Which Engineering Field Would Make Sense for a Masters?

<p>I am currently a Public Health (Pre-Med Track) undergrad student (sophomore to be specific) and since I will be a junior this upcoming Fall semester, I have started researching medical schools, but graduate programs for public health and recently I have pondered whether a Masters degree in engineering would be viable. Having taken all the premed courses throughout my undergrad (bio, chem, ochem, physics, calculus 1 and statistics) and my public health courses (Environmental Health, Nutrition and Health, Epidemiology, just to name a few), if I were to go on to get a Masters in Engineering, which field would require the least amount of additional coursework so that I do not have to do a post-bac or 5-7 years of a Masters degree (which could be done in 2-3 years) because I do not have an engineering bachelors? The only ones I can think of that are related to what I have studied are bioengineering, BME, and environmental engineering? Which one would you guys choose? Thank you. </p>

<p>Environmental Engineering might be the best bet. I know that in our department at Illinois Tech, they take students from varied disciplines. You need more that Calculus 1 though so if you have some ability to select elective courses for your last year, you can try to include courses which give you a better preparation.</p>