Engineering > Environmental/Environmental Health Engineering

Environmental/Environmental Health Engineering

Numerous, frequently overlapping disciplines are studied in environmental/environmental health engineering, including infectious illness, biology, chemistry, biostatistics, epidemiology, toxicology, nutrition, and arithmetic. In most programs, you'll supplement your classroom learning with practical research and lab work. It almost seems inevitable that the first-grader who arranges their family's recycling bins and constructs a backyard compost unit would major in environmental/environmental health engineering. People passionate about environmental issues are aware of this before they even enter college, but they also hold other values in high regards, such as preservation and conservation. They complete them. Environmental/environmental health engineering encompasses maintaining the quality of our air and water, creating methods to reduce the health hazards posed by hazardous waste, and establishing rules for businesses. The environmental implications of various businesses, potential countermeasures, techniques for supplying potable water and lowering air pollution, and the safest ways to dispose of garbage are all covered in this major. Environmental health has three facets:

  • Biological
  • Physical
  • Social.

By the time students have completed their studies, they can differentiate and give a relationship between health and the environment.