A Dialogue to Build a Healthier Community
The public is invited to join A Dialogue to Build a Healthier Community, part of the Gordon E. Inman College of Health Sciences & Nursing Diagnosing Our Future speaker series. Admission is free.
Featuring Dr. David Williams, Professor of Public Health at Harvard University School of Public Health and Staff Director of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's Commission to Build a Healthier America.
ALSO PARTICIPATING
- Dr. Stephanie Bailey - CDC Chief, Office of Public Health Practice
- Juan Canedo - Director of Progreso Community Center
- Helen Moore – Director of Non-discrimination Compliance and Health Care Disparities for the Bureau of TennCare, and an Edgehill community member
- Jacky Akbari – Chairperson of the Middle Tennessee Diversity Forum
- Dr. Eleanor Bright Fleming – Edgehill Dental Collaborations and Policy
- Dr. Alisa Haushalter – Director of the Bureau of Population Health Programs for Metro Public Health Department
- Yvonne Joosten – Executive Director of the Office of Community Engagement at Vanderbilt Institute for Medicine and Public Health
- Winona Yellowhammer – Spokesperson for the Native American Indian Association of Tennessee
- Ann Hatcher – Vice President of Workforce Development Programs at Hospital Corporation of America (HCA)
- Belmont University faculty, staff and students
SCHEDULE
8:30am - Registration
8:45am - Welcome
9:00am - Framework for a Healthier Community - David Williams
9:30am - Dialogue I
11:00am - Dialogue II
12:15pm - Lunch break
1:30pm - Dialogue III with guest panelists
3:15pm - Closing Remarks - David Williams
TOPICS INCLUDE
How Our Neighborhood Affects Our Health
Partnering Together for a Healthier Community
A Community Perspective on Disparities Research
Beyond Health Care: Building a Healthier Community
Click here to get more information and RSVP.
Co-sponsored by:Belmont University's Center for Community Health & Health Equity
Presentation Partners Include:
Nashville Health Disparity Coalition
Meharry Medical College
Metro Public Health Department

Noted Civil Rights attorney and minister Fred Gray will appear on Belmont’s campus on Wed., Jan. 20 for a special forum and lecture. Gray—the former attorney for Rosa Parks, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study victims—will discuss “Lessons Learned from a Civil Rights Pioneer about Health, Social Justice and Christian Service.” This morning-long event is free and open to the public, courtesy of financial assistance provided by the Jacob G. Schmidlapp Trusts, Fifth Third Bank, Trustee. Both the forum and the lecture will take place in Belmont’s Massey Performing Arts Center.
Tommy Thompson, four-term Governor of Wisconsin and former Secretary of the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services, recently painted a scenario of political intrigue filled with back room bargaining and deal-making worthy of the latest political best seller. However, he wasn’t speaking of a fictional thriller but of the real life maneuvers that will be necessary to get a healthcare reform bill out of Congress.
From Erin Lawley of the Nashville Post. . . .
Former Secretary of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Tommy Thompson, will be on campus Monday, November 16, 2009 at 4:00 p.m. for a Healthcare Reform Briefing: How Will Reform Impact Providers, Payors and Individuals? An
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