Couverture de C2: Critical Conversations that Lie at the Heart of Health Justice

C2: Critical Conversations that Lie at the Heart of Health Justice

C2: Critical Conversations that Lie at the Heart of Health Justice

De : BUSPH CoE in Maternal and Child Health
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This podcast is hosted by the Center of Excellence in Maternal and Child Health Education, Science and Practice at the Boston University School of Public Health. These episodes serve to generate conversations in classrooms and living rooms about issues and strategic solutions critical to the health of communities and families, focusing on how we can achieve health justice as a collective. This podcast is supported by the Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) grant 6-T76MC00017‐26‐01. Podcast contents do not represent views of, nor an endorsement, by HRSA or the U.S. Government.BUSPH CoE in Maternal and Child Health
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    Épisodes
    • Conversation on Disability Justice with Mallory Cyr
      Nov 11 2025

      Our discussion today focuses on Disability Justice, a movement that centers the voices and experiences of those most marginalized, recognizing that disability is not a single, isolated experience. Disability inclusion is vital for social justice. It is deeply interconnected with race, class, gender, and other systems of oppression. Their slogan ‘'Nothing About Us Without Us' is a powerful statement that reminds us why centering those with disabilities in this fight for justice is imperative.

      Today I’m joined by Mallory Cyr. Mallory combines lived experience as a disabled woman with a rare disease and professional expertise in healthcare policy and transition to adulthood. She earned her MPH in Maternal & Child Health from Boston University and a BFA in Creative Writing from the University of Maine at Farmington. A nationally recognized expert, Mallory has provided ADA consulting, technical assistance, and over 50 workshops and keynote presentations to state and national organizations. She previously served as a policy specialist and contract manager for Colorado Medicaid, overseeing the statewide Non-Emergency Medical Transportation benefit and advancing systems and benefits for individuals with disabilities and medical complexities. From 2008 to 2020, she contributed to the National Center on Healthcare Transition Improvement, co-authoring a textbook chapter on health care transition published by Springer in 2018 (Health Care Transition: Building a Program for Adolescents and Young Adults with Chronic Illness and Disability). Mallory has been honored with Boston University’s 2021 MCH Alumnae Award for Outstanding Service and the DeBeaumont Foundation’s 2023 40 Under 40 in Public Health. Mallory lives in North Carolina with her husband and their rescue dog, Tinsley. To learn more about Mallory and her work, visit MalloryCyr.com.


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      46 min
    • MCH Student Perspectives
      Sep 10 2025

      Fellowships are a wonderful way for students to pursue additional hands-on experience during their academic career. They’re defined as any amount paid or allotted to, or for the benefit of, an individual to aid such individual in the pursuit of study or research. There are two types of fellowships that the Center of Excellence offers: practice and research. Practice fellows work closely with community leaders, while Research fellows work closely with faculty members. Having a fellowship can provide even the most unlikely of skills, for example, hosting this podcast has been an incredible practice fellowship. I’ve had the chance to meet and interview incredible practitioners in various fields of public health. Luckily, the MCH fellowships are open to all on-campus MPH students.

      Today I’m joined by 3 different MCH Student Fellows who have spent the last year working on various projects. 1 Research fellow: Jennifer Madu; and 2 Practice fellows: DeJah Fleurancois and Margaret Jones. They will explain the work they’ve been doing and how this has impacted their public health journey.

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      35 min
    • Conversation on Autism with Emily Feinberg, ScD, CPNP
      Jul 16 2025

      There have been a lot of public health topics that have become widely discussed, dissected, and debated within public discourse: Vaccines, Climate Change, Nutrition, and especially Autism. Autism or Autism Spectrum Disorder diagnoses have increased in recent years, sparking a variety of positive, but also negative, responses. Over the years, increased research has led to more understanding about how to support our community members on the spectrum

      I’m joined today by Dr. Emily Feinberg, ScD, CPNP. Dr. Feinberg is the Director of Emerging Projects for the TEAM UP Scaling and Sustainability Center. She is currently a professor at the Hassenfeld Child Health Innovation Institute, Department of Health Services, Policy, and Practice at Brown University School of Public Health. Emily is a pediatric nurse practitioner at DotHouse Health. She has served as core faculty on Boston University’s Maternal and Child Health Bureau-funded Maternal Child Center of Excellence, mentoring MPH and DrPH students. The impetus for her research has come from the disturbing inequities in access to developmental and mental health services that she has witnessed among the children and families with whom she works. The overarching theme of her work has been the redesign of community-based child health systems. She has applied this lens to several public health priorities, including maternal depression screening, management, and prevention; autism services; and the integration of child mental health services within pediatric primary care. Her work has been funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute for Nursing Research, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the March of Dimes Foundation, and the Health Resources and Services Administration.


      Links to Dr. Feinberg's organization:

      https://www.teamupcenter.org/



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      47 min
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