UCLA EMPH and MHA 2026 Graduates Inducted into Delta Omega Honor Society

A photo collage of fourteen UCLA Fielding School of Public Health graduate students inducted into the Delta Omega National Honor Society. The professional headshots are arranged in circular frames surrounding the Delta Omega Honorary Society in Public Health text logo and circular gold key emblem in the center. Each graduate's name and degree credential (MHA, MPH, RN, or MD) is listed underneath their photo.

UCLA EMPH and MHA 2026 Graduates Inducted into Delta Omega Honor Society

Congratulations to the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health Class of 2026 Health Policy & Management Executive MPH and MHA students recently inducted into the Delta Omega National Honor Society. Membership in Delta Omega reflects the dedication of an individual to increasing the quality of the field of public health, as well as to the protection and advancement of the health of all people.

The UCLA Executive HPM students chosen for this honorary society were officially recognized at the UCLA Health Policy & Management Alumni Association (HPMAA) Leaders of Today, Leaders of Tomorrow Annual Dinner on May 18, 2026, held at the Bel-Air Bay Club in Pacific Palisades, California.

Heidi Bautista, MHA
Maya Camacho, MPH
Brian Fong, MHA
Aaron Gunewardena, MHA
Mervet Halaka, MHA
John Jones, MHA
Maite Medina, MPH, RN
Subashini Maloney, MHA
Parfait Migisha, MHA
Danielle Milosavljevic, MHA
Alejandro Andres Munoz, MHA
Alexa Osime, MPH
Angela Savelli, MHA
Ye Tian, MD, MHA

The Delta Omega Honorary Society in Public Health was founded in 1924 at Johns Hopkins University within the School of Hygiene and Public Health (now known as the Bloomberg School of Public Health) by two graduate students, Dr. Edgar Erskine Hume and Dr. Claude W. Mitchell. They organized this honorary society in order to promote the graduate study of public health, a new field at the time, and recognize outstanding achievement.

Currently, Delta Omega has expanded to more than 130 chapters at CEPH-accredited schools and programs and has more than 30,000 members.

Learn more at deltaomega.org.