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  • Gun Violence Interruption in American Cities with Devone Boggan and Jason Corburn
    2025/11/05

    Richmond, California used to be called America’s “Murder Capital”. But when city leaders chose a different path the city’s gun violence problem dramatically declined. Devone Boggan and UC Berkeley’s Jason Corburn join Claudia to discuss their new book “Advancing Peace”, which chronicles their efforts to reduce gun violence in Richmond and other cities by focusing on those most likely to pull the trigger. Boggan and Corburn make a case for an approach to gun violence interruption grounded in deep mentorship, community investment and healing and accountability.

    We discuss:

    • The book's core ideas: ending urban gun violence with redemptive love
    • How public health overlooks community strengths by fixating on risk
    • Why Richmond’s Office of Neighborhood Safety sits in government - but outside policing

    Devone says that the greatest demonstration of this approach has always been Richmond:

    “From the moment we implemented the Peacemaker Fellowship in 2010, within 18 to 24 months after we did that, there were dramatic, precipitous reductions in gun violence… Our argument has been [that] when you get the right people to get at the right people the right way over a long period of time, here's living proof and demonstration of what can happen…In 2014, we achieved a 40 year low in gun violence [in Richmond].”

    Relevant Links

    • Read Jason and Devone’s book “Advancing Peace: Ending Urban Gun Violence through the Power of Redemptive Love”
    • Listen to an episode from our archives with Megan Ranney on gun violence as a public health issue
    • Check out Richmond, California’s Office of Neighborhood Safety
    • Read more about Jason Corburn’s work at UC Berkeley
    • Get more information on Devone’s organization Advance Peace

    About Our Guest

    DeVone Boggan serves as Founder and CEO of Advance Peace. Advance Peace interrupts gun violence in American urban neighborhoods by providing transformational opportunities to young men involved in lethal firearm offenses and placing them in a high-touch, personalized fellowship. By working with and supporting a targeted group of individuals at the core of gun hostilities, Advance Peace bridges the gap between anti-violence programming and a hard-to-reach population at the center of violence in urban areas, thus breaking the cycle of gun hostilities and altering the trajectory of these men’s lives.

    DeVone is the former Neighborhood Safety Director and founding director of the Office of Neighborhood Safety (ONS) for the City of Richmond, California. The ONS is a government, non-law enforcement agency that is charged with reducing firearm assaults and associated deaths in Richmond. Under his leadership as Neighborhood Safety Director, the city experienced a 71% reduction in gun violence between 2007 when the office was created and 2016. His work with ONS has been recognized in national publications and media, including the New York Times, Mother Jones, The Nation, Detroit Free Press, The Washington Post, TIME Magazine, PBS NewsHour, NPR, NBC Nightly News, ABC Nightline, CNBC, MSNBC, and CNN.

    Prior to his...

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    48 分
  • Smarter Venture Bets with Nancy Brown
    2025/10/22

    Investor Nancy Brown joins us at Aspen Ideas Health to share her blueprint for impactful investments. Identify public health breakthroughs that deliver measurable cost and quality improvements — then show how they can thrive in the marketplace. You don’t have to look far to see this playbook in action. One of the year’s biggest health exits, Omada Health, is a digital version of the CDC’s Diabetes Prevention Program. At Oak HC/FT, Nancy has partnered with entrepreneurs who are redefining how America stays healthy — and she’s eager to see more people with public health roots take the leap into building impactful companies.

    Please note: this conversation happened before HR1 was passed, so big Medicaid cuts were a threat but not yet a reality when we spoke.

    In this episode, we discuss:

    • Lessons from Todd Park in the early days of athenahealth
    • How to turn good ideas into great businesses
    • Nancy’s advice in an era of policy disruption: keep on building and proving value
    • The lesson Kaiser Permanente is still teaching us

    Nancy reminds us that in reality, even a brilliant idea needs to have ROI built in:

    “We look for entrepreneurs, for innovators, who have really defined a way in which to find a cohort of patients, it could be pregnant Medicaid moms... And they have identified if they apply a certain clinical process consistently to that population, they will get a consistently good outcome, quality outcome, and they can do it in a sustainable [way] at a sustainable price.”

    Relevant Links

    • Read Oak HC/FT’s AI Investment Policy
    • Explore businesses Nancy mentioned from Oak HC/FT’s investment portfolio:
    • Maven Clinic
    • Oshi Health

    About Our Guest

    Nancy Brown is a General Partner at Oak HC/FT, a leading venture and growth equity firm investing in transformative healthcare and fintech companies. Since joining Oak HC/FT at its inception in 2014, Ms. Brown has focused on identifying and supporting technology-enabled healthcare services that deliver measurable clinical and financial impact. She focuses on growth equity and early-stage venture investments in healthcare, serving on the boards of innovative companies such as Firefly Health, Groups Recover Together, InterWell Health, Maven Clinic, Oshi Health, Regard, Unite Us, and Wayspring. Her portfolio also includes Noom, TurningPoint Healthcare Solutions, Limeade (ASX: LME), OncoHealth, and OODA Health.

    Ms. Brown brings over three decades of operational and leadership experience to her investment role. Prior to Oak HC/FT, she was Vice President of Strategy and Business Development at McKesson Technology Solutions and Chief Growth Officer at MedVentive (acquired by McKesson in 2012). Previously, she served as Senior Vice President of Clinical Services and Corporate Development at athenahealth, and earlier held senior roles at McKesson and Harvard Community Health Plan. She also co-founded Abaton.com, one of the first web-based clinical solution companies, which was later acquired by McKesson.

    A graduate of the University of New Hampshire (B.S. in Zoology) and Northeastern University (MBA), Ms. Brown is an active mentor and advisor. She serves on Northeastern’s D’Amore‑McKim School of Business Dean’s Executive Council and is involved in the Roux Institute’s Future of Healthcare Founder Residency program.

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    31 分
  • Stories Move the World with Zoanne Clack
    2025/10/08

    Grey’s Anatomy Executive Producer and physician Dr. Zoanne Clack joins The Other 80 at Aspen Ideas: Health to talk about what public health leaders can learn from Hollywood storytelling. After training as a doctor and working for the CDC, Zoanne followed her childhood dreams and moved to Hollywood. With no job or warm leads, Zoanne set out to use the power of storytelling to drive health change.

    We discuss:

    • What Shonda Rhimes taught Zoanne about standing in power
    • Making it as a Hollywood “showrunner”
    • Why public health leaders should lean into storytelling

    Zoanne reminds us that stories - even about fictional characters - have the ability to help us move the world:

    “I think just having that, that feeling of belonging, that feeling of these are my people, and I am very interested in what they're doing and thinking is just a great way for the media in Hollywood to have impact.”

    Relevant Links

    • Watch the two episode Zoanne mentioned are her favourites: “Fight the Power” (Season 17, Episode 5) and “The Time Warp” (Season 6, Episode 15)
    • See Zoanne’s filmography

    About Our Guest

    Zoanne Clack is executive producer and showrunner for “Grey’s Anatomy” and “Station 19.” An emergency medicine physician turned TV writer and showrunner, Clack is best known for her influential writing roles on these critically acclaimed ABC-TV series, where she combines her medical background and artistic flair, offering a unique and authentic touch. As a writer/producer on "Grey's Anatomy" since the show began, she has played an integral role in the show's longevity and cultural impact. She uses her knowledge of entertainment education to promote global public health issues through the media, advocating for representation and inclusivity and providing diverse characterizations as well as poignant social commentary. Clack is co-chair of the Norman Lear Center’s Hollywood, Health & Society program at USC’s Annenberg School of Journalism and serves on the board or as an advisor of several global health groups.

    Source

    Connect With Us

    For more information on The Other 80 please visit our website - www.theother80.com. To connect with our team, please email claudia@theother80.com and follow us on twitter @claudiawilliams and LinkedIn


    Subscribe to The Other 80 on YouTube so you never miss our video extras or special video episodes!

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    34 分
  • Is AI Public Health’s New Ally? with Dr. Karen DeSalvo
    2025/09/24

    AI is going to transform healthcare - but how do we ensure it does so responsibly, equitably and ethically? Google’s former Chief Health Officer, Dr. Karen DeSalvo, says that AI could be public health’s new best friend - if we use it in the right ways. Karen sits down with Claudia at Aspen Ideas Health to talk about her longtime career as a public health leader and where she sees a role for AI in helping to take some heat off public health communicators. She’s interested in how AI can support - not replace - our human values.

    We discuss:

    • How AI health agents could personalize and simplify care, especially for patients navigating complex health challenges
    • Why government should act as both regulator and convener to shape the future of how we use AI in health
    • Our failure to scale and implement big ideas because we keep adding new layers instead of simplifying

    Karen underscored that AI-enabled robots will bring new ethical challenges:

    “I think when robotics becomes more commonplace, that also raises some of the need for us to be very thoughtful as a society about the ethical challenges when there's a physical manifestation of the models that's not just in a computer screen or even through your glasses, but as the robots get more and more humanoid.”

    Relevant Links

    • Read the Forbes article on Karen’s tenure at Google
    • Watch a Video where Karen introduces “Check Up”
    • Read the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials’ spotlight on Karen
    • Read Karen’s article about “Public Health 3.0”
    • Check out Karen’s Health Affairs article on the future of public health

    About Our Guest

    Dr. Karen DeSalvo is a physician executive working at the intersection of medicine, public health, and information technology to help everyone, everywhere, live a healthier life. She leads a team of experts at Google who build helpful products, develop AI solutions focused on some of the biggest health challenges and bring information and insights to consumers, caregivers and communities with the aim of democratizing access to health and healthcare. She provides clinical leadership for Google employee health, including as part of the company COVID response team. Prior to joining Google, Dr. DeSalvo was National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and Assistant Secretary for Health (Acting) in the Obama Administration. Dr. DeSalvo served as the New Orleans Health Commissioner following Hurricane Katrina and was previously Vice Dean for Community Affairs and Health Policy at the Tulane School of Medicine where she was a practicing internal medicine physician, educator, and researcher. She is co-founder of the National Alliance to Impact the Social Determinants of Health. Dr. DeSalvo serves on the Council of the National Academy of Medicine and the Board of Directors for Welltower.

    Source

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    For more information on The Other 80 please visit our website -

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    34 分
  • Take Your Moonshot: 13 Ideas to Reimagine Health
    2025/09/10

    In a time where we need hope and innovation more than ever, we asked 13 health leaders—all guests on this podcast—what they would do to reimagine health. Tune into the episode to hear what they shared (in order of appearance):

    • David Zipper, Senior Fellow, MIT Mobility Initiative
    • Maya Petersen, Professor of Biostatistics, Epidemiology and Computational Precision Health, UC Berkeley
    • Kody Kinsley, Senior Policy Advisor, Johns Hopkins University (former Secretary of HHS in North Carolina)
    • Theresa Cullen, Director of Public Health, Pima County, AZ
    • Anne Zink, Lecturer & Senior Fellow, Yale School of Public Health (former Chief Medical Officer, Alaska
    • Karen DeSalvo, former Chief Health Officer, Google
    • Palav Babaria, Chief Quality and Medical Officer, California Department of Health Care Services
    • Jacey Cooper, President, Precision Health Strategies (former Medicaid Director in California)
    • Pooja Mittal, Chief Health Equity Officer, Health Net
    • Natalie Davis, Co-Founder and CEO, United States of Care
    • Steve Downs, Co-Founder, Building H
    • Katie Drasser, CEO, Rock Health
    • Zoanne Clack, Executive Producer, Grey’s Anatomy

    Connect With Us

    For more information on The Other 80 please visit our website - www.theother80.com. To connect with our team, please email claudia@theother80.com and follow us on twitter @claudiawilliams and LinkedIn

    Subscribe to The Other 80 on YouTube so you never miss our video extras or special video episodes.

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    26 分
  • A “Slow Tech” Approach to Health Innovation with Katie Drasser
    2025/07/30

    When we think about digital tools and technology, we think of them as moving fast. Katie Drasser, CEO of Rock Health, joins me to discuss what a “slow tech” approach to health innovation could look like. It would ground innovation in participatory design, build community trust and aim for long term impact, not just rapid scaling.

    We discuss:

    • How she’s working to fix the broken investment cycle for women’s health
    • Why impact—not just return—should guide the future of health innovation
    • The big differentiator for youth mental health companies? Kids are at the table

    Katie reminds us that designing for the most overlooked ends up helping everyone:

    “There's that theory – the curb cut theory – [that says] if you design for the most marginalized, if you design for the most overlooked, it's actually better for everybody. And so… how might we design for those most left out? And actually, the folks that are always included would actually benefit too.”

    Relevant Links

    • Visit the Rock Health website
    • Listen to Podcast episode with Katie Drasser and Carolyn Witte
    • Read the Rock Health report on women as digital health consumers
    • Check out MindRight Health’s website - the youth mental health texting resource Katie mentioned in this episode

    About Our Guest

    Katie is an entrepreneurial leader committed to equality and justice who has launched groundbreaking, inclusive programs that address complex global issues with a focus on public health innovation and the role of innovative financing and leadership in systems change. As the CEO of RockHealth.org, she leads a team of experts in health equity, social enterprise and design to encourage more equitable innovation in digital health. Previously, Katie curated health content for the Aspen Ideas Festival and was Managing Director of the Aspen Global Innovators Group, where she led global leadership programs to address poverty alleviation and human rights. Katie has worked nationally and around the world on initiatives including HIV/AIDS treatment strategies in Romania, private health services delivery in Myanmar, and the scale up of Kenya’s national emergency medical system. She also built a range of start-ups, designing a network of charter schools, and developing Good Capital, a venture fund that invests millions in social enterprises like The Hub Bay Area and the Social Capital Markets Conference.

    Source

    Connect With Us

    For more information on The Other 80 please visit our website - www.theother80.com. To connect with our team, please email claudia@theother80.com and follow us on twitter @claudiawilliams and LinkedIn

    Subscribe to The Other 80 on YouTube so you never miss our video extras or special video episodes!

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    31 分
  • Snake Oil & Smoothies: What's Up With the Booming Wellness Industry? with Amy Larocca
    2025/07/17

    On the surface, what the wellness industry is offering feels like an antidote to our fragmented and fast-paced lives. Influencers and companies use words like "mindfulness" or “whole foods” or “self care” to get our stressed out, burnt out buy in. But, somewhere along the line those promises start to morph into luxury services, expensive memberships and supplements you never knew you needed. In her book “How to Be Well” former fashion journalist Amy Larocca explores the blurred line between healing and branding in a $6 trillion dollar industry.

    We discuss:

    • Why our current wellness craze mirrors 1930s pre-Nazi Germany
    • How Abraham Flexner completely changed how we teach medicine in the US for better – and for worse
    • Why the spiritual and community void left by declining religious participation leads people to look to the wellness industry for both

    Amy says what attracts people to the modern fitness class has parallels to religious practices:

    “So if you look at what happens in ritual religious gatherings… You see a lot of that replicated in a lot of these boutique fitness settings. You have ritual, you have music, you have ecstatic movement, you have charismatic leaders, you have a sermon. And these sermons have increasingly moved away from talk of muffin tops and bikini bodies and losing that whatever it is, to kindness, community, thinking about your place in the world, thinking about taking the energy that you are building up in that room and spreading it forward. ”

    Relevant Links

    • Buy Amy’s book “How to Be Well: Navigating Our Self-Care Epidemic, One Dubious Cure at a Time”
    • Read this Wikipedia page on Martine Rothblatt’s robot replica of her wife Bina
    • Check out this article on the impact of the Flexner report on US medicine
    • Read the book “McMindfulness” Amy mentions in the episode
    • Sign up for Lamar’s SoulCycle class

    About Our Guest

    Amy Larocca is an award-winning American journalist. She spent 20 years working at New York Magazine as both Fashion Director and Editor at Large. Her writing has appeared in the New York Times, Vogue, Town & Country, and the London Review of Books, among others. She lives with her family in New York and North London.

    Source

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    For more information on The Other 80 please visit our website - www.theother80.com. To connect with our team, please email claudia@theother80.com and follow us on twitter...

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    38 分
  • Why We Need a Social Health Movement with Kasley Killam
    2025/07/02

    Loneliness isn’t just a feeling - it’s a public health crisis. The number of hours we spend with friends is rapidly decreasing, more and more Americans report feeling lonely, and loneliness is linked to bad health outcomes like risk of premature death, heart disease, stroke, depression and anxiety. Kasley Killam, author of “The Art and Science and Connection”, joins us to talk about why social health should be the third pillar of wellness alongside physical and mental health.

    We discuss:

    • The surprising finding that connected communities were more resilient during the COVID pandemic
    • Kasley’s 100+ day experiment with acts of kindness
    • How small investments in social health have big ripple effects
    • Her nuanced views on AI companions

    Kasley talks about how vulnerability is key to building trust and human connection:

    “When you share something a little vulnerable that goes beyond… surface level and small talk, that is like this magical way of deepening connections, right? It builds trust, it builds intimacy, it makes us relatable, it helps us get to know each other better. And so … there I am with a complete stranger who… I've maybe shared something on stage or in conversation, they're now sharing something really intimate and vulnerable about their life and that just creates this beautiful moment. ”

    Relevant Links

    • Grab Kasley’s book “The Art and Science of Connection”
    • See Kasley’s TED talk: Why Social Health is Key to Happiness and Longevity
    • Get more info on the APA poll on social connection
    • Read an Article on Kasley’s 108-day experiment with acts of kindness
    • Read the Surgeon General’s advisory on loneliness as a pandemic
    • See this Article on Scan Health Plan’s “Togetherness” program

    About Our Guest

    Kasley Killam is a leading expert in social health and author of The Art and Science of Connection: Why Social Health is the Missing Key to Living Longer, Healthier, and Happier. As a Harvard-trained social scientist, 2X TED speaker, sought-after advisor, and award-winning founder, Killam has been dedicated to improving well-being through human connection for nearly 15 years. Globally recognized for her thought leadership on social health, Killam’s collaborations with top organizations like Google, the US Department of Health and Human Services, and the World Economic Forum contribute to building more socially healthy products, workplaces, and communities. Discover her insights in outlets like The New York Times, Forbes, NPR, CNBC, and The Washington Post and join her newsletter community at www.kasleykillam.com.

    Source

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    For more information on The Other 80 please visit our

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    43 分