87, Dean, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

"Only a small portion of all the professionals and others around the world who could benefit from attending this School could ever actually hope to come here. OCW provides an opportunity for those who are motivated and interested to gain unique insights into public health as a profession and as a career at no cost to them." — Michael J. Klag, MD, MPH '87
Dean, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health