Moderator: Benjamin Mason Meier, Assistant Professor
of Global Health Policy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [Listen to Presentation][View Presentation]
Not exact matches
Eric Ries, Entrepreneur & Author, The Lean Startup Justin Rosenstein, Co-Founder, Asana Alec Ross, Author, The Industries
of the Future Javier Saade, Venture Capitalist; Former Associate Administrator, SBA Chris Sacca, Founder / Chairman, Lowercase Capital Dave Samuel, Co-Founder, Freestyle Capital Julie Samuels, Executive Director, Tech: NYC Reshma Saujani, Founder, Girls Who Code Chris Schroeder, Venture Investor; Author, Startup Rising Jake Schwartz, Co - Founder / CEO, General Assembly Robert Scoble, Entrepreneur in Residence and Futurist, Upload VR Kim Malone Scott, CEO, Candor, Inc; Former Director, Google Tina Sharkey, Partner, Sherpa Foundry & Sherpa Capital Clara Shih, Co - Founder / CEO, Hearsay Social Shivani Siroya, Founder / CEO, InVenture Steve Smith, Executive Director, Public
Policy Institute, Government Relations & Telecommunications Project, Rainbow PUSH Coalition Jonathan Spalter, Chair, Mobile Future DeShuna Spencer, CEO, kweliTV Katie Stanton, CMO, Color Genomics; Former VP
of Global Media, Twitter Jenny Stefanotti, Co-Founder, OneProject; Board
of Directors, Ushahidi Debby Sterling, Founder / CEO, Goldiblox Seth Sternberg, Co - Founder / CEO, Honor Margaret Stewart, Vice President
of Product Design, Facebook Jeremy Stoppelman, CEO, Yelp Michael Stoppelman, SVP, Engineering, Yelp Baratunde Thurston, Former supervising producer, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah; Co-Founder, Cultivated Wit Stephanie Tilenius, Founder / CEO, Vida
Health; Board
of Directors, Seagate Technology Richard D. Titus, Entrepreneur; SVP, Samsung Anne Toth, VP
of Policy & Compliance, Slack Bill Trenchard, Partner, First Round Capital April Underwood, VP
of Product, Slack Max Ventilla, Founder / CEO, AltSchool Tabreez Verjee, Co - Founder / Partner Uprising; Board Director Kiva.org Jimmy Wales, Founder
of Wikipedia Hunter Walk, Partner, Homebrew VC; Former Director
of Product Management, Google Tristan Walker, Founder / CEO, Walker & Company Brands, Inc.; Founder / Chairman, Code 2040 Ari Wallach, CEO, Synthesis Corp..
Eric Ries, Entrepreneur & Author, The Lean Startup Justin Rosenstein, Co-Founder, Asana Alec Ross, Author, The Industries
of the Future Javier Saade, Venture Capitalist; Former Associate Administrator, SBA Chris Sacca, Founder / Chairman, Lowercase Capital Dave Samuel, Co-Founder, Freestyle Capital Julie Samuels, Executive Director, Tech: NYC Reshma Saujani, Founder, Girls Who Code Chris Schroeder, Venture Investor; Author, Startup Rising Jake Schwartz, Co - Founder / CEO, General Assembly Robert Scoble, Entrepreneur in Residence and Futurist, Upload VR Kim Malone Scott, CEO, Candor, Inc; Former Director, Google Tina Sharkey, Partner, Sherpa Foundry & Sherpa Capital Clara Shih, Co - Founder / CEO, Hearsay Social Shivani Siroya, Founder / CEO, InVenture Steve Smith, Executive Director, Public
Policy Institute, Government Relations & Telecommunications Project, Rainbow PUSH Coalition Jonathan Spalter, Chair, Mobile Future DeShuna Spencer, CEO, kweliTV Katie Stanton, CMO, Color Genomics; Former VP
of Global Media, Twitter Jenny Stefanotti, Co-Founder, OneProject; Board
of Directors, Ushahidi Debbie Sterling, Founder / CEO, Goldiblox Seth Sternberg, Co - Founder / CEO, Honor Margaret Stewart, Vice President
of Product Design, Facebook Jeremy Stoppelman, CEO, Yelp Michael Stoppelman, SVP, Engineering, Yelp Baratunde Thurston, Former supervising producer, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah; Co-Founder, Cultivated Wit Stephanie Tilenius, Founder / CEO, Vida
Health; Board
of Directors, Seagate Technology Richard D. Titus, Entrepreneur; SVP, Samsung Anne Toth, VP
of Policy & Compliance, Slack Bill Trenchard, Partner, First Round Capital April Underwood, VP
of Product, Slack Max Ventilla, Founder / CEO, AltSchool Tabreez Verjee, Co - Founder / Partner Uprising; Board Director Kiva.org Jimmy Wales, Founder
of Wikipedia Hunter Walk, Partner, Homebrew VC; Former Director
of Product Management, Google Tristan Walker, Founder / CEO, Walker & Company Brands, Inc.; Founder / Chairman, Code 2040 Ari Wallach, CEO, Synthesis Corp..
CHAMPIONS INCLUDE: Dave Lewis, Group Chief Executive, Tesco (Chair) Erik Solheim, Executive Director, United Nations Environment (Co-Chair) Vytenis Andriukaitis, European Commissioner for
Health and Food Safety Peter Bakker, President, World Business Council for Sustainable Development John Bryant, Chairman
of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Kellogg Company Paul Bulcke, Chairman
of the Board
of Directors, Nestlé Nguyen Xuan Cuong, Minister
of Agriculture and Rural Development, Vietnam Michael La Cour, Managing Director, IKEA Food Services AB Wiebe Draijer, Chairman
of the Executive Board, Rabobank Shenggen Fan, Director General, International Food
Policy Research Institute Peter Freedman, Managing Director, The Consumer Goods Forum Louise Fresco, President
of the Executive Board, Wageningen University & Research Liz Goodwin, Senior Fellow and Director, Food Loss and Waste, World Resources Institute Marcus Gover, Chief Executive Officer, Waste and Resources Action Programme Hans Hoogeveen, Ambassador and Permanent Representative
of the Netherlands to the UN Organizations for Food and Agriculture Gilbert Houngbo, President, International Fund for Agricultural Development Selina Juul, Chairman
of the Board and Founder, Stop Wasting Food Movement in Denmark Yolanda Kakabadse, President, WWF International Sam Kass, Former White House Chef, Founder
of TROVE and Venture Partner, Acre Venture Partners Michel Landel, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman
of the Executive Committee, Sodexo Esben Lunde Larsen, Minister
of Environment and Food, Denmark José Antonio Meade, Minister
of Finance, Mexico Gina McCarthy, Former Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Denise Morrison, President and Chief Executive Officer, Campbell Soup Company Kanayo Nwanze, Former President, International Fund for Agricultural Development Rafael Pacchiano, Minister
of the Environment and Natural Resources, Mexico Paul Polman, Chief Executive Officer, Unilever Juan Lucas Restrepo Ibiza, Chairman,
Global Forum on Agricultural Research Judith Rodin, Former President, The Rockefeller Foundation Oyun Sanjaasuren, Chair,
Global Water Partnership Lindiwe Majele Sibanda, Vice President for Country Support,
Policy and Delivery, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa Feike Sijbesma, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman
of the Managing Board, Royal DSM Rajiv Shah, President, The Rockefeller Foundation Andrew Steer, President and Chief Executive Officer, World Resources Institute Achim Steiner, Administrator, United Nations Development Programme Tristram Stuart, Founder, Feedback Rhea Suh, President, Natural Resources Defense Council Rhoda Peace Tumusiime, Former Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, The African Union Sunny Verghese, Co-Founder, Group Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Olam International Tom Vilsack, Former Secretary, U.S. Department
of Agriculture Senzeni Zokwana, Minister
of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Republic
of South Africa
Professor Bruce Neal is Senior Director
of the Food
Policy Division at the George Institute for
Global Health, Chair
of the Australian Division
of World Action on Salt and
Health, and Professor
of Clinical Epidemiology, Imperial College London.
Dave Lewis, Group Chief Executive, Tesco (Chair) Erik Solheim, Executive Director, United Nations Environment (Co-Chair) Vytenis Andriukaitis, European Commissioner for
Health and Food Safety Peter Bakker, President, World Business Council for Sustainable Development John Bryant, Chairman
of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, Kellogg Company Paul Bulcke, Chairman
of the Board
of Directors, Nestlé Wiebe Draijer, Chairman
of the Executive Board, Rabobank Shenggen Fan, Director General, International Food
Policy Research Institute Peter Freedman, Managing Director, The Consumer Goods Forum Louise Fresco, President
of the Executive Board, Wageningen University & Research Liz Goodwin, Senior Fellow and Director, Food Loss and Waste, World Resources Institute Marcus Gover, Chief Executive Officer, Waste and Resources Action Programme Hans Hoogeveen, Ambassador and Permanent Representative
of the Netherlands to the UN Organizations for Food and Agriculture Selina Juul, Chairman
of the Board and Founder, Stop Wasting Food Movement in Denmark Yolanda Kakabadse, President, WWF International Sam Kass, Senior Food Analyst at NBC News and former U.S. White House Chef Michael La Cour, Managing Director, IKEA Food Services AB Michel Landel, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman
of the Executive Committee, Sodexo Esben Lunde Larsen, Minister
of Environment and Food, Denmark José Antonio Meade, Minister
of Finance, Mexico Gina McCarthy, Former Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Denise Morrison, President and Chief Executive Officer, Campbell Soup Company Kanayo Nwanze, Former President, International Fund for Agricultural Development Rafael Pacchiano, Secretary
of the Environment and Natural Resources, Mexico Paul Polman, Chief Executive Officer, Unilever Juan Lucas Restrepo Ibiza, Chairman,
Global Forum on Agricultural Research Judith Rodin, Former President, The Rockefeller Foundation Oyun Sanjaasuren, Chair,
Global Water Partnership Lindiwe Majele Sibanda, Vice President for Country Support,
Policy and Delivery, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa Feike Sijbesma, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman
of the Managing Board, Royal DSM Andrew Steer, President and Chief Executive Officer, World Resources Institute Achim Steiner, Administrator, United Nations Development Programme Tristram Stuart, Founder, Feedback Rhea Suh, President, Natural Resources Defense Council Rhoda Peace Tumusiime, Former Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, The African Union Sunny Verghese, Co-Founder, Group Managing Director & Chief Executive Officer, Olam International Tom Vilsack, Former Secretary, U.S. Department
of Agriculture Senzeni Zokwana, Minister
of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Republic
of South Africa
The
Global Strategy has not yet been fully implemented in the countries
of the UK and the APPG will continue to explore the
policy options, while hearing from experts on how these will contribute to improving infant and young child feeding practices, improving short and long - term
health outcomes and reducing
health inequalities.
Professor Goodwin is the founder and director
of The Center for Biotechnology and
Global Health Policy at UC Irvine School
of Law.
I am writing on behalf
of the International Baby food Action Network (IBFAN), the
global network that monitors the baby food industry and works for EU
Policy coherence with World
Health Assembly Resolutions on infant and young child feeding.
Survive & T hrive
Global Development Alliance Survive & Thrive is an allian ce
of government, professional
health association, private sector and non-profit partners working with country g overnments and
health professionals to improve
health outcomes for mothers, newborns and children through clinical training, systems strengthening and
policy advocacy.
Canada's infant feeding
policy should be based on those recommended by the World
Health Organization (WHO), including the full implementation
of the International Code
of Marketing
of Breast - milk Substitutes and subsequent World
Health Assembly (WHA) resolutions on infant and young child nutrition; the WHO / UNICEF Baby - Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI)(including the BFI for communities); and the WHO / UNICEF
Global Strategy for Infant and Infant and Young Child Feeding.
This finding underscoring the need for a comprehensive approach is supportive
of the approach called for by the World
Health Organization and the United Nations Children's Fund in the
Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding, and by the United States Agency for International Development in its breastfeeding
policy.
Abt Associates is a mission - driven,
global leader in research and program implementation in the fields
of health, social and environmental
policy, and international development.
The Guiding Principles for Complementary feeding
of the Breastfed Child (2003) developed by the Pan American
Health Organization, summarize the current scientific evidence for complementary feeding and are intended to guide
policy and programmatic action at
global, national and community levels, while the Guiding Principles for feeding the non-breastfed child 6 - 24 months
of age (2005) provide guidance for feeding children who are not receiving breast - milk.
Provision
of effective maternity care is a vital
global policy goal as governments seek not only to reduce mortality and morbidity rates [1] but also to ensure that maternal and newborn
health and wellbeing are improved.
Activities include the production
of sound, evidence - based technical information, development
of guidelines and counselling courses, provision
of guidance for the protection, promotion and support
of infant and young child feeding at
policy,
health service and community levels, production
of appropriate indicators and maintenance
of a
Global Data Bank on Infant and Young Child Feeding.
The Liberal Democrat MP and former party leader, who sits on the
Global Commission on Drugs
Policy, called for sweeping changes that would take the control
of cannabis out
of the hands
of criminals, and also ensure that the users
of harder drugs receive
health treatment rather than jail sentences.
AAAS has partnered with The World Academy
of Sciences (TWAS) since 2011 to organize a week - long summer course at TWAS headquarters in Trieste, Italy, to introduce science diplomacy to participants from the
global south and explore key contemporary international
policy issues relating to science, technology, environment and
health.
The essays represent a wide range
of scientific topics: neuroscience, biology, «Big Data», forensic anthropology, science
policy, STEM education, wildlife ecology, environmental sustainability, sociology, medicine,
global health, science ethics, stem cell research, materials engineering, crowd - sourcing, computer science, biotechnology, genetics, agricultural sciences, climate change, and information technology.
«Nanotechnology in
Global Medicine and Human Biosecurity: Private Interests,
Policy Dilemmas, and the Calibration
of Public
Health Law.»
Besides microbial ecology, fields that rely on
global sharing
of samples, data, and methods include climate science, geophysics, and
health and science
policy.
But even before all the data were in, the researchers began to suspect that their assumptions were wrong, says lead study author Kathryn Whetten, director
of the Center for Public
Health Policy at the Duke
Global Health Institute in Durham, N.C. «The stereotype that many
of us in the U.S. and Europe have
of an institution is not what is being set up in less wealthy nations,» Whetten says.
The authors — Ralph W. Muller, CEO
of the University
of Pennsylvania
Health System, Ezekiel J. Emanuel, MD, PhD, vice provost for global initiatives and chair of the Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania, Andrew Steinmetz, research assistant to Dr. Emanuel, and Steven M. Altschuler, MD, president and CEO of The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia — surveyed 74 senior executives from large hospitals and health systems across the United S
Health System, Ezekiel J. Emanuel, MD, PhD, vice provost for
global initiatives and chair
of the Department
of Medical Ethics and
Health Policy at the University of Pennsylvania, Andrew Steinmetz, research assistant to Dr. Emanuel, and Steven M. Altschuler, MD, president and CEO of The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia — surveyed 74 senior executives from large hospitals and health systems across the United S
Health Policy at the University
of Pennsylvania, Andrew Steinmetz, research assistant to Dr. Emanuel, and Steven M. Altschuler, MD, president and CEO
of The Children's Hospital
of Philadelphia — surveyed 74 senior executives from large hospitals and
health systems across the United S
health systems across the United States.
Researchers from the Perelman School
of Medicine at the University
of Pennsylvania, in partnership with ORGANIZE — a non-for-profit organization based in New York which leverages
health data to end the organ donor shortage by applying smarter technologies, utilizing social media, building more creative partnerships, and advocating for data - driven
policies — The Bridgespan Group — a
global nonprofit organization that collaborates with mission - driven leaders, organizations, and philanthropists to break cycles
of poverty and dramatically improve the quality
of life for those in need — and Gift
of Life Donor Program — an OPO which serves the eastern half
of Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and Delaware — evaluated the metrics and criteria used to measure OPOs across the country, and found significant discrepancies in how potential donors are evaluated and identified.
«Cross-national surveys such as the WHO Study on
Global Aging and Adult
Health (SAGE), the Gallup World Poll, and other longitudinal cohorts studies
of aging in Brazil, China, India, and South Korea, are beginning to redress the balance and provide the evidence for
policy, but much more remains to be done.»
Louise Ivers, MD, senior
health and policy adviser for Partners In Health and associate professor of global health and social medicine Harvard Medical School, who has worked in Haiti for over a decade, said there are several reasons the vaccine campaigns succ
health and
policy adviser for Partners In
Health and associate professor of global health and social medicine Harvard Medical School, who has worked in Haiti for over a decade, said there are several reasons the vaccine campaigns succ
Health and associate professor
of global health and social medicine Harvard Medical School, who has worked in Haiti for over a decade, said there are several reasons the vaccine campaigns succ
health and social medicine Harvard Medical School, who has worked in Haiti for over a decade, said there are several reasons the vaccine campaigns succeeded.
These are some
of the findings released by the World Bank Group and the Institute for
Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) in six regional reports as part
of The
Global Burden
of Disease: Generating Evidence, Guiding
Policy.
But implementation
of policies is not enough; countries, and the
global health community, need to collect timely, reliable, and detailed information on the effect
of those
policies, particularly among vulnerable populations and those being directly targeted by the tobacco industry.
«The Burden
of Cancer in Developing Countries: A
Global Health Council Report on the Cancer Advocacy and Learning Institute,» published in June
of 2010, documents both the incidence
of the disease and a set
of policy solutions.
A new examination
of remoteness as a barrier to
health care, published online in the Journal of Global Health, notes that most surveys and policy documents categorize families as living either in an urban or rural setting, and this dichotomy can mask disparities of the most remote fam
health care, published online in the Journal
of Global Health, notes that most surveys and policy documents categorize families as living either in an urban or rural setting, and this dichotomy can mask disparities of the most remote fam
Health, notes that most surveys and
policy documents categorize families as living either in an urban or rural setting, and this dichotomy can mask disparities
of the most remote families.
«While we can't stop the huge impact
of global warming on coral
health in the short term, this new work should drive
policy toward reducing plastic pollution.»
Holgate and others gathered on 25 September for a conference addressing the role
of non-governmental organizations in the
Global Health Security Agenda (GHSA), which was held at the Milken Institute School
of Public
Health at George Washington University and co-sponsored by AAAS, the Nuclear Threat Initiative, CORDS: Connecting Organizations for Regional Disease Surveillance, the UPMC Center for
Health Security, the Elizabeth R. Griffin Research Foundation and the CSIS
Global Health Policy Center.
«So much
of our funding for children in adversity focuses on girls,» said Kathryn Whetten, director
of the Center for
Health Policy and Inequalities Research at the Duke
Global Health Institute.
Martin Enserink coordinates most
of Science's European news as a contributing editor; he also edits and writes stories in the areas
of infectious diseases,
global health, and research
policy.
The AAAS analysis also traces
global scientific output, breaks down R&D spending by sectors such as
health and energy, looks at the balance
of R&D spending between the civil and defense sectors and weighs the use and impact
of tax
policies to spur R&D spending.
Gregg Gonsalves, an audience member who had been part
of the ACT UP movement in the 1980s and 1990s and is now co-director
of Yale's
Global Health Justice Partnership, earned a round
of applause when he argued that the safety
of medical products was a public
policy issue that should not be dominated by lobbying from the pharmaceutical industry.
In an accompanying editorial, David Goldblatt, M.B.Ch.B., Ph.D.,
of the UCL Institute
of Child
Health and Great Ormond Street Children's Hospital, London, and Elizabeth Miller, F.R.C.Path.,
of Public
Health England, London, write that the WHO Strategic Advisory Group
of Experts recently decided to revisit the issue
of nonspecific effects
of vaccines as part
of its continued appraisal
of important issues that could be relevant to inform
global immunization
policy.
«Although we did not find the overall traffic - related fatality rate to predict
policy adoption, the size
of the population ages 15 to 24 years — the group most at risk for death and injury from impaired driving — was associated with first time
policy adoption, suggesting that states might be initially more receptive to regulation when it involves protecting younger populations,» said study author Diana Silver, associate professor
of public
health at NYU Steinhardt and NYU College of Global Public H
health at NYU Steinhardt and NYU College
of Global Public
HealthHealth.
Public
health policy and research must overcome several barriers to developing vaccines for pregnant women, say authors Saad B. Omer, MBBS, PhD, professor
of global health, epidemiology and pediatrics at Emory University and Richard H. Beigi, MD, MSc, associate professor
of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive sciences at the University
of Pittsburgh Medical Center and chief medical officer at Magee - Womens Hospital
of UPMC.
«There is a very distressing disconnect between the research and the
policy,» says Kim Knowlton, a scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council, who studies the
health impacts
of global warming.
Its mission is «To improve
health and
health equity in the UK and worldwide», working in partnership to achieve excellence in public and
global health research, education and translation
of knowledge into
policy and practice.
High - Level Consultation Event 2016: «Towards Ethics & Principles
of Science Policy - Making» EuroScience Open Forum Manchester 2016: «Evidence Newcomers: Revolutionising Regional & Global Initiatives» «Waging War On Drugs Doesn't Work — Applying Harm Reduction Science Does» «The Right To Be Forgotten vs The Right To Know» «Toxicant Detectives: The Chemical Innovation Race, Lifestyle Risks & the Role of Animal Experiments» «Clinical Trial & Error: Why Narrowing The Resources Gap Matters» AAAS Boston 2016: «Neuroscience Clues To The Chemistry Of Addictions & Mood Disorders» «Statecraft & Scalpel: Regional & Global Health Diplomacy in 2016 And Beyond» Science Forum South Africa 2015: «Harm Reduction: Scientists Tackling Our Lifestyle Killers&raqu
of Science
Policy - Making» EuroScience Open Forum Manchester 2016: «Evidence Newcomers: Revolutionising Regional &
Global Initiatives» «Waging War On Drugs Doesn't Work — Applying Harm Reduction Science Does» «The Right To Be Forgotten vs The Right To Know» «Toxicant Detectives: The Chemical Innovation Race, Lifestyle Risks & the Role
of Animal Experiments» «Clinical Trial & Error: Why Narrowing The Resources Gap Matters» AAAS Boston 2016: «Neuroscience Clues To The Chemistry Of Addictions & Mood Disorders» «Statecraft & Scalpel: Regional & Global Health Diplomacy in 2016 And Beyond» Science Forum South Africa 2015: «Harm Reduction: Scientists Tackling Our Lifestyle Killers&raqu
of Animal Experiments» «Clinical Trial & Error: Why Narrowing The Resources Gap Matters» AAAS Boston 2016: «Neuroscience Clues To The Chemistry
Of Addictions & Mood Disorders» «Statecraft & Scalpel: Regional & Global Health Diplomacy in 2016 And Beyond» Science Forum South Africa 2015: «Harm Reduction: Scientists Tackling Our Lifestyle Killers&raqu
Of Addictions & Mood Disorders» «Statecraft & Scalpel: Regional &
Global Health Diplomacy in 2016 And Beyond» Science Forum South Africa 2015: «Harm Reduction: Scientists Tackling Our Lifestyle Killers»
2015 Amy Paul, PhD, MPH AAAS Science and Technology
Policy Fellow Strategy and Research Team Center for Digital Development
Global Development Lab United States Agency for International Development Carleigh Krubiner, PhD Research Scholar Berman Institute
of Bioethics Johns Hopkins University Lee - Lee Ellis, PhD, MA
Health Researcher Mathematica
Policy Research
His contributions to both medical ethics and
policy include his work on the ethics
of informed consent, umbilical cord blood banking, stem cell research, international HIV prevention research,
global health and research oversight.
Further to my research and clinical activities, as President
of the World Federation
of Nuclear Medicine and Biology, the peak
global Nuclear Medicine organisation, I am engaged in strategic planning for training,
health care
policy, and advocacy for molecular imaging and nuclear medicine therapy within the US, European, South American, Asia - Oceania, and African regions, and with the IAEA and WHO.
Prior to joining IDRI, Erik was Associate General Counsel at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where he was the second attorney on staff and worked for over seven years exclusively within the Foundation's
Global Health Program, where he led the development and implementation
of the foundation's
Global Access
policy through the review
of grant proposals and assistance in structuring strategic initiatives.
Sponsored by the Center for
Health and Wellbeing (CHW), the Sept. 18 symposium featured the work of students who conducted research projects and participated in summer internships sponsored by the global health and U.S. health policy pro
Health and Wellbeing (CHW), the Sept. 18 symposium featured the work
of students who conducted research projects and participated in summer internships sponsored by the
global health and U.S. health policy pro
health and U.S.
health policy pro
health policy programs.
The initiative, launched March 2 by the Northrop Grumman Corporation, aims to unite higher education and the private sector to accelerate the application
of thought leadership to
global public
health informatics,
policy development, strategic planning, programmatic implementation and evaluation.
Seema Kumar, Vice President
of Innovation,
Global Health and
Policy Communication at Johnson & Johnson (J&J).
A - FIT FOR PURPOSE
GLOBAL HEALTH POLICIES Ceremonial Hall, Hungarian Academy
of Sciences