Global Health

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Macalester and its students are part of a growing national movement to make public health a true liberal art.

BY LAURA BILLINGS COLEMAN > ILLUSTRATIONS BY ERIC HANSON

When Sydney Fencl ’12 returned to Macalester for her sophomore year in 2009, the headlines were filled with news of a possible H1N1 flu pandemic. As the flu season heated up that fall, stores were filled with hand sanitizer, makeshift vaccination clinics sprang up everywhere, and more than 600 schools were closed against the contagion. By October, President Barack Obama declared the H1N1 outbreak a national emergency, and even Café Mac started allowing students to remove food from the cafeteria to control the spread of the virus. Keeping a careful watch on world events, not to mention the constant public service messages about coughing into your elbow, Fencl avoided the flu—but CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE > SPRING 2012

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