Department of Nutrition
Introduction
The Department of Nutrition is one of the top-ranked nutrition departments in the country. The curriculum offers a wide range of courses on the nutritional, epidemiological, intervention, and policy aspects of human diseases.
Advising
All majors have a primary academic advisor in the department. Undergraduate students are encouraged to meet regularly with their advisor and review their Tar Heel Tracker each semester. Advisors, the program director, and the Office of Student Affairs staff work with current and prospective majors by appointment (see the "Contacts" tab at the top of this page). Departmental academic advising is particularly important for those majors who are considering going on to graduate school. Further information on courses, undergraduate research opportunities, the honors program, careers, and graduate schools may be obtained from the department’s website.
Distinguished Professors
Alice Ammerman, Mildred Kaufman Distinguished Professor, [email protected]
Penny Gordon-Larsen, W. R. Kenan Jr. Distinguished Professor, Vice Chancellor for Research, [email protected]
Stephen Hursting, AICR/WCRF Distinguished Professor, [email protected]
Elizabeth Mayer-Davis, Cary C. Boshamer Distinguished Professor, Dean of Graduate School, [email protected]
Barry Popkin, W.R. Kenan Jr. Distinguished Professor, [email protected]
Susan Smith, Dickson-Harris Teeter Distinguished Professor, [email protected]
June Stevens, AICR/WCRF Distinguished Professor, [email protected]
Professors
Linda Adair, Director of Graduate Studies, [email protected]
Andrea M. Azcarate-Peril*,mailto:[email protected]
Cynthia Bulik*, [email protected]
Kyle S. Burger, Associate Chair for Research, [email protected]
Shufa Du, [email protected]
John French, [email protected]
Anthony Hackney*, [email protected]
Thomas Keyserling*, mailto:[email protected]
Martin Kohlmeier, [email protected]
Sergey Krupenko, [email protected]
Nobuyo Maeda*, [email protected]
Philip May, [email protected]
Shu Wen Ng, Distinguished Scholar in Public Health Nutrition, [email protected]
S. Raza Shaikh, Chair, [email protected]
Abbie Smith-Ryan*, mailto:[email protected]
Mirek Styblo, [email protected]
Susan Sumner, [email protected]
Deborah Tate, [email protected]
Amanda Thompson*, [email protected]
Associate Professors
John Batsis*, [email protected]
Melissa Bauserman*, mailto:[email protected]
Ian Carroll, B.S.P.H. and M.S. Program Co-Director, [email protected]
Amanda Holliday, M.P.H.-N.D. Program Director, [email protected]
Folami Ideraabdullah*, [email protected]
Natalia Krupenko, [email protected]
Sandra Mooney, [email protected]
Carmen Samuel-Hodge, [email protected]
Lindsey Smith Taillie, Associate Chair for Academics, [email protected]
Kimberly Truesdale, M.P.H.-NUTR Program Director, [email protected]
Carmina Valle, [email protected]
Saroja Voruganti, [email protected]
Assistant Professors
Seema Agrawal, [email protected]
Ximena Bustamante Marin, B.S.P.H. and M.S. Program Co-Director, [email protected]
Michael Coleman, [email protected]
Molly De Marco, [email protected]
Anna Kahkoska, [email protected]
Stephanie Martin, [email protected]
Katie Meyer, [email protected]
Brooke Nezami, [email protected]
Wimal Pathmasiri, [email protected]
Blake Rushing, [email protected]
Nipin Saini, mailto:[email protected]
Jessica Soldavini, [email protected]
Isis Trujillo, [email protected]
Matthew Ulgherait, mailto:[email protected]
Heather Wasser, [email protected]
*Primary appointment is in another UNC department. Faculty's secondary appointment is Nutrition.
NUTR–Nutrition
Undergraduate-level
Introduction to food studies covering a variety of topics including how food was consumed over history, land use and aquaculture, food in the arts, food and culture in the American South, food politics, and nutrition science. Previously offered as ANTH 175.
Relationships of human nutrition to health and disease. Integration of biology, chemistry, and social sciences as related to human function. Nutrient composition of foods and safety of the food supply.
Examines the intersection of local foods and public health with respect to nutrition and environmental, economic, and community issues. Students explore impacts and potential solutions of the increasingly industrialized and centralized food system, while assisting community partners to increase opportunities for farmers, local food marketers, distributors, and entrepreneurs.
This course will provide an overview of global food systems drivers, elements, and activities; key players; key problems, and potential solutions. Students will learn about challenges facing food systems across the globe, and learn to critically evaluate the design, measurement, and impact of programs, policies, and interventions addressing these challenges. Students will also learn about methods to assess food systems activities and impacts.
Permission of the instructor. For undergraduates enrolled in the department's baccalaureate degree program. Directed readings or laboratory study on a selected topic. May be taken more than once for credit.
Advanced Undergraduate and Graduate-level
Function of the human body focusing on chemical properties, function, and metabolism of nutrients. Biochemistry of nutrients with a limited focus on medical aspects of nutrient metabolism. For advanced undergraduates and graduate students needing to enhance background prior to NUTR 600.
This course focuses on food and nutrition policy on a federal, state, and local level. Topics covered include policy formation, interest/consumer advocacy groups, key legislation, how research informs policy, equity and diversity, global food policy issues, sustainability and health, advocacy, and current public health nutrition policy hot topics and examples.
This course is designed to introduce students to clinical trials in nutrition, including experimental designs, nutrition intervention methods, and skills necessary to critically analyze, describe, and evaluate feeding and behavioral nutrition interventions. The course covers concepts, skills and methods related to nutrition interventions, with an emphasis on theory-based interventions at the individual, community, or environmental levels to improve health and nutrition outcomes.
Cell biochemistry and physiology emphasizing integration of proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids in whole-body metabolism; regulation of energy expenditure, food intake, metabolic adaptations, and gene expression; and macronutrient-related diseases (atherosclerosis, obesity).
This course covers nutrition during the life cycle. Units include women during preconception, pregnancy, and lactation; infancy; childhood; adolescence; and older adults (65+). Nutrient and energy needs, assessment of nutritional status, and cultural and socioeconomic barriers are discussed for each phase.
Cell biochemistry and physiology emphasizing metabolism of vitamins and minerals including antioxidant protection, immune function, nutrient control of gene expression, and disease states induced by deficiencies (e.g., iron-deficient anemia).
Course teaches the future nutrition professional the art and science of communicating with individuals, groups, and the public. Students will enhance cultural awareness and frame nutrition messages for mass media including social media.
This course will focus on the laboratory mouse as a model organism to learn fundamental genetic concepts and understand how state-of-the-art experimental approaches are being used to elucidate gene function and the genetic architecture of biological traits.
This is a food service management practicum that applies the basic concepts of institutional food service systems. Two laboratory hours per week.
This is an honors course for research for the first semester of senior year, to be followed by NUTR 692H in the second semester. NUTR 691H/692H is a two-course sequence. Enrollment is only for students approved to conduct a senior honors thesis project.
Permission of the instructor. Directed readings or laboratory study of a selected topic. Requires a written proposal to be submitted to and approved by the B.S.P.H. Committee and faculty research director. A written report is required. May be taken more than once for credit. Six laboratory hours per week.
Permission of the instructor. Individual arrangements with faculty for bachelor and master students to participate in ongoing research.
Permission of the instructor. Reading and tutorial guidance in special areas of nutrition.
General Student Inquiries