What Is Public Health Nursing? Career path and whether it’s right for you
When nurses consider graduate school, many immediately think of becoming a nurse practitioner. But there is another advanced path that is growing in demand, one focused not on treating individual patients, but on improving the health of entire communities: public health nursing.
For nurses interested in prevention, systems thinking, and community impact, this career offers a powerful alternative.
What is public health nursing?
Public health nursing is a nursing specialty focused on improving the health of populations rather than individual patients. Public health nurses work in community settings to prevent disease, promote health, and address social determinants like housing, access to care, and education.
Instead of treating illness after it occurs, public health nurses work “upstream” — identifying risks early and implementing interventions that improve outcomes at scale.
Turner-Bicknell conducting community outreach for Harm Reduction Ohio
Tasha Turner-Bicknell, DNP, RN, CPH, Associate Professor and Director of Public Health Nursing Programs at the University of Cincinnati College of Nursing, began her career in bedside nursing doing what she describes as meaningful work, but with lingering questions.
“I wondered what could have been done earlier to prevent patients from reaching the hospital in the first place,” she recalls. Those questions led her into home-based care as a visiting nurse and case manager.
“Seeing patients in their own environments, watching them recover, manage their own health, and eventually be discharged gave me a different view of what nursing could accomplish,” she says.
After graduate school, she transitioned into public health nursing, the field she had been drawn to all along. Today, her work focuses on harm reduction and overdose prevention, collaborating with interdisciplinary teams that include physicians, epidemiologists, social workers, and peer support specialists.
What do public health nurses do?
Public health nursing sits at the intersection of clinical expertise, community advocacy, and population-level thinking. It is about getting upstream of the problem, about the conditions that lead patients to more serious situations. Public health nurses take on roles that extend far beyond traditional clinical care. Their work often includes:
Turner-Bicknell presenting on implementation of harm reduction vending machines.at a national conference
- Leading community health programs and outreach initiatives;
- Conducting population health assessments
- Managing mobile health units and community-based services;
- Supporting harm reduction and disease prevention efforts;
- Using data to guide interventions and policy decisions;
- Collaborating with organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
- Addressing social determinants of health at the community level.
They may work in health departments, nonprofits, schools, federal agencies, or healthcare systems expanding into community-based care. Bachelor's-prepared nurses might deliver direct services, while someone with a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) is ready to direct programs, manage teams, and drive evidence-based change across an entire organization or region.
Who should consider a career in public health nursing?
Public health nursing is best suited for nurses who are motivated by impact beyond individual patient care. Turner-Bicknell emphasizes that passion is essential, but so are communication and collaboration skills.
“Public health has never been more contested or more visible, and nurses who can listen, persuade, and compromise are the ones who move the needle.”
Turner-Bicknell supporting then-student Courtney Farber at the National Public Health Conference
Strong candidates for this field often:
- Enjoy working with varied communities and stakeholders;
- Are comfortable using data to inform decisions;
- Have an interest in prevention and long-term outcomes;
- Value fairness and accessibility for healtcare for everyone;
- Want to influence systems, not just individual care.
It’s also important to reflect on career goals: Do you want to provide direct patient care, or lead programs and interventions that impact entire populations?
What makes the University of Cincinnati public health nursing program unique?
The University of Cincinnati College of Nursing offers both a DNP and a post-bachelor’s certificate in public health nursing, designed for working professionals. Program highlights include:
Turner-Bicknell visiting 2025 public health graduate Tara Jimison at her practicum site
- Fully online structure with flexible scheduling;
- Day-one course access, allowing students to plan ahead;
- Real-world training, including coursework from FEMA and the U.S. Census Bureau;
- Extensive practicum experience, with 1,000 total hours in the DNP program: 500 hours are front-loaded across three structured public health practicums;
- Opportunities to complete multiple practicums within one organization or across varied settings.
Students often see direct career benefits from these experiences.
“Many students have been offered positions through their practicum organizations,” Turner-Bicknell says. “In some cases, employers have adopted a student's DNP project as a permanent program.”
The most common challenge in the program is balancing practicum hours with a full-time job. Students may need to complete around 12 practicum hours per week, which requires careful planning and time management.
However, those same experiences often lead directly to job offers, expanded networks, and career transitions that would otherwise be difficult to achieve.
“The challenge of juggling the schedule is, in most cases, the price of admission to a career pivot,” Turner-Bicknell explains.
Why public health nursing matters now
Public health has become more visible — and increasingly complex. From infectious disease response to substance use and healthcare access for everyone, today’s challenges require leaders who can navigate competing perspectives and build consensus across communities.
Turner-Bicknell being interviewed at National Public Radio's Cincinnati Edition show
“Nurses are uniquely positioned to navigate that landscape,” Turner-Bicknell says. “They're prepared to listen, to bring people along, and to build consensus across very different parts."
For nurses drawn to advocacy, systems thinking, and large-scale impact, public health nursing offers a meaningful and concrete path forward — without stepping away from the career they have already built.
Public health nursing shifts the focus from treating illness to preventing it, expanding the nurse’s role from bedside care to community and systems leadership. For the right nurse, it’s not just a different career path — it is a broader way to make a difference.
Frequently asked questions about public health nursing
- Is public health nursing the same as a nurse practitioner?
No. Nurse practitioners provide direct patient care, while public health nurses focus on population health, prevention, and community-level interventions.
- Do you need a DNP for public health nursing?
Not always. Entry-level roles may require a BSN, but leadership and program management roles often prefer or require a Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP). A public health post-bachelor's certificate program can also provide a foundation for those interested in the field.
- Is public health nursing in demand?
Yes. Demand is growing as healthcare systems invest more in prevention, community health, and population-based care.
- Can public health nurses work outside hospitals?
Absolutely. Many work in public health departments, nonprofits, schools, government agencies, and community organizations.
- Is public health nursing a good career choice?
It is a strong choice for nurses who want to create broader impact, focus on prevention, and work toward fair health outcomes for everyone at the community or systems level.
Have more questions on our public health nursing programs? Request information here.
Feature image: Tasha Turner-Bicknell and the first cohort of Public Health Nursing graduates at 2025 commencement. / Photo provided.
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