2018: 3/27 Place, Race, and Power: Advancing Health Equity in New Jersey and Nationally

March 28, 2018

3/27  2018 Place, Race, and Power: Advancing Health Equity in New Jersey and Nationally

click to play

2018 Robert A. Catlin Memorial Lecture

Residential segregation is a powerful root cause of racial and ethnic health inequities because it concentrates health risks in communities of color while limiting access to health-enhancing resources. This talk by Brian D. Smedley, co-founder and Executive Director of the National Collaborative for Health Equity, a project that connects research, policy analysis, and communications with on-the-ground activism to advance health equity, reviewsr research on the importance of place for health, and discusses policy strategies that can improve equity. In particular, the talk offers a preview of the Health Opportunity and Equity Measures, which offer state-level rankings of health and the major drivers of health equity. It also focuses on how patterns of residential segregation reinforce health inequities, and both place- and people-based strategies to counter the effects of segregation.

Recent Posts

Bloustein School Announces Faculty Promotions for Smart and Longo

The Bloustein School is pleased to announce the recent promotion of Dr. Michael Smart to Professor and Dr. Nicholas Longo, Director of the Rutgers Democracy Lab, on appointment and tenure as a Professor in the Bloustein School. “I am thrilled to recognize these...

Safe Driving for Life: Mature Drivers Resource Center

Older drivers are often safer drivers. There comes a point, however, when physical or cognitive limitations may contribute to unsafe driving. Added to this, older drivers are more likely to be severely injured or killed when a crash occurs. The Mature Drivers Resource...

NJSPL: Are Data Centers Raising Your Electric Bill? Mostly Not. Yet.

Are Data Centers Raising Your Electric Bill? Mostly Not. Yet. Authored by Kiran Garimella If you have opened an electric bill recently, you have probably noticed the same thing many households have: it is higher than it used to be. Nationally, average residential...