How Decisions Get Made During Public Health Disasters

How Decisions Get Made During Public Health Disasters

A new episode of Who the Health Cares?

The work of public health often becomes most visible when our systems are under the greatest strain. From hurricanes to pandemics, crises test not only our ability to respond, but also the strength, flexibility and fairness of the systems we rely on every day. 

In this episode, Michael sits down with Mitch Stripling,

Headshot for Mitch Stripling

Professor Mitch Stripling

Director of the New York City Preparedness and Recovery Institute, to discuss the role of emergency preparedness and response within our public health system. Drawing on decades of experience responding to disasters across the country, Mitch explains how emergency response systems are supposed to work and why they sometimes fail. He also reflects on what the COVID-19 pandemic revealed about our leaders’ ability to respond under uncertainty and the risks and opportunities that come with emerging technologies like AI. 

The Center for Public Health Systems at Columbia's Mailman School of Public Health conducts needed research, facilitates public discussions, develops policy proposals and provides educational programs, all with the goal of encouraging a better, more efficient and more equitable public health system. This work builds on the recognition that the nation’s public health system is currently under-resourced, under-paid and under-valued, and that a stabilized and strengthened system would benefit all of us.

Listen now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or YouTube

Tags

Podcast, Disaster Preparedness, PRI, Emergency Response
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