In this conversation, Marvin Taylor, owner of All in the Wrists, and Brownsyne Tucker Edmonds, M.D., vice president and chief health equity officer at Indiana University Health, discuss the importance of barbershops in the African American community, and how community health workers inside these barbershops are providing valuable health care and public education. To see the video on IU Health and All in the Wrists partnership, please click here. LISTEN NOW
 

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The University of Utah Health shares how it is using intensive primary care to support patients navigating complex medical and social challenges. LISTEN NOW…
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“Hospitals are the heart of communities across America for one fundamental reason: They support patients whenever, wherever and however they need care,” writes…
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Jeremy Fish, M.D., director of the Family Medicine Residency Program at John Muir Health, and Pilar Corcoran-Lozano, behavioral health corps faculty and…
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I have the distinct privilege of serving as chair of the American Hospital Association’s Foster G. McGaw Prize Committee, which awards a prize each year to one…
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Gratia Pitcher, M.D., chief medical officer and patient experience dyad leader with Essentia Health, and Larissa Africa, vice president of health care…
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Doug Brown, partner with Manatt Health and current chair of the AHA’s Foster G. McGaw Prize Committee, discusses how hospitals are tackling food insecurity,…