Human Health Sciences

There are two things you need to know about Katie Reed—a human health sciences major and University of Kentucky student athlete. One: softball is a significant part of her world, and two: she absolutely hated going to the dentist as a child. Number one hasn’t changed but the soon-to-be graduate’s opinions on dentistry are quite different. So different, in fact, that Reed now aspires to become a dentist herself. 

Human Health Sciences

Not every person’s passion is realized in an all-consuming epiphany; in fact, for human health sciences junior Emily Appel, her grand moment of revelation happened in the back of her mother’s car on the way to a college fair. 

Human Health Sciences

Human health sciences (HHS) major Amina Nouri is no stranger to persistence. During the many hours she spends in the lab each week, she is faced with countless frustrations and triumphs. “One day you’ll run the perfect experiment with the perfect results,” she said. “But, when you try to reproduce it, it just doesn’t happen. You might repeat the experiment four or five times before you get the results you want.” 

Human Health Sciences

Service is ingrained into the very fiber of the health care professions, and no one knows this better than Karen O. Skaff, RDH, PhD. Since 2015, a diverse group of human health sciences students led by Skaff board a bus headed for New Orleans, LA, and Appalachian counties of Kentucky, ready to give more of themselves to assist communities in need.

Human Health Sciences

As the latest health care headline flashes across the news, it can be difficult to make heads or tails of what exactly is happening in our state legislatures, and how these changes in policy impact the average citizen. That’s why Maddie Miles, a junior human health sciences major at the University of Kentucky College of Health Sciences, decided to spring into action by creating her podcast series, “What the health is going on?”

Human Health Sciences

Human Health Sciences

Due to its selective nature, HHS requires a non-refundable seat fee. For your amount, please see the following table. For eligible students, this seat fee acts as a deposit which will be credited to the student’s tuition in the fall semester. If a student decides to withdraw prior to starting the program, this deposit is not refundable. Seat fee payments shall be made online with a credit/debit card through Worldpay services.  

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