The Geisel School of Medicine Events Calendar
The Geisel School of Medicine Events - ( Subscribe )
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Take Heart, Take Action – Impacting heart failure trajectories in children.
Kimberly Molina, MD
Section Chief, Pediatric Cardiology
Dartmouth Health Children’s
Kimberly Molina, MD
Section Chief, Pediatric Cardiology
Dartmouth Health Children’s
Stakes have never been higher for communicating healthcare information. As we witnessed during the pandemic, the way information is presented can change the illness trajectory of a person, a family, or a population. We live in a time of unprecedented access to knowledge and an overwhelming amount of information across platforms that are often challenging to navigate. Dr. Steven Woloshin has done public health research in improving the quality of communication for professional media. He trains journalists and press officers who are tasked with the complex work of writing public-facing messages. As a healthcare community, we need methods to help people become better consumers of health information.
Join Manish K. Mishra and Elizabeth Carpenter-Song as they welcome Dr. Woloshin to share how he coaches writers to be more balanced and morally anchored in context to clearly and effectively communicate to a national audience.
Join Manish K. Mishra and Elizabeth Carpenter-Song as they welcome Dr. Woloshin to share how he coaches writers to be more balanced and morally anchored in context to clearly and effectively communicate to a national audience.
Please join TDI for Dr. Lavoie's talk on "What Can We Learn from Mobilizing Inuit Knowledge to Make Us Better Health Equity Researchers? The Qanuinngitsiarutiksait Program of Research."
Dr. Lavoie explains: We all have a lens, a way to see the world that is shaped by our race, gender, culture, class, upbringing, experiences. This lens shapes our sense of priorities and our responses, based on insights and blind spots. In this talk, I will provide an overview of the work accomplished through the Qanuinngitsiarutiksait program of research, and the steps undertaken to address western-informed blind spots in the pursuit of health equity for Inuit.
Please email: TDI.Events@dartmouth.edu for zoom link.
Dr. Lavoie explains: We all have a lens, a way to see the world that is shaped by our race, gender, culture, class, upbringing, experiences. This lens shapes our sense of priorities and our responses, based on insights and blind spots. In this talk, I will provide an overview of the work accomplished through the Qanuinngitsiarutiksait program of research, and the steps undertaken to address western-informed blind spots in the pursuit of health equity for Inuit.
Please email: TDI.Events@dartmouth.edu for zoom link.