The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation is supporting programs on the cutting edge of public health policy, so to have this National Program Office at the Academy is a real honor for us. It is exciting for the Academy to link its own research and applied programs on the health of people living in cities to this important academic network preparing the next generation of leaders in population health.![]() Dr. Jo Ivey Boufford, President of The New York Academy of Medicine, and Director of the National Program Office. |
As the National Program Office, NYAM works with the participating universities: Columbia University, Harvard University, University of California (San Francisco and Berkeley), University of Michigan, University of Pennsylvania, and University of Wisconsin, to manage and administer the program, organize and host annual meetings of current Health & Society Scholars, develop and maintain an alumni network, and provide cross-cutting educational opportunities for all scholars.
Eighteen individuals, who have completed their doctoral training and show outstanding potential, will be selected to engage in an intensive two-year program, receive a stipend ($86,000 in their first year and $89,000 in their second year) and be trained to: investigate rigorously the connections among biological, genetic, behavioral, environmental, economic and social determinants of health; and develop, evaluate and disseminate knowledge and interventions that integrate and act on these determinants to improve health.
The
program will have a lasting impact on the type of research I conduct
throughout my career because it has expanded the way I think about the
links between social and biological sources of inequality, the methods
available to assess these links, and the range of ways to confront inequality.
Patrick Sharkey, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholar, Columbia University. |
Key Dates
For more information on the program please visit www.healthandsocietyscholars.org.