Subject guides / Global Health
Global Health
Also appears in programme titles as: Global Health Policy · International Public Health
What a global health degree actually is
Pandemic treaties, vaccine financing, health systems that survive conflict — global health is public health at the scale where borders stop mattering and institutions start. A master's in the field mixes epidemiology and health economics with the politics of who pays for whose health, and it has become the standard credential for careers in WHO-orbit organisations, global funds and health ministries.
The naming spread is wide: London hosts an entire specialist university for it (LSHTM), Edinburgh files it under policy, Copenhagen and Karolinska under straight "Global Health". The bigger structural choice is format — campus degrees for career switchers, and LSHTM's distance-learning MSc for professionals who cannot leave their posts, a route most rankings simply ignore.
What you study — and the quantitative bar
Cores cluster around epidemiology, biostatistics, health systems and health economics, with the policy-flavoured programmes (Edinburgh) adding political science and the Nordic programmes adding field-based thesis work — Karolinska's thesis can be carried out in a low- or middle-income country through its partner networks.
The quantitative bar is moderate: you need statistics seriously, but at public-health level rather than econometrics level. Clinical backgrounds are welcome but not required — cohorts mix medics, nurses, economists and social scientists, and the non-clinical entrants report the epidemiology core as the steepest climb.
Where it leads
Exits split across the WHO system and global funds (Gavi, Global Fund), national public-health agencies and health ministries, INGOs (MSF, PATH, IRC health programmes), and health-policy consulting. Health economics and health-systems specialisation are the strongest employment tickets — financing questions dominate the field's hiring. For clinicians, the degree is the standard bridge from practice into programme leadership.
Who it suits — and who it does not
A good fit if you are…
- Clinicians and public-health officers moving from service delivery into programme and policy roles
- Applicants from health-system-building countries — the archetypal Commonwealth and Chevening health profile
- Working professionals who need the credential without leaving their post: the distance-learning route exists for exactly this
Probably not the right degree if…
- Applicants who want laboratory or clinical research — that is an epidemiology, infectious-disease or biomedical MSc
- Those avoiding statistics: the epidemiology and biostatistics cores are non-negotiable
- Anyone expecting hospital-management training — health-systems here means national systems, not facility operations
Where to study it: the programme map
The map spans a specialist university (LSHTM — the IDS-Sussex pattern again: subject authority without a general-ranking halo), a policy school, and two Nordic programmes. Note the distance-learning row: most rankings ignore it, most scholarships exclude it, but for working professionals it is often the only viable route.
| University | Official programme title | Length | Tuition (intl) | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karolinska InstitutetSweden | Master's Programme in Global Health | 12 mo | — | — |
| King's College LondonUnited Kingdom | Global Mental Health MSc (joint with LSHTM) | 12 mo | — | — |
| London School of Hygiene & Tropical MedicineUnited Kingdom | Global Health Policy by Distance Learning | — | — | — |
| London School of Hygiene & Tropical MedicineUnited Kingdom | MSc Public Health for Global Practice | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of CopenhagenDenmark | MSc in Global Health | 24 mo | — | — |
| University of EdinburghUnited Kingdom | Global Health Policy MSc | 12 mo | — | — |
| University of OxfordUnited Kingdom | MSc in Global Health Science and Epidemiology | 12 mo | — | — |
Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.
Application strategy and funding routes
Format first: if you can relocate, the one-year UK degrees (LSHTM campus, Edinburgh) are the scholarship-friendly route; if you cannot, LSHTM's distance MSc trades cohort experience for continuity in your job. The Nordic pair adds a price dimension — Copenhagen charges non-EU fees but Karolinska's programme is a regular target of Swedish Institute funding, which bundles tuition and living costs for Global South professionals.
Scholarship fit is unusually clean: the UK one-year formats sit inside Chevening's length rule, health systems is an explicit Commonwealth theme, and the Swedish Institute route covers Karolinska. Distance learning is the exception — most major scholarships fund full-time residential study only, so the online route usually means self-funding or employer sponsorship.
Which scholarship funds which programme
Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.
- Karolinska Institutet — study destination outside the scheme
- King's College London
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine — course length not on file
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
- University of Copenhagen — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Edinburgh
- University of Oxford
- Karolinska Institutet — study destination outside the scheme
- King's College London
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
- University of Copenhagen — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Edinburgh
- University of Oxford
- Karolinska Institutet
- King's College London — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Copenhagen — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Edinburgh — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Oxford — study destination outside the scheme
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a medical background?
No — cohorts deliberately mix clinicians with economists, social scientists and managers. Clinical experience helps for programme roles in clinical services, but health economics and policy roles are hired from non-medical backgrounds routinely.
Global health vs public health — what is the difference?
Public health is the discipline; global health is its transnational layer — institutions, financing and health systems across borders. If your career is in one country's health agency, a straight MPH may fit better; if it runs through WHO-orbit organisations or international programmes, global health is the label recruiters look for.
Which scholarships fund global health degrees?
Chevening (one-year UK courses), Commonwealth Master's (health systems is a named theme), and the Swedish Institute scholarships for Karolinska are the clean fits. Note that distance-learning MScs fall outside most scholarship rules — funders generally require full-time residential study.
Is LSHTM worth it given Sussex-style ranking confusion?
LSHTM is a specialist postgraduate university that general league tables handle badly — inside global health it is arguably the single strongest name. Judge specialist institutions by subject authority and employer recognition, not by composite rankings.
Related fields
Sources
Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.
Global Study Prep is independent and not affiliated with any university or scholarship programme. Programme details change — always confirm on the official page before applying.