28 results match your criteria: "Bipartisan Policy Center[Affiliation]"
JAMA Health Forum
June 2024
Duke Health AI Evaluation and Governance, Algorithm-Based Clinical Decision Support Oversight, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina.
Cell Metab
April 2024
MMS Health Strategies, LLC, Alexandria, VA, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
April 2024
Graduate School of Geography, Clark University, Worcester, MA 01610.
JAMA
February 2024
Bipartisan Policy Center, Washington, DC.
In every country, a clear national strategy, goals and metrics are needed to end hunger, improve nutrition, reduce diet-related diseases and create a just, sustainable and equitable food system. We identify six policy domains where real change can be made to deliver this vision in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFN Engl J Med
April 2022
From the Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy, Tufts University, Boston (D.M., D.R.G.); and the Bipartisan Policy Center, Washington, DC (D.R.G.).
Glob Chang Biol
June 2022
Department of Biological Systems Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Nature-based Climate Solutions (NbCS) are managed alterations to ecosystems designed to increase carbon sequestration or reduce greenhouse gas emissions. While they have growing public and private support, the realizable benefits and unintended consequences of NbCS are not well understood. At regional scales where policy decisions are often made, NbCS benefits are estimated from soil and tree survey data that can miss important carbon sources and sinks within an ecosystem, and do not reveal the biophysical impacts of NbCS for local water and energy cycles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPopul Health Manag
October 2020
Google Health, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Background: The US faces remarkable food and nutrition challenges. A new federal effort to strengthen and coordinate nutrition research could rapidly generate the evidence base needed to address these multiple national challenges. However, the relevant characteristics of such an effort have been uncertain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA
November 2019
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Am J Public Health
October 2019
Karen DeSalvo is with the Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin. Anand Parekh and G. William Hoagland are with the Bipartisan Policy Center, Washington, DC. Abby Dilley, Sherry Kaiman, and Mason Hines are with RESOLVE, Washington, DC. Jeff Levi is with the Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC.
All people in the United States deserve the same level of public health protection, making it crucial that every health department across the country has a core set of foundational capabilities. Current research indicates an annual cost of $32 per person to support the foundational public health capabilities needed to promote and protect health for everyone across the nation. Yet national investment in public health capabilities is currently about $19 per person, leaving a $13-per-person gap in annual spending.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Learning Health Community is an emergent global multistakeholder grassroots incipient movement bonded together by a set of consensus developed at the 2012 Learning Health System (LHS) Summit. The Learning Health Community's Second LHS Summit was convened on December 8 to 9, 2016 building upon LHS efforts taking shape in order to achieve consensus on actions that, if taken, will advance LHSs and the LHS vision from what remain appealing concepts to a working reality for improving the health of individuals and populations globally. An iterative half-year collaborative revision process following the Second LHS Summit led to the development of the .
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCA Cancer J Clin
January 2018
Professor of Behavioral Science, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, TX.
JAMA
August 2017
Gail Wilensky, PhD, is an economist and Senior Fellow at Project HOPE, an international health foundation. She also cochairs the Bipartisan Policy Center's initiative on the future of health care.
J Occup Environ Med
December 2016
Institute for Health and Productivity Studies, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore (Mr Berko, Dr Goetzel, Dr Roemer, Ms Kent); Truven Health Analytics, an IBM Company, Bethesda, Maryland (Dr Goetzel); and Bipartisan Policy Center, Washington, District of Columbia (Marchibroda).
Objective: The aim of this study was to describe findings from a survey of employees at 10 businesses participating in the "Building Better Health: Physical Activity Challenge," an effort led by the Bipartisan Policy Center's CEO Council on Health and Innovation.
Methods: Employers provided employees with pedometers as part of an 8-week Physical Activity Challenge (Challenge). Employees were then asked to complete a survey about their awareness of, participation in, and satisfaction with the Challenge.
Health Aff (Millwood)
September 2015
Don W. Bradley is an associate consulting professor in the Department of Community and Family Medicine at the Duke University School of Medicine, in Durham, North Carolina.
Improved patient experience, population health, and reduced cost of care for patients with obesity and other chronic diseases will not be achieved by clinical interventions alone. We offer here a new iteration of the Chronic Care Model that integrates clinical and community systems to address chronic diseases. Obesity contributes substantially to cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and cancer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost health care professionals are not adequately trained to address diet and nutrition-related issues with their patients, thus missing important opportunities to ameliorate chronic diseases and improve outcomes in acute illness. In this symposium, the speakers reviewed the status of nutrition education for health care professionals in the United States, United Kingdom, and Australia. Nutrition education is not required for educating and training physicians in many countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Clin Nutr
May 2014
Division of Community Pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics, Medstar Georgetown University Hospital, Washington, DC (MDL), and the Bipartisan Policy Center, Washington, DC (LL and LYZ).
Nutrition and physical activity are key risk factors for a host of today's most prevalent and costly chronic conditions, such as obesity and diabetes; yet, health care providers are not adequately trained to educate patients on the components of a healthy lifestyle. The purpose of this article is to underscore the need for improved nutrition and physical activity training among health care professionals and to explore opportunities for how policy can help support a shift in training. We first identify key barriers to sufficient training in nutrition and physical activity.
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