Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp Master of Science in Global One Health: Diseases at the Human-animal Interface (MScGOH)
Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp

Master of Science in Global One Health: Diseases at the Human-animal Interface (MScGOH)

Antwerp, Belgium

MSc

2 years

English

Full time, Part time

31 Mar 2026

Feb 2027

EUR 5,775 *

Distance Learning, Blended

* EEA / EUR 11,745 - non-EEA

Key Summary

    About : The Master of Science in Global One Health: Diseases at the Human-animal Interface (MScGOH) focuses on the interdisciplinary study of health issues related to humans and animals. The program emphasizes collaboration across sectors to address the increasing frequency of zoonotic diseases. Students gain valuable insights into effective public health strategies and the complexities of managing health in a global context.
    Career Outcomes : Graduates can pursue various opportunities in public health, veterinary medicine, and research. Potential career paths include roles in government agencies, NGOs, and international organizations, focusing on disease prevention and health policy development. Students will be equipped to tackle pressing health challenges at the human-animal interface.

The Master of Science in Global One Health: diseases at the human-animal interface or MScGOH (formerly Master of Science in Tropical Animal Health or MSTAH) will be offered as a 2-year blended program (mainly web-based with optional face-to-face parts) in collaboration with the Department of Veterinary Tropical Diseases of the University of Pretoria, South-Africa (UP). The program is designed to allow participants to combine work and study (largely done from your home). It contains the following components: a compulsory induction week, 4 compulsory online core modules, advanced modules that you can choose (to support your specific career path), and a mini-dissertation.

Content: Following an integrated One Health approach, the program focuses on the relationships between infectious and parasitic diseases of animals and humans (zoonoses), diseases, and ecosystem health in order to improve disease control strategies, ecosystem sustainability, food security, and rural development. It will support the building of capacity to meet the challenges to the health of people, livestock, and wildlife at such interfaces and at the same time building capacity that can influence the policy process to increase recognition and realization of the One Health concept when dealing with livestock, human and wildlife diseases in the tropics.

Important: Teaching modalities may be adjusted to fit the Coronavirus outbreak. Face-to-face teaching might be postponed or replaced by online teaching.