American Public Health Association
Alumni and Friends Reception | Philadelphia
Understanding social determinants to create a healthier world | American College of Healthcare Executives
Public Health and the Future Public Health Professional | Philadelphia
The Consequence of Systems Thinking in Public Health: New Ideas and Challenges | La Trobe University
The limits of risk factors revisited: is it time for a causal architecture approach? | UNSW Sydney
Canberra Politics; Hate and Health; Black Holes | Late Night Live
Why hate is a public health issue | ABC The Drum
Oklahoma News Report
Epidemiology Counts – Episode 5 “Consequential Epidemiology”
Understanding Health in Cities | Tsinghua University
What we need to talk about when we talk about health | Clinical Conversations with Joe Elia
Well: What We Need to Talk About When We Talk About Health | BU Alumni Association
We need to think about health differently | KUOW The Record
"Well: What We Need To Talk About When We Talk About Health." | At Length with Steve Scher
Sandro Galea, Nancy Fraser, Bhaskar Sunkara, Ray Williams | In the Moment with Steve Scher
Well Book Talk | Seattle
Well Book Talk | San Francisco
Sandro Galea: Reframing the Health Care Conversation | Commonwealth Club of California
“It’s the social divides that cause health divides.” Sandro Galea, dean of the Boston University School of Public Health, comes to this conclusion in his new book, Well: What We Need to Talk About When We Talk About Health. Americans spend more money on health than people anywhere else in the world, yet they lead shorter, less healthy lives than citizens of other rich countries. Galea's book is a call for a new framing of American health care, in which socioeconomic factors take on a larger role in the conversations about public health. While not obvious at first glance, Galea explains how the American fixation on medicine and symptom-focused health care misses the point—we should be preventing these medical issues in the first place. Join us for a conversation on how socioeconomic factors ultimately decide who gets to be healthy and who does not, and how we can invest in structural changes to build a healthier America for the future.
