No. My university offered epi through the School of Public Health so I counted it as a health class. Plus, epi really doesn't incorporate enough "math" imo to be included compared to a real math class. If you took biostats, then I would include that.
It all depends on the content of the course I suppose. The epi. course they offered at my school was listed as an honors level sr. year bio class cross listed also as a 400 level math class.
i think it depends on amcas. public health isn't quite the same as epidemiology (which is less applied, more analytic). but even if epidemiology shouldn't be considered a "health science" like public health is (see below, from amcas), then it is probably most appropriately classified as a "social science." in either case, it will not count toward the BCPM GPA.
Hemostasis (MLS, Medical Laboratory Science course covering theory on all pathways, drugs, etc of hemostasis, 4000 level)
Quantitative Biological Methods (Biology, laboratory and lecture course on PCR, pipetting, chromatography, etc)
Human Physiology
Human Anatomy
Hemostasis (MLS, Medical Laboratory Science course covering theory on all pathways, drugs, etc of hemostasis, 4000 level)
Quantitative Biological Methods (Biology, laboratory and lecture course on PCR, pipetting, chromatography, etc)
Human Physiology
Human Anatomy