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Dolores Acevedo-Garcia is an associate professor at the Harvard
School of Public Health. Her research interests include the effect
of social determinants such as residential segregation and immigrant
integration on health inequities and the role of non-health interventions,
such as housing and immigrant policies, in reducing those inequities.
She serves on numerous academic and advisory panels and is Project
Director of DiversityData.org. |
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Nancy E. Adler is a professor of psychology and director of
the Center for Health and Community at the University of California,
San Francisco. She is also director of the MacArthur Research
Network on SES and Health and chairs/serves on committees for
the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences and National
Institute of Health. Her own research focuses on the impact of
subjective social status on health. |
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William Dow is Associate Professor of Health Economics, Chair of the Health Services and Policy Analysis PhD Program, and Associate Director of the Berkeley Population Center at UC Berkeley. His current work analyzes economic aspects of health insurance, health behaviors, and health and demographic outcomes. He has conducted extensive health research in many countries, as well as in the U.S. |
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Troy Duster, professor of sociology at New York University,
is a leading authority on the use and misuse of race and ethnicity
in biomedical research. He has served on many national panels
and committees, including as chair of the National Advisory Committee
on Ethical, Legal and Social Issues in the Human Genome Project.
His books include Backdoor to Eugenics and Whitewashing
Race (co-author), and he has written numerous academic articles
on theory and methods. |
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Anthony Iton, M.D., is Alameda County Public Health Department
Director and Health Officer. His work focuses on the effects
of social determinants and systemic injustices on the health
of disadvantaged populations and he promotes community empowerment
strategies to eliminate health inequities. In 2006, he was awarded
the prestigious Roemer Prize for Creative Public Health Work. |
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Camara Phyllis
Jones, M.D., is research director, Social Determinants of Health
and Equity, at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and
a professor of medicine and public health in Atlanta. She is also
a family physician and social epidemiologist whose research focuses
on the effects of racism and the structural causes of "racial”
health inequities. Though her work, she hopes to initiate a national
campaign against racism.
Note: The responses and conclusions in this conversation are those of Dr. Jones and do not necessarily represent the official position of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. |
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Jay S. Kaufman is associate professor of epidemiology at the
University of North Carolina School of Public Health, research
fellow in the Sheps Center for Health Services Research, and
editor of a number of academic journals. He studies how health
status varies by socioeconomic factors, currently focusing on
methods of analysis, social and community factors in preterm
birth, and racial/ethnic disparities in medical care provision. |
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Nancy Krieger is a professor at the Harvard School of Public Health and co-director of the HSPH Interdisciplinary Concentration on Women, Gender, and Health. An internationally recognized social epidemiologist and long-time activist, she focuses on societal determinants of health inequities, including racism, class, and gender, methods for monitoring social inequalities in health, and theoretical frameworks, informed by history and politics, for addressing health inequities. She edited Embodying Inequality: Epidemiologic Perspectives and co-edited AIDS: The Politics of Survival and Women’s Health, Politics, and Power. She co-founded and chairs the Spirit of 1848 Caucus of the APHA, focused on links between social justice and public health. |
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Meizhu Lui is former executive director of United for a Fair
Economy and a long-time activist for racial and gender equality.
Her work calls attention to the growing divide between the very
wealthy and the rest of us, and the negative consequences of
racial inequality on our society. She recently co-authored The
Color of Wealth: The Story Behind the U.S. Racial Wealth Divide. |
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Bruce S. McEwen is Mirsky Professor and head of the Hatch Laboratory
of Neuroendocrinology at Rockefeller University. His laboratory
investigates stress effects on the brain and body and his work
helps to reformulate concepts and measurements related to stress
and stress hormones in the context of human societies. He co-authored
the books The Hostage Brain and The End of Stress
as We Know It. |
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Pilar N. Ossorio is associate professor of law and bioethics
at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and faculty in UW’s
Graduate Program on Population Health. Her work addresses the
ethics of genetic research and issues at the intersection of
race, research and justice. She serves on the Human Embryonic
Stem Cell Research Advisory Committee for the Institute of Medicine
and has served on numerous advisory committees and working groups
on genetics and ethics. |
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Dennis Raphael, professor at the School of Health Policy and Management, York University in Toronto, Canada, edited Social Determinants of Health: Canadian Perspectives, co-edited Staying Alive: Critical Perspectives on Health, Illness, and Health Care and authored Poverty and Policy in Canada: Implications for Health and Quality of Life. Dr. Raphael serves on the Advisory Committee for Canada's National Collaborating Centre on the Determinants of Health. |
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Peter Schnall, M.D., is clinical professor of medicine at the
University of California at Irvine Center for Occupational and
Environmental Health and adjunct professor of public health at
UCLA. A physician and epidemiologist interested in sources of
hypertension, he has played a key role in developing the field
of “occupational cardiology.” He co-edited the Workplace
and Cardiovascular Disease, edited the forthcoming Unhealthy
Work (2008, Baywood Publishing), and currently directs the Center
for Social Epidemiology. |
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Jack P. Shonkoff, M.D., is the Julius B. Richmond FAMRI Professor
of Child Health and Development at the Harvard School of Public
Health and Harvard Graduate School of Education, and founding
director of the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University.
He also chairs the National Scientific Council on the Developing
Child, a multi-university collaboration comprising leading scholars
in neuroscience, developmental psychology, pediatrics, and economics,
whose mission is to bring sound and accurate science to bear
on public decision-making affecting the lives of young children. |
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Makani Themba-Nixon is executive director of The Praxis Project,
a not-for-profit organization dedicated to building power and
democracy through community-based media and policy advocacy,
and former director of the Marin Institute Center for Media and
Policy Analysis. She has published numerous pieces on race, media,
policy advocacy and public health, including Making Policy,
Making Change, Media Advocacy and Public Health (co-author)
and most recently Talking the Walk: Communications Guide
for Racial Justice. |
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Donald Warne, M.D., is
president and CEO of American Indian Health Management & Policy
and adjunct clinical professor at the Arizona State University College
of Law. He comes from a long line of Oglala Lakota traditional healers, trained
in medicine at Stanford and public health at Harvard, and has
studied diabetes education and minority health policy. He worked
for several years as a primary care and integrative medicine
physician, and has developed diabetes education and prevention
programs in partnership with tribes. |
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David R. Williams is Norman Professor of Public Health and professor of African and
African American studies and of sociology at Harvard University.
He is also executive director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Commission to
Build a Healthier America. His work focuses on socioeconomic and
racial differences in health, including the effects of racism on
health. He is a top-cited social science researcher, whose work has
been featured often in major national media. |
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