Our seminar series features talks by researchers focused on understanding and addressing health inequities in the United States and globally.

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UPCOMING SEMINARS

 

To Be Announced

 

PAST SEMINARS

Tuesday, October 15, 2024
12:10-1:30PM (PT)
 

Ending the Urban Gun Violence Epidemic

The US Surgeon General, the WHO, and US Centers for Disease Control have called gun violence an epidemic. Gun violence is a public health issue that contributes to mortality, chronic trauma, and ‘toxic stress.’ Communities living with gun violence often fail to have a public sphere, because people are afraid to go outside, and civic life can break-down entirely. Communities experiencing this epidemic are also experiencing decades of structural violence, or chronic neglect and dehumanization by urban planning and policy institutions, that contributes to systemic racism, poverty, and lack of opportunity. Yet, these same communities have mobilized to protect themselves, often without the support of  police. This talk will describe the global movement around ‘community violence intervention,’ or CVI. Dr. Jason Corburn will describe how CVI works and offer examples from his experience working with the organization Advance Peace. Dr. Corburn will show that CVI can reduce violence and contribute to less trauma, more healing, and healthier cities.  

 

Jason Corburn, PhD, MCP
Professor, Dept. of City and Regional Planning and School of Public Health
University of California, Berkeley

 

Dr. Jason Corburn is a Professor in the School of Public Health and Department of City and Regional Planning at the University of California, Berkeley. He also serves as the faculty Director of Berkeley’s joint Master in City Planning and Master in Public Health degree program, and directs Berkeley’s Center for Global Healthy Cites. Dr. Corburn is an award-winning author and a global leader in research and action linking urban and environmental planning, community health equity, citizen science, and public safety. His work focuses on community-engaged participatory action research, formative evaluation, and spatial and social epidemiology. A respected advisor in the field of urban health equity, he has received numerous awards for his research, practice and teaching.

 


Wednesday, May 1, 2024
12:00-1:15PM (PT)

Safety Net Policies to Address Pandemic-Era Health Inequities: Impacts and Challenges

During the COVID-19 pandemic, US state and federal governments engaged in unprecedented spending on social safety net policies. For example, in 2021 nearly all US families received up to $300 in monthly cash benefits, and nutrition benefits for low-income families were greatly expanded. Many of these benefits have since expired, but similar policies continue to be considered by state and federal governments. In this presentation, Dr. Hamad will discuss the health impacts of pandemic-era expansions to the US safety net, as well as implementation barriers that have limited potential impact.

 

Rita Hamad, MD, PhD
Associate Professor 
Harvard School of Public Health
 

Rita Hamad, MD, PhD, is an Associate Professor at the Harvard School of Public Health. She is a social epidemiologist, family physician, and Director of the Social Policies for Health Equity Research Center. Her team examines the health effects of social and economic policies using interdisciplinary quasi-experimental methods to generate actionable evidence to inform policymaking. Dr. Hamad is the co-Chair of the Communications Committee of the Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science and serves as an Associate Editor for the journal Health Affairs Scholar. In 2020-2022, she was the James C. Puffer American Board of Family Medicine / National Academy of Medicine Fellow. She has provided consultation to state and federal legislators on the design of poverty alleviation policies.

 

Monday, February 5, 2024
12:10-1:30PM (PT)

A biopsychosocial approach to examining child health disparities

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Rebecca E. Hasson, PhD
Associate Professor 
University of Michigan School of Kinesiology

 

The integration of psychosocial and physiologic measures of stress provide exciting new opportunities to clarify the complex biopsychosocial pathways through which chronic stress contributes to child health disparities. This talk will examine the relationships between stress exposure, appraisal, response, and type 2 diabetes risk in African American and non-Latino white youth.

 

 


April 17, 2023
12:10-1:15PM 

From the cell to the street: Addressing structural determinants
to advance the science of environmental justice

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Rachel Morello-Frosch, Ph.D., M.P.H.

Rachel Morello-Frosch, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Professor, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management 
UC Berkeley School of Public Health

 

Researchers, community members and advocates have raised concerns about the need to address the double jeopardy of co-occurring exposures to environmental and social "stressogens" that likely shape the origins and persistence of health disparities, particularly those related to perinatal health outcomes. This talk will delve into the scientific evidence, as well as research translation and policy engagement strategies for how to advance environmental justice in policy and regulatory decision-making.

 


November 15, 2022
12:00-1:30PM 

Leveraging Administrative Data to Investigate Historical and Contemporary Structural Racism

Zinzi Bailey, ScD, MSPH
Epidemiologist & Assistant Professor
Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami

 

Zinzi Bailey, ScD, MSPH is a social epidemiologist and an Assistant Professor at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center. Her research focuses on operationalizing historical and contemporary structural racism in relationship to health inequities and neighborhood variation in cancer risk as well as lung cancer disparities across the cancer continuum. Prior to moving to the University of Miami, she was the Director of Research and Evaluation at the Center for Health Equity in the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and a postdoctoral fellow at McGill University’s Institute for Health and Social Policy.

 

 


April 14, 2022
12:00-1:30PM

Economic Opportunity, Public Policy, and Population Health

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Atheendar Venkataramani, MD, PhD
Assistant Professor, Medical Ethics and Health Policy
Director, Opportunity for Health Lab
Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania

 

This talk will examine the relationship between economic opportunity, economic security, and health outcomes and elucidate how an opportunity framework can clarify structural and policy drivers of health inequality.

 


April 27, 2021
12:00-1:30PM

Structural Racism - Deflating the "Bucky Ball"

Gilbert Gee, Ph.D.
Professor, Department of Community Health Sciences
UCLA, Fielding School of Public Health

 

Racism is a fundamental driver of racial inequities. Structural and institutional racism are terms often used interchangeably, yet, the concepts are quite distinct. This presentation will illustrate the differences using the analogy of "bucky balls" and further discuss how racialized rules provide a major way to maintain the racial hierarchy across institutions. 

 


March 11, 2021
12:00-1:00PM

Understanding and Addressing Structural Determinants of Cardiovascular Health Inequities

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Kiarri Kershaw, PhD, MPH
Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine
Northwestern University, Feinberg School of Medicine
 

Racial residential segregation, fueled by discriminatory housing and lending practices faced by Black Americans, is an obstacle to promoting the equitable distribution of resources that optimize cardiovascular health. This talk will highlight research examining associations of racial residential segregation with cardiovascular health, and evaluate the impact of multi-level social interventions to address the downstream consequences of segregation on cardiovascular disease risk in Black people.

 


October 7, 2020
12:00-1:30PM

Why Data Are Not Enough to Solve Health Inequities:

Environmental Injustice, Corporate Influence and the Public’s Health

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Tracey Woodruff, PhD, MPH
Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences
University of California, San Francisco
 

Dr. Tracey Woodruff will discuss how industrial chemicals pollute air, water, food, and dust and will explore the science behind their contribution to chronic health conditions. She will illustrate how the burden of exposure disproportionately falls on vulnerable populations and contributes to health disparities, and elucidate the role of corporate influence on science in contributing to these conditions. She will discuss her experience in strategies and approaches to address these environmental injustices.

 

January 15, 2020
12:00-1:30PM

On the Question of Race, Racism, and Biological Embedding:

A Critical Race Approach to Population Health and Health Inequities

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Amani Allen, PhD, MPH
Associate Professor of Community Health Sciences and Epidemiology
University of California, Berkeley
 

This talk will explore the concept of race and discuss how ontological conceptions of race impact the questions we ask, the nature of our scientific investigations, and the conclusions we draw from scientific evidence. I will discuss racism as a determinant of health and the need for conceptual rigor for advancing the study of race, racism, and embodiment in social epidemiology. Drawing on recent findings from the African American Women’s Heart & Health Study, the talk will demonstrate the use of mixed methods research and intersectional framing to examine how racism gets into the body to impact health, and conclude with a discussion of implications for how we approach population health.

 


December 4, 2019
12:00-1:30PM

Uses and Misuses of DNA Methylation to Explain Health Inequalities

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David Rehkopf, ScD, MPH
Associate Professor of Medicine
Primary Care and Population Health
Stanford University
 

DNA methylation is a biological system critical for human physiological function. It is more stable over time than many biomarkers, but, unlike genotype, it is dynamic depending on the environment. Two difficult challenges for studying the impacts of social and economic factors on health are: 1) the lag time between exposure and health outcomes, and 2) the need to evaluate multiple health outcomes to understand the impacts of policy change. In this talk, I will discuss what we know about how DNA methylation may help to address these challenges, with the goal of providing the best evidence possible for understanding the impacts of policies for decreasing inequalities in health.