Humans in Public Health  By  cover art

Humans in Public Health

By: Brown University School of Public Health
  • Summary

  • How should we prepare for the next pandemic? How is noise pollution affecting my neighborhood? And how can we prevent opioid overdose from a public parking lot? From epidemiology to behavioral science, Megan Hall covers it all as she interviews public health researchers here at Brown University about their work and what brought them to the field of public health.
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Episodes
  • BONUS: H5N1 Bird Flu
    May 9 2024

    Professor Jennifer Nuzzo, epidemiologist and director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health, joins host Megan Hall for a timely update on the recent outbreaks of H5N1 Bird Flu.

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    13 mins
  • Harmonizing International Health Data for Better Outcomes
    Apr 9 2024

    Different countries around the world have very different ways of providing health care. In order to learn from these varied systems—each with its own unique goals and priorities—and to compare their outcomes, researchers must devise new methodologies of working with highly sensitive data to overcome not only language differences, but vast organizational, operational and infrastructure differences between countries.

    Brown’s new Center for Health System Sustainability (CHeSS), led by Professor Irene Papanicolas, aims to standardize data from across global health systems, then compare them in order to inform policy choices and improve health care value and patient care.

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    11 mins
  • Short-Haul Truckers, Long-Term Noise Exposure
    Mar 12 2024

    MPH student Rosemelly Jimenez Medal comes from a family of truckers—her father has worked as a short-haul trucker for over 25 years. The cab of a commercial truck can be a noisy place, and she noticed that her father was having trouble hearing conversations at the family dinner table. Could there be a link between his job and his hearing loss?

    To find the answer, Jimenez Medal teamed up with her father and noise researcher Erica Walker, RGSS Assistant Professor of Epidemiology at Brown University, to conduct hearing screenings on short-term truckers in her home state of California.

    Host Megan Hall interviews Jimenez Medal and Walker to discuss their project and their findings.

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    And one last thing! If you enjoyed today’s episode, leave Humans in Public Health a review wherever you listen to the show, and let us know what topics we should cover next.

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    15 mins

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