Épisodes

  • When the Hospital Stops Being the Center of Healthcare
    Feb 19 2026

    Hospital-at-Home, policy incentives, and what breaks when care leaves the building.

    Hospitals are increasingly treating patients at home instead of admitting them, not as a temporary workaround, but as a structural shift in care delivery.

    This episode explains why reimbursement policy, not technology, is driving the change and how it reshapes responsibility, equity, and expectations in healthcare.

    NextGen Public Health Consulting: https://www.nextgenpublichealthconsultancy.com/
    The NextGen Brief Newsletter: https://the-nextgen-brief.beehiiv.com/subscribe


    New episodes every Tuesday.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    8 min
  • Episode 1: Why Evidence-Based Public Health Programs Still Fail
    Feb 8 2026

    We rely on evidence-based public health programs to guide policy, protect communities, and improve population health.

    Yet despite an unprecedented volume of research and best-practice guidance, many public health programs still struggle to achieve their intended impact.

    In the first episode of The Public Health Practice Gap, public health educator and consultant Bradley Fevrier examines why evidence-based interventions often break down in real-world settings — not because the science is wrong, but because systems are misaligned with the conditions required for success.

    Using the Flint Water Crisis as a central case study, alongside other well-documented public health failures, this episode explores how gaps in governance, workforce capacity, accountability, and evaluation undermine even the strongest evidence.

    This podcast is not about assigning blame.
    It is about understanding where implementation fails — and what it takes to bridge the gap between research, education, and practice.

    This episode is intended for public health professionals, educators, policymakers, and anyone working at the intersection of evidence and real-world impact.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    11 min