Master of Philosophy in Applied Epidemiology (MAE) (Australia’s Field Epidemiology Training Program)

Update

Applications for 2025 have closed.  Please monitor our website for 2026 recruitment.  Alternatively, if you wish to be contacted when applications open, please email mae.nceph@anu.edu.au.

Please Note: The Master of Applied Epidemiology Program places students in field placements in Australia, i.e. Australian Government Departments and State and Territory Public Health Units. To be eligible to be placed in these organisations you are required to be an Australian citizen or an Australian permanent resident. If you do not meet these criteria, unfortunately we cannot consider your application.

Australia’s FETP

Australia’s Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP) at ANU is an applied ‘learning-through-doing’ practitioner training program. The Australian program is TEPHINET-accredited, and part of a global network of 76 FETPs strengthening public health systems across more than 100 countries. The MAE partners with and complements health department initiatives to enhance workforce skills, health system performance and the evidence base for policies, programs and practice.

Established in 1991, our program is modelled on the highly regarded Epidemic Intelligence Service (EIS) at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Our graduates have gone on to hold senior positions in health departments across Australia, and work for international organisations such as the World Health Organization (WHO) and Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF). Graduates, students, and our teaching staff frequently play critical roles in the coordination and field response to national and international public health events, including severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS, 2002–2003), H1N1 influenza (2009), Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV, 2012–), Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines (2013), Ebola virus disease in West Africa (2014–2016), Cyclone Winston in Fiji (2016) and the COVID-19 pandemic from 2020 onwards.

As of June 2021, our ever-growing network consists of 63 students and 270 alums. Their ability to respond proactively and add professional surge capacity to immediate health threats has garnered significant respect for our graduates and program worldwide.

The MAE is committed to supporting First Nations Scholars, with fifteen per cent of graduates identifying as Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.

The Master of Philosophy (MPhil) in Applied Epidemiology is a 22-month program that trains internationally accredited future public health leaders. Using an ‘on-the-job’ approach, students spend most of the program working within field placements. This supports capacity development in the health sector and ensures our alums gain real-life training contributing to the detection, investigation, response and control of acute public health events. Scholars also undertake short periods of intensive coursework and complete a research thesis. In addition, students can participate in an internship at WHO during their study to apply their learning in an international context.

Program details

MAE logo

The Master of Philosophy (MPhil) in Applied Epidemiology is a 22-month program that trains internationally accredited future public health leaders. Using an ‘on-the-job’ approach, students spend most of the program working within field placements. This supports capacity development in the health sector and ensures our alums gain real-life training contributing to the detection, investigation, response and control of acute public health events. Scholars also undertake short periods of intensive coursework and complete a research thesis. In addition, students can participate in an internship at WHO during their study to apply their learning in an international context.

What you will learn

MAE scholars spend most of their time in a field placement, typically a government health department or a research institute. While in their placements, scholars complete at least four useful and important research projects under the supervision of field and academic supervisors to meet the following competencies:

  • Response to an acute public health threat (usually an outbreak investigation);
  • Analysis of a public health data set;
  • Conduct an epidemiological research project;
  • Evaluation or establishing a surveillance system.

Learning in the field placements is supported by three coursework intensives at ANU (usually three-week blocks) where scholars complete courses in outbreak investigation, public health surveillance, data analysis, applied research methods and issues in applied epidemiology. Scholars must also complete other course requirements, including teaching, writing a peer review paper and presenting their work at a national or international conference.

Scholars write up their projects and their other requirements into a thesis submitted for examination (including an oral viva) to be awarded the MPhil degree.

The Master of Philosophy requires the completion of 30 units of coursework.

Key facts

Careers

The MAE is Australia’s TEPHINET-accredited program. The skills our graduates learn throughout their training are recognised around the world and place them in good positions for employment nationally and internationally. Our graduates have gone on to hold senior positions in federal and state health departments across Australia. Roles range from emergency response in the National Incident Room to research, policy development and advice. Many have also worked for international organisations such as the World Health Organization (WHO), International Committee of the Red Cross, and Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) in both emergency response and ongoing roles.

Our graduates are eligible to join TEPHINET Alumni Network, which provides access to many professional opportunities in Australia and internationally. Graduates can also join the ARM Network – a network dedicated to facilitating the deployment of qualified Australian field epidemiologists and other public health specialists in the event of global, regional, and cross-jurisdictional public health disease emergencies.

Some graduates also pursue academic and research roles, with employment opportunities at universities worldwide.

As a student at ANU, you gain access to the ANU CareerHub – an online career development and employability tool that includes a jobs board and careers resources. You also have access to drop-in chats with a career consultant and to attend our career fairs to meet potential employers.

Dr Meru Sheel

A ‘disease detective’ from ANU wants to better coordinate emergency responses.

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Learning experience

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MAE field placements

Field placements

MAE scholars receive on the job training in a field placement, typically a government health department or a research institute.

Learn more
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Michaela Gilbert

Bridging animal and human health

Hear from Michaela Gilbert about her MAE experience and two-year placement with the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry.

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Impact of long COVID in Western Australia

New research from The Australian National University (ANU) shows that nearly 20% of over 11,000 Australians who had COVID-19 in 2022 still had symptoms three months later.

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Ashish Shrestha

Investigating a COVID-19 cluster

Second-year Master of Philosophy in Applied Epidemiology Scholar Ashish Shrestha embarked on a field epidemiology training placement in Queensland.

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Investigating Salmonella Typhimurium linked to backyard poultry

Investigating Salmonella Typhimurium linked to backyard poultry

MAE student Troy Laidlow applies a One Health approach to a Salmonella Typhimurium linked to backyard poultry.

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Celeste Marsh

Hear from Celeste Marsh about her MAE experience and deployment with the Department of Health and Aged Care and NSW Health.

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Dr Kushani Marshall

Dr Kushani Marshall

Read about Dr Kushani Marshall’s MAE experience and deployment at Australia’s National Centre for Immunisation Research and Surveillance.

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First Nations graduates

Dr Jill Guthrie leads a discussion with First Nations Alumni Jocelyn Jones, Bobby Maher, Tamara Riley and Roxanne Jones about their MAE experiences.

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Tamara Riley

One Health in Wadeye, Northern Territory

Meet Tamara Riley as she combines her veterinarian skills with epidemiology in a One Health program in the remote community of Wadeye.

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Srean Chhim

Hear from graduate Srean Chhim about his MAE experience and deployment to the Institut Pasteur du Cambodge in Cambodia.

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Fees & scholarships

Fees

Please visit the Programs and Courses website for information about fees.

View fees

Scholarships

Featured Master of Philosophy in Applied Epidemiology Scholarship

The Master of Philosophy in Applied Epidemiology Scholarship provides funding for students in Australian placements and is supplied via the field placements as a tax-free full-time scholarship of $60,000 per annum in year 2023 with 3.5% increase in year 2024 on a pro rata basis of scholarship duration.

In 2023 we launched the Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHS) scholarship with the aim of Indigenous scholars being able to undertake the MAE program in placements that focus on improving the health and well-being of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.

Key people

Tony Stewart

Professor Tony Stewart (MAE Director)

Tony Stewart

Professor Tony Stewart, MAE Director, graduated in MAE’s first cohort (1991-93). He has since contributed to global FETP, worked in Indonesia and the Pacific on health projects, and with WHO on outbreak responses including Ebola, Zika, and Rohingya refugee crises.

Emma Field

Dr Emma Field

Emma Field

Emma is the MAE National Convenor, with expertise in Health Security and Health Systems. She has worked widely in the Asia Pacific, including the Philippines and PNG. She coordinates the ASEAN-Australia Health Security Fellowship and leads Public Health Surveillance within the MAE.

Dr Davoud Pourmarzi

Dr Davoud Pourmarzi

Dr Davoud Pourmarzi

Davoud is the MAE program Curriculum Convenor. He is a Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has extensive experience in teaching and HDR supervision.

Dr Rezanur Rahaman

Dr Rezanur Rahaman

Dr Rezanur Rahaman

Rezanur, a medical doctor, is trained in field epidemiology, international public health, and infectious/environmental epidemiology. He focuses on infectious diseases, environmental epidemiology, climate change, zoonosis prevention, and a One Health approach.

Dr Sam Colquhoun

Dr Sam Colquhoun

Dr Sam Colquhoun

Sam is an epidemiologist with 20 years field experience in operational research and public health programs in resource poor countries. She has a strong interest in MCH, infectious diseases, NCD and vaccine research as well as health system strengthening in primary health care.

Dr Amy Parry

Dr Amy Parry

Dr Amy Parry

Amy, MAE International Convenor, is an international field epidemiologist with humanitarian experience. An Australian FETP graduate and staff member with a background in anthropology and public health, she worked in WHO Cambodia (2013–2018) and Thai-Burma refugee camps (2005–2008) before returning to Australia for a PhD on emergency response workforce strengthening.

Guddu Kaur

Guddu Kaur

Guddu Kaur

Guddu is an applied epidemiologist who has worked for the past 12 years primarily in the management of communicable disease events in low resource settings across Australia, Africa, Asia-Pacific and Central America. In her spare time, she can be found making questionable recipes she found online. 

Laura Vitler

Laura Vitler

Laura Vitler

Laura, the Senior Administrator/MAE Student Officer, has extensive administrative experience within the Australian Government and ANU. She previously worked at the John Curtin School of Medical Research and the NCEPH Student Office, and now brings her expertise to support MAE HDR and coursework students.

Rosalina Sa aga-Banuve

Rosalina Sa aga-Banuve

Rosalina Sa aga-Banuve

Rosalina is a medical doctor with over 30 years experience initially as a clinician then in regional and global organizations in health policy and program management in the Pacific. She is passionate about improving capacity in the field of applied epidemiology for all students both national and international.

How to apply

Understand the entry requirements

  1. Check the admission dates
    1. Applications open 3 June 2024
    2. Application close 21 July 2024
    3. Referee reports due 28 July 2024
  2. Applicants typically have several years of relevant work experience and should have a bachelor degree with at least one upper second class honours, or a graduate diploma or master degree with significant research thesis component. Learn more about admission requirements.
  3. You must also meet the University's English language admission requirements.

Review the MAE Application Guide

The application guide provides step by step instructions for completing your application.

Prepare references & supporting documents

You need to submit the supplementary questions as a supporting document in your application. Email the referee report form directly to your referees, and request they complete the form and email it to mae.nceph@anu.edu.au by 28 July 2024.

For questions specific to the application process email the MAE Student Office: mae.nceph@anu.edu.au.

Submit an application

Start your application on the ANU Apply website.

Attend an interview

Applicants will be shortlisted on the basis of their academic achievements and referee reports. If you're shortlisted, the selection committee will invite you to attend a personal interview.

Receive an offer

Applicants who are successful at the interview will be offered places in the program. If you're offered a place, you will have a short period to accept the offer.

Accept your offer

Once you receive an offer it is very important that you accept it to ensure your place at ANU is reserved.

Understand the entry requirements

  1. Check the admission dates
    1. Applications open 3 June 2024
    2. Application close 21 July 2024
    3. Referee reports due 28 July 2024
  2. Applicants typically have several years of relevant work experience and should have a bachelor degree with at least one upper second class honours, or a graduate diploma or master degree with significant research thesis component. Learn more about admission requirements.
  3. You must also meet the University's English language admission requirements.

Review the MAE Application Guide

The application guide provides step by step instructions for completing your application.

Prepare references & supporting documents

You need to submit the supplementary questions as a supporting document in your application. Email the referee report form directly to your referees, and request they complete the form and email it to mae.nceph@anu.edu.au by 28 July 2024.

For questions specific to the application process email the MAE Student Office: mae.nceph@anu.edu.au.

Submit an application

Start your application on the ANU Apply website.

Attend an interview

Applicants will be shortlisted on the basis of their academic achievements and referee reports. If you're shortlisted, the selection committee will invite you to attend a personal interview.

Receive an offer

Applicants who are successful at the interview will be offered places in the program. If you're offered a place, you will have a short period to accept the offer.

Accept your offer

Once you receive an offer it is very important that you accept it to ensure your place at ANU is reserved.

 

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