...with job search and taking (free) online classes on epidemiology.
For the most part, they are "continuing education" courses for public health professionals, but since I keep throwing apps at epidemiology jobs, I should probably know more.
Some of it is a bit dry, but there's a lot more to public health that's really interesting to me. Part of it really plays with the way I think of myself. In spite of getting a bachelor's degree in psychology, I really find myself leaning toward the biological end of the spectrum when I think about human behavior. Add in a healthy interest in the systemic social relationships in humans as well as an interest in health and disease, you've got much of the non-technical end of epidemiology.