Master of Health Promotion

2021 Deakin University Handbook

Note: You are seeing the 2021 view of this course information. These details may no longer be current. [Go to the current version]
Year

2021 course information

Award granted Master of Health Promotion
Course Map

These course maps are for new students commencing from Trimester 1 2021:

These course maps are for new students commencing from Trimester 2 2021:

Course maps for commencement in previous years are available on the Course Maps webpage or please contact a Student Adviser in Student Central.

CampusOffered at Burwood (Melbourne)
Cloud CampusYes
Duration

Depending on your professional experience and previous qualifications, the Master of Health Promotion is typically 1, 1.5 or 2 years duration.

  • 1 year full time (2 years part time) – 8 credit points
  • 1.5 years full time (3 years part time) – 12 credit points
  • 2 years full time (4 years part time) – 16 credit points

Deakin courses can also be studied part time over a longer period.

CRICOS course code069327G Burwood (Melbourne)
Deakin course codeH759
Approval status

This course is approved by the University under the Higher Education Standards Framework.

Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) recognition

The award conferred upon completion is recognised in the Australian Qualifications Framework at Level 9.

Course sub-headings

Course overview

The Master of Health Promotion gives you the skills and platform to create healthy social and ecological environments for whole populations. You will develop skills and knowledge in health program planning, evidence-based strategies, policy, advocacy and research to prevent, minimise and respond early to health issues and their underlying causes.

Want an internationally recognised qualification that opens the door to a career that builds strong and just communities?

Health promotion contributes to social change for improved health outcomes, especially for marginalised and disadvantaged communities. Preventative action saves health dollars as well as promoting wellbeing. With a Master of Health Promotion, you can be a key player in creating social and environmentally just and equitable communities. You’ll graduate with a valuable set of analytical, creative, advocacy, planning and communication skills that prepare you to lead the way in health promotion, locally and globally. Plus, the course’s practical learning opportunities ensure you’re ready for both the current and emerging health challenges of the 21st century.

The course explores evidence-based health promotion strategies that improve the health of individuals, families, communities and countries. These are strategies that empower people to take control of their own health and advocate for just and equitable policies, strengthen community action and create environments that are more supportive of good health. Get hands-on practice developing these initiatives from start to finish, while gaining a deep understanding of the social, environmental, political and economic conditions that impact health. Whether you see yourself working on the prevention of violence against women, mitigation and adaptation to climate change, or promotion of positive mental health and wellbeing for youth, you’ll have the skills and experience to not only manage, but thrive.

Some of the course’s core study areas include:

  • health communication
  • evidence-based health program planning
  • health program evaluation
  • health equity and human rights
  • contemporary health issues and policies
  • health research.

You can customise your degree to your interests by choosing from a broad range of elective units. Choose from topics such as, nutrition, global health policy, environmental protection and obesity prevention to create a unique degree that takes your career further. The course also gives you the option of undertaking a major or minor project. These projects allow you to apply the knowledge and skills developed in the course to a significant health issue through a literature review, industry-linked project or research project.

A strong focus of the course is professional development through practical experience. In particular, the course’s new work-integrated learning elective allows you to undertake 150 hours of valuable industry experience. This can be an agency-based work placement with one of our many industry partners, or agency-sponsored work based at the Deakin Freelancing Hub. These projects give you the chance to develop and apply your new skills in real-world contexts. They also allow you to work alongside leading health promotion practitioners and build professional networks that unlock new career pathways.

Our academics are renowned for their contributions to social and environmental justice, equity and the promotion of community wellbeing. Their project work and research feed into the course, ensuring content is authentic, relevant and responsive to the needs of an evolving sector. There are also opportunities for students to join academics and their colleagues on projects that address current health issues of global importance. We have academics embedded in many renowned healthcare organisations, institutes and health and environmental settings across many different roles, so you’ll have access to the perfect mentor no matter your interests and career aspirations.

Indicative student workload

As a student in the Faculty of Health you can expect to participate in a range of teaching activities each week. This could include classes, seminars, practicals and online interaction. You can refer to the individual unit details in the course structure for more information. You will also need to study and complete assessment tasks in your own time.

Professional recognition

Graduates may be eligible to apply for membership of the Australian Health Promotion Association (AHPA) and the International Union of Health Promotion and Education (IUEPE). All Master of Health Promotion students also have option of obtaining free membership to AHPA for the duration of their studies.

Note: information regarding professional recognition is accurate at the time of publication. Enquiries regarding accreditation and professional membership should be directed to the School of Health and Social Development in order to ascertain the current status of accreditation. Representations about accreditation apply only to the course and the relevant professional body retains discretion as to who they admit as members of their association. Deakin University cannot exercise any control over membership of an external body.

Career opportunities

The health sector is Australia’s largest and fastest-growing.  Contemporary health challenges such as obesity, mental health, climate change and an ageing population have increased the demand for skilled health promotion practitioners able to address the underlying social and ecological determinants of ill health and lead in the promotion of wellbeing.

With a Master of Health Promotion you can take advantage of this demand. Health promotion practitioners are employed locally and globally in all levels of government, health services, the education sector, private business and non-government, not-for-profit and community organisations. This also includes national and state-wide peak authorities such as VicHealth, the National Heart Foundation, Asthma Foundation, Gender Equity Victoria and The Cancer Council. Some of the areas you could be working in include:

  • community development
  • social planning and activities
  • health education
  • program development and evaluation
  • advocacy
  • policy development
  • youth services
  • aged and disability services
  • women’s health
  • migrant, refugee and asylum seeker services

Mandatory student checks

Any unit which contains work integrated learning, a community placement or interaction with the community may require a National Police Record Check, a Working with Children Check or other check. Refer the relevant unit guide.

Fees and charges

Fees and charges vary depending on your course, the type of fee place you hold, your commencement year and your study load. To find out about the fees and charges that apply to you, visit the Current students fees website or our handy Fee estimator to help estimate your tuition fees.

Course Learning Outcomes

Graduate Learning Outcomes

Course Learning Outcomes

Discipline Specific knowledge and capabilities

Apply a critical and advanced knowledge in the area of health promotion that includes:

  • theories of behaviour change, inequalities and inequities in health
  • the action areas for health promotion
  • the determinants of health (biological, behavioural and socio-environmental)
  • the biomedical, behavioural and socio-environmental models of health and their relevance to health promotion practice in general and needs assessment in particular
  • stages of program planning, implementation, evaluation and sustainability
  • awareness of how health promotion practice is influenced, such as, ethnicity and Indigenous status, age, gender, society, culture, geography, the environment and socio-economic status.

Communication

Communicate on health promotion issues in an effective and coherent manner, attentive to the needs of the target audience.

Develop effective communication skills relevant for the professional health sector.

Digital Literacy

Demonstrate mastery in current technologies to discover, select, analyse, employ, evaluate, and disseminate technical and non-technical information applicable to health promotion.

Critical thinking

Demonstrate critical thinking to evaluate, using appropriate analytical and research methods, health promotion problems and solutions for individuals and communities.

Problem Solving

Apply theoretical constructs and critical analysis to real-world and ill-defined problems and develop innovative health promotion solutions.

Self-management

Apply knowledge and skills in creative ways to adapt to new situations in professional practice and/or plan for further learning in the field of health promotion.

Teamwork

Work effectively within health promotion and multi-disciplinary teams with others from a range of backgrounds

Global Citizenship

Apply the highest ethical standards in the development, design, construction and management of health promotion programs for Australia or elsewhere.

 

Course rules

The Master of Health Promotion is typically 8, 12 or 16 credit points. The exact number of credit points you study depends on how much credit you receive as recognition of prior learning (RPL) – your professional experience and previous qualifications – which can save you time and money.

To complete the Master of Health Promotion students must attain 16 credit points.

The course comprises 8 core units (these are compulsory) and 8 elective units (which must include a minor or major project)
 
The majority of core and elective units will be offered in Cloud (online) and campus mode. Some units may also be offered in block mode.

Other electives outside the list below may be approved on an individual basis. Course Director approval is required.

All commencing Faculty of Health Undergraduate and Postgraduate course work students are required to complete HAI010 Academic Integrity in their first trimester of study (0 credit point compulsory unit).

Students are required to meet the University's academic progress and conduct requirements. Click here for more information.

Course structure

Core units

Core units

HAI010Academic Integrity (0 credit points)

HSH703Health Promotion

HSH704Health Communication

HSH705Needs Assessment and Health Program Planning

HSH725Research Literacy

HSH745Health Program Evaluation

HSH702Contemporary Health Issues and Policies

HSH715Qualitative Health Research

HSH728Health Equity and Human Rights

Projects and Elective Study Options

Students must complete a minor or major project option: 

Minor Project Option

HSH731Minor Project A (1 credit point)

HSH732Minor Project B (1 credit point)

Plus 6 electives from the Elective Unit Options table below

Major Project Option

HSH733Major Project A (2 credit points)

HSH734Major Project B (2 credit points)

Plus 4 electives from the Elective Unit Options table below

Any student wishing to do both a Minor and a Major project, may do so with the permission of the course director, and will therefore only be required to complete 2 elective units from the elective unit options table below.

Other electives outside the list below may be approved on an individual basis. Course Director approval is required.

Electives

Other electives outside the list below may be approved on an individual basis. Course Director approval is required.

HSH712Alcohol, Tobacco, and other Drugs

HSH736Community Consultation and Participation

HSH755Postgraduate Health Practicum

HSH760International Perspectives in Health and Social Development

HSH761Health Technology Assessment 1

HSH762Resource Allocation and Priority Setting

HSH764Economic Evaluation - Theory and Practice

HSH769Comparative Health Systems

HDS730Disability and Inclusion: Contemporary Theory and Lived Experience

HDS731Planning for Inclusion Across the Life Course

HDS732Determinants of Health and Wellbeing in the Lives of People with Disability

HDS733Community Capacity Building - Theory and Practice for Inclusion

HDS734Inclusive Design and Technology

HMF701Agricultural Health and Medicine

MPE781Economics for Managers

MPM701Business Process Management

HSN701Principles of Nutrition

HSN702Lifespan Nutrition

HSN705Public Health Nutrition

HSN706Food Policy and Public Health

HSN708Nutrition Promotion

HSN713Food, Nutrition and Behaviour

HSN714Systems Thinking in Public Health Nutrition

HSN734Obesity Prevention

HSN738International Nutrition

AHL701The Humanitarian World

AHA722Applied Humanitarian Assistance: From Theory to Practice

AHL705Management of Humanitarian Health Programs

AHA723Fundamentals of Humanitarian Management

AHA721Dynamics and Dilemmas of the Humanitarian Sector

AHA724Disaster Risk Reduction and Management in Humanitarian Contexts

AHA725Project and Financial Management in Humanitarian Contexts

Work experience

Students will undertake work integrated assessment tasks in several core and elective units. All students also undertake a capstone minor or major project.


Course duration - additional information

Course duration may be affected by delays in completing course requirements, such as accessing or completing work placements.

Further information

Student Central can help you with course planning, choosing the right units and explaining course rules and requirements.

Other learning experiences

Internships are also available to students with WAM 70 and above.

Research and research-related study

Research related study is undertaken in core units: HSH725 Research Literacy for Health Practice, HSH715 Qualitative Health Research, HSH731 Minor Project A and HSH732 Minor Project 2 (1 credit point each). Students can also elect to undertake HSH733 Major Project A and HSH734 Major Project B (2 credit points each). Research is also embedded in most core units and electives.