Our Health and Aging area offers courses focusing on medical sociology, caregiving in later life, sexual health, successful aging, health over the life course, race/ethnicity and health, stress and mental health, gender and mental health, families and the life course, sexual and reproductive health, social epidemiology, health and aging, neighborhoods and health, and data analysis for public health. Eight of our faculty are affiliated with this area of concentration: Barrett, Burdette, Carr, McFarland, J. Taylor, M. Taylor, Ueno, Waggoner. They have published research on subjective aging, gender and depression, infant mortality, cancer, disabilities across the life course, how race, class, gender, and sexuality shape health outcomes, neighborhood and religious correlates of health and illness, how education affects health from birth to death, veterans mental and physical health, and the political/cultural construction of genetics, allergies, and maternal health.