Public Health Entomology for All

Internships and Fellowships at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 

Do you want to protect all U.S. communities from vector-borne diseases like malaria, dengue, and Lyme disease? Would you like to learn about Public Health Entomology as a profession and learn applied entomological strategies to prevent and control vector-borne diseases that are transmitted to people by mosquitoes, ticks, and fleas? Apply for an internship or fellowship through Public Health Entomology For All, an exciting opportunity for current students or recent undergraduate graduates in the United States.

Applications for 2025 Internships and One-Year Fellowships are currently closed. Applications for Summer 2026 Internships will open in December.

About the Program

In partnership with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Entomological Society of America (ESA) created the Public Health Entomology For All (PHEFA) program as we recognize entomology and ESA have a role in creating a workforce that can protect the United States from debilitating diseases carried by insects.

PHEFA Internships and Fellowships will encourage students and recent graduates to pursue entomology as a career and work toward a future in which all communities benefit from creative scientific processes and solutions.

Through PHEFA, ESA hires interns and fellows who have attended a college or university in the United States and are interested in entomology and public health. Interns and fellows work at the CDC Arboviral and Bacterial Diseases Branches in Fort Collins, Colorado, the Rickettsial Zoonoses Diseases Branch and Division of Parasitic Diseases and Malaria in Atlanta, Georgia, and the Dengue Branch in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Learn more about public health entomology at the CDC from C. Ben Beard, Ph.D., Deputy Director, here.