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Conversations on the Business of Health Webinar Series – Whose Business is Health? Corporate Social Responsibility and the Health of Americans

Department and Center Events
Hopkins Business of Health Initiative

Friday, October 14, 2022, 12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. ET
Location
Zoom
Online
Past Event

About the Event

Do companies have a responsibility for the health consequences of their products? Should those consequences drive how a company designs its product or service to be used by customers? What are the tradeoffs?

Panelists

Steve Downs

Steve Downs is a co-founder at Building H, a project to build health into everyday life. Building H is growing a community of entrepreneurs, investors, designers, engineers and researchers who believe that we need to reimagine everyday life—how we eat, sleep, get from place to place, socialize and entertain ourselves—to be healthy by design. Steve is the primary developer of the Building H Index, a tool that rates and ranks popular companies in the entertainment, food, housing and transportation industries on the impacts of their products and services on the health and well-being of their customers. Steve is adjunct faculty at the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts and a lecturer at the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design (Stanford d.school).

Thomas Goetz

Thomas Goetz is a co-founder at Building H, is a journalist, entrepreneur, and author. He uses data and design to help people understand and navigate complicated issues in their world. Thomas is the co-founder of Iodine, an award-winning website that helps millions of people make sense of their health and medicines. In 2016, Iodine was acquired by GoodRx, America’s leading source for prescription drug savings, where he presently serves as chief of research. Thomas was previously the executive editor at WIRED, which he led to a dozen National Magazine Awards in as many years. He began his career as a reporter at the Village Voice and the Wall Street Journal. He currently writes the LaunchPad column for Inc. magazine.

Sara Singer

Sara Singer, PhD, MBA, is a professor of medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine and professor by courtesy at Stanford Graduate School of Business and Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies. Her research in the field of health care management and policy focuses on how organizational leadership and culture impact efforts to implement health delivery innovations, integrate patient care, and improve safety and reliability of health care organizations. A key feature of this research is the development of survey instruments that measure provider and patient perspectives on key interpersonal and organizational factors, enabling benchmarking, rapid and reliable feedback about the effectiveness and comparative effectiveness of delivery system innovations, and broader dissemination of more successful interventions.

Luigi Zingales

Luigi Zingales' research interests span from corporate governance to financial development, from political economy to the economic effects of culture. He co-developed the Financial Trust Index, which is designed to monitor the level of trust that Americans have toward their financial system. In addition to holding his position at Chicago Booth, Zingales is currently a faculty research fellow for the National Bureau of Economic Research, a research fellow for the Center for Economic Policy Research, and a fellow of the European Governance Institute.  In 2014 he was the President of the American Finance Association. He is the co-host of the podcast Capitalisn't.

Moderator

Mario Macis is a member of the HBHI Leadership Team.

Registration

Please click the link below to register for this event. If you'd like to hear about future webinars in the series email us at hbhi_info@jhu.edu.

Register

Conversations on the Business of Health Webinar Series

This event is part of a larger series on 'Conversations on the Business of Health,' which will be one-hour webinars that will engage leaders in business and academia. We will explore questions such as: Should companies invest in their employees’ health?  Are companies responsible for the health consequences of their products? Will artificial intelligence actually advance health? How can business offer healthcare in novel settings?

Moderated by faculty members and jointly hosted by the Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Carey Business School, the School of Nursing, and the School of Medicine, the series is open to all.  Indeed, we invite you to spread the word as we seek participants both inside and outside of Johns Hopkins, including the business world.

Seminars will be on a Friday from 12 to 1 p.m. unless otherwise noted. 

Contact Info

Jamey MH Longden