Epidemiology · Florida
Epidemiology colleges in Florida
Epidemiology program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Epidemiology studies how disease, injury, and health outcomes spread through populations, suiting analytically minded students who want to investigate causes and shape prevention.
We're still verifying Epidemiology programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Epidemiology or browse all colleges in Florida.
What you'll study in a Epidemiology program
- Study design including cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional methods
- Biostatistics and statistical inference for health data
- Measures of disease frequency, risk, and association
- Causal reasoning, confounding, and bias control
- Outbreak investigation and disease surveillance methods
- Infectious and chronic disease epidemiology
- Environmental, behavioral, and genetic determinants of health
- Statistical software for cleaning and analyzing population datasets
- Applied practicum analyzing real-world public health data
Where a Epidemiology degree can lead
- Epidemiologist
- Infectious Disease Analyst
- Public Health Researcher
- Biostatistician
- Disease Surveillance Specialist
- Field Epidemiologist
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 epidemiologists median $83,980).
Epidemiology is the study of why illness, injury, and health conditions appear, cluster, and move through groups of people rather than within a single patient. Students learn to design studies that compare populations, measure how often conditions occur, and tease apart whether an exposure actually causes an outcome or merely travels alongside it. The work draws on biostatistics, the biology of how diseases and injuries develop, and the environmental, behavioral, and genetic factors that shape risk, then applies that reasoning to outbreak investigation, disease surveillance, and the design of programs meant to prevent harm. Unlike biostatistics, which centers on the mathematical machinery for analyzing health data, epidemiology keeps the population and the causal question at the center and uses statistics as a tool; and unlike clinical medicine, which treats individuals, it asks what is happening across whole communities.
Coursework is grounded in research methods, statistics, and the determinants of health, and most programs build toward a culminating practicum or applied project in which students analyze real population data or contribute to a field investigation. The most commonly associated role typically expects a master's degree, and many research and faculty positions call for a doctoral degree; epidemiology itself is not a licensed clinical profession, though graduates who also hold clinical credentials such as nursing or medicine must maintain those separate state licenses, and any program-level accreditation or licensure expectations should be confirmed directly with the program and the relevant state board. Graduates work in public health departments, hospitals and health systems, government agencies, research institutes, universities, and the pharmaceutical and insurance sectors, doing disease surveillance, study design, data analysis, and the translation of findings into prevention and policy.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of epidemiologists, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $83,980 and projects employment to grow about 16.2% from 2024 to 2034; a master's degree is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
Epidemiology in other states
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