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Health Program Design & Implementation (POPH90189)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville) and Online
About this subject
Contact information
February
Matthew Reeve
Melbourne School of Population and Global Health
mreeve@unimelb.edu.au
Overview
| Availability | February - On Campus February - Online |
|---|---|
| Fees | Look up fees |
An increasing global focus on program effectiveness and efficiency has brought renewed attention to the role of evidence in designing and implementing health programs. Students of this subject will engage with the discipline of implementation science, and will investigate a range of current theories and approaches to program design, including: Theory of Change; program logic models; logical frameworks; complexity theory; behaviour change theories; emergent design; participatory/co-design approaches; and approaches to scale-up.
Facilitated by experts with applied field experience in program design and implementation in Australia and other global contexts, students will learn via practical, staged exercises to draft strategic program plans. A range of case studies on current health challenges and interventions will build students’ knowledge and skills in evidence-based health program design and implementation. Cross-cutting issues in program design will also be considered and applied to case studies, particularly the issues of participation and inclusion. Students will be asked to consider evidence requirements and real-world compromises in programmatic research and planning within Australian and other global settings. This subject will equip students with the knowledge and skills to operationalise their program design skills through best practice approaches to program implementation.
Health Program Design & Implementation is a block mode intensive subject. It has a combination of online content which can studied in each student’s own time, combined with live seminars and workshops held on six days across the two week period. Selection of study mode (online or on campus) determines the mode of attending these seminars and workshops. Students are expected to commit approximately 40 hours to learning each week.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Synthesise evidence to guide development of a program design;
- Apply current frameworks and theories to the development of program design;
- Apply the principles of inclusive design, designing for sustainability, replicability and scalability in program design;
- Develop monitoring frameworks and systems that are integrated within the design process;
- Develop complex and integrated program implementation plans
Generic skills
On completion of this subject, students should have skills in:
- Critical thinking and analytical skills.
- Finding, evaluating and using relevant information.
- Written communication skills.
- Oral communication skills.
Last updated: 19 November 2025