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Health Policy, Equity, and the Lead Poisoning Crisis: A Conversation with Dr. Mona Hanna-Attisha


Mona Hanna-Attisha, MD, MPH, FAAP, is founder and director of the Michigan State University and Hurley Children’s Hospital Pediatric Public Health Initiative, an innovative and model public health program in Flint, Michigan.

September 23, 2021

Health Have, Health Have Nots in a Time of COVID-19


Sandro Galea, a physician, epidemiologist and dean and Robert A. Knox Professor at Boston University School of Public Health, presented the 2020 Herbert Memorial Lourie Lecture on Health Policy.

Galea looked at how our health is fundamentally socially patterned and reflects the world around us. COVID-19 has made this evermore apparent.

September 10, 2020

Marijuana Legalization: Beyond Yes or No


Dr. Keith Humphreys, Stanford University, spoke about the marijuana legalization movement, which states are getting it right and wrong, and what the research says about the implications of legalization for public health.

September 5, 2019

Unequal Hopes, Lives, and Lifespans in the USA: Lessons from the New Science of Well-Being


Carol Graham, The Brookings Institute, highlights the importance of well-being measures in identifying and monitoring trends in life satisfaction, optimism, misery and despair, and demonstrates how hope and happiness can lead to improved economic outcomes.

September 18, 2018

The Opioid Epidemic: A Practice & Policy Perspective


Known internationally for her work as an independent investigator in drug and alcohol research, Dr. Gail D’Onofrio is professor of emergency medicine and founding chair of the Department of Emergency Medicine at Yale University School of Medicine.

October 2017

A Roadmap to Reducing Gun Violence in America


Dr. Daniel Webster, director, Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research/professor of Health Policy and Management at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

October 13, 2016

Daniel Webster

Patients as Consumers: Is It Time to Make Health Care Like Other Service Industries?


Dr. James R. Knickman is the president and CEO of the New York State Health Foundation (NYSHealth), a private foundation dedicated to improving the health of all New Yorkers, especially the most vulnerable.

Under Dr. Knickman’s leadership, the Foundation has invested more than $100 million since 2006 in initiatives to improve health care and the public health system in New York state.

October 8, 2015

Improving Public Health Safety Nets after an Economic Recession


Dr. Sanjay Basu is an assistant professor of Medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center.

October 9, 2014

Rajiv Kumar

Health Promotion 2.0: The Future of Wellness Programs in America


Dr. Rajiv Kumar is founder and CEO of Providence-based wellness company ShapeUp.

2013

Palliative Care: Transforming the Care of Serious Illness


With Diane E. Meier, M.D., vice chair for public policy for the Brookdale Department of Geriatrics and Palliative Medicine and director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care

2012

Diane Meier
Macaran Baird

Integrating Care: Improving Overall Health by Integrating Behavioral/Mental Health Care into Primary Care


With Macaran A. Baird, M.D., M.S., Department of Family Medicine and Community Health Medicine, The University of Minnesota

2011

Electronic Health Records: Delivering the Right Information to the Right Health Care Providers at the Right Time


With William M. Tierney, M.D., Indiana University School of Medicine

2010

William Tierney
Jonathan Gruber

Universal Health Insurance Coverage: Progress and Issues


With Jonathan Gruber, Ph.D., professor of economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

2009

Physician Sovereignty: The Dangerous Persistence of an Obsolete Idea


With David Lawrence, M.D., MPH, retired CEO and chairman of Kaiser Permanente

2008

David Lawrence

Our Troubled Health Care System: Why Is It So Hard to Fix?


With Judy Feder, Ph.D., professor and dean, Georgetown Public Policy Institute, Georgetown University

2007

The Truth About Moral Hazard and Adverse Selection


With Mark V. Pauly, Ph.D., Bendheim Professor, and professor of health care systems, business and public policy, insurance and risk management, and economics at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania

2006

Mark Pauly
John Wennenberg

Variations among Regions and Hospitals in Managing Chronic Illness: How Much Care Is Enough?


With John Wennberg, M.D., MPH, professor of community and family medicine (Epidemiology) and of medicine; director, Center for the Evaluative Clinical Services; and principal investigator of the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care project, Dartmouth Medical School

2005

Spending Health Care Dollars Wisely: Can Cost-Effectiveness Analysis Help?


With Milton Weinstein, Ph.D., director of the Program on the Economic Evaluation of Medical Technology at Harvard Center for Risk Analysis, and Henry J. Kaiser Professor of Health Policy and Management at Harvard University

2004

Milton Weinstein
David Cutler

Are the Benefits of Medicine Worth What We Pay for It?


With David M. Cutler, professor of economics at Harvard University and a faculty member of the Kennedy School of Government

2003

The Changing American Hospital in the Twenty-First Century


With Ralph W. Muller, former president and CEO of the University of Chicago Hospitals and Health Systems

2002

Ralph Muller
Patricia Danzon and Stephen Soumerai

Pharmaceuticals: Access, Cost, Pricing, and Directions for the Future


With Patricia M. Danzon, the Celia Moh Professor, and professor of health care systems, and insurance and risk management, at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, and Stephen B. Soumerai Professor of Ambulatory Care and Prevention at the Harvard Medical School, and director of the Drug Policy Research Group at Harvard Pilgrim Health Care

2001

Medicaid, Managed Care, and Kids


With Deborah A. Freund, Ph.D., MPH, vice chancellor for Academic Affairs and provost of Syracuse University

2000

Deborah Freund
Linda Fried

Health Promotion for Older Adults: What is the Potential?


With Linda P. Fried, M.D., MPH, director, Center on Aging and Health, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions

1999

The Evolving Practice of Medicine: A View from the Front Line


With Robert M. Corwin, medical director, MedBest Medical Management, Inc. and HealthBest IPA, Inc.; Thomas H. Dennison, adjunct professor of public administration, The Maxwell School, Syracuse University (Moderator); Patricia D. Franklin, assistant professor of medicine, medical director of quality management, SUNY Health Science Center; Paul B. Ginsburg, Ph.D., president, Center for Studying Health Change;  David G. Murray, professor and chairman, Department of Orthopedic Surgery, SUNY Health Science Center.

1998

Robert Corwin Thomas Dennison Patricka Franklin Paul Ginsburg and David Murray
David Lansky

Patients as Consumers: Making the Health Care System Our Own


With David J. Lansky, Ph.D., president of the Foundation for Accountability

1997

New Conundrums: Public Policy and the Emerging Health Care Marketplace


With James R. Tallon, Jr., president of the United Hospital Fund of New York

1996

James Tallon
David Lawrence

Health Care: Public Good or Private Enterprise?


With David M. Lawrence, M.D., chairman and CEO of the Kaiser Foundation Health Plan, Inc. and Hospitals

1995

The Rhetoric and the Reality of Health Care Reform Legislation


With Marilyn Moon, Senior Fellow with the Health Policy Center of the Urban Institute

1994

Marilyn Moon
John Iglehart

Pursuing Health Care Reform: The Promise and the Pitfalls


With John K. Iglehart, founding editor of Health Affairs and national correspondent for The New England Journal of Medicine

1993

Center for Policy Research
426 Eggers Hall