
IAPHS Online Events
IAPHS is pleased to offer online events throughout the year. In most cases, the online events will be recorded and available to IAPHS members to access.
UPCOMING EVENTS
Shifting Power and Advancing Equity in Population Health Webinar Series: How does the history of population health impact our work today?
Shifting Power and Advancing Equity in Population Health Webinar Series: Hosted in partnership between the International Conference on Family Planning’s Power Shifting Subcommittee and the Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science
The public health field has been engaging in efforts to better understand the historical power dynamics and shift power. Colonialism and its legacy are part of our shared human history. The social structures, funding models, and knowledge generation practices that define global health are rooted in a history of inequality, exploitation, and racism. For the population health community, this is also a history of coercion, population control, and eugenics. Calls to address these legacies continue to fall short, challenging the community to think and act critically to address them. These actions hold the potential to bring historically marginalized individuals to the table as contributors and spur rich conversations about “decolonizing knowledge”.
We aim to create interactive virtual spaces to explore the question: what can we do to shift power and advance equity in population health now?
In the first session we will start by discussing how this work is progressing currently and how we got here. We will first reflect on the historical legacies of family planning, population health, and development broadly and how they impact the systems that we are working within today.
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The ‘Product Environment’ Is a Driver of Health. It’s Time to Measure It
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R2A Webinar: Collective Advocacy for Population Health Equity
Hear from scientists who are successfully approaching policy change based on the findings of their research through collaboration with collective advocacy groups in population health. Featured case studies on collective advocacy presented in the webinar will cover researchers’ success and effectiveness through community-based research methods, partnership or synergistic timing with organizations, or alignment with local movements and/or lobbying. Panelists will discuss their experiences and lessons learned with collective advocacy in order to translate population health research into real world change that advances social justice and health equity.
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Shifting Power and Advancing Equity in Population Health Webinar Series: How can we shift power and advance equity within our own work?
Shifting Power and Advancing Equity in Population Health Webinar Series: Hosted in partnership between the International Conference on Family Planning’s Power Shifting Subcommittee and the Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science
The public health field has been engaging in efforts to better understand the historical power dynamics and shift power. Colonialism and its legacy are part of our shared human history. The social structures, funding models, and knowledge generation practices that define global health are rooted in a history of inequality, exploitation, and racism. For the population health community, this is also a history of coercion, population control, and eugenics. Calls to address these legacies continue to fall short, challenging the community to think and act critically to address them. These actions hold the potential to bring historically marginalized individuals to the table as contributors and spur rich conversations about “decolonizing knowledge”.
We aim to create interactive virtual spaces to explore the question: what can we do to shift power and advance equity in population health now?
In the second session we will showcase an example of how power shifting works in practice. We will then draw on the expertise in the room and engage participants to identify actionable next steps that they can take to shift power and advance equity in their organizations and working relationships.
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PAST EVENTS:
Legal epidemiology: Investigating the impact of laws on population health
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Communicating Controversial Science
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The Nuts and Bolts of Using An Intersectionality Framework in Population Health Research
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Racialization and Global Racial Hierarchies
Webinar: Speaking Science on Social Media
12:00PM EDT
Hear from scientists who have used social media to communicate their population health knowledge and research and learn how to choose and create your own program of science dissemination.
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Warts and All: Successes and Failures in Population Health Grant Writing
12:00PM – 1:30PM EDT
Warts and All: Successes and Failures in Population Health Grant Writing In our professional lives, we tend to talk a lot more about our successes than our failures. This can give a misleading impression of how hard our jobs can be, and that can contribute to impostor syndrome and anxiety. For example, if you only hear about the grants that a senior faculty member received, you might mistakenly think that they get every grant they apply for – and, when your own grant is rejected, you might think this means you’ll never be as successful as them. Conversely, you might feel a little better if you know that the same senior faculty member had a lot of grants rejected before they got those few grants funded. Read more
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Abstract Writing Workshop
**Must be an IAPHS Student Member.
Registration Capacity is 50 Registrants
Join the IAPHS Student Conference Committee in this 60-min abstract writing workshop. This workshop is for students interested in submitting a conference abstract for the upcoming annual meeting or to a professional conference elsewhere. We will cover the basics of writing an abstract, review samples, and share helpful strategies to assist in a successful submission.
Facilitators:
Akliah Collins-Anderson, Washington University in St. Louis
Bee Ben Khallouq, University of Central Florida
Carlyn Graham, Pennsylvania State University
Webinar: Securing Funding for Applied Research
Learn about private and public funding sources for applied research in population health and strategies for making your search for funding a success.
Webinar: Forging Research Partnerships with Community-Based Organizations
Join us for a panel discussion on building research partnerships with community-based organizations as a doctoral student, post-doc, or early career researcher.
Panelist
Mónica Gutiérrez, PhD
University of Denver Graduate School of Social Work
Panelist
Libby McClure, PhD
DataWorks NC
Panelist
Kristefer Stojanovski, PhD
Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine
Webinar: Bridging Research with Community Practice
How scientists can contribute knowledge and research skills to population health practice in local communities by engaging with community organizations, building sustainable long-term relationships, and structuring meaningful and equitable collaborations.
“Building a Professional Network of Population Health Scientists”
The focus of the panel discussion is to discuss: 1) the rationale for; 2) the implications of; and 3) strategies for professional network building in population health.
Webinar: Making Research Actionable for State & Local Policymakers
Learn what policymakers need from you to inform their decision-making and how to connect and communicate with them effectively.
Webinar: NIH and Foundation Graduate and Postdoctoral Funding Opportunities
The purpose of this webinar is to help orient IAPHS students to the variety of funding sources available either for dissertation completion or postdoctoral study. We anticipate opening the webinar with an overview of funding in general (max 10 mins), and then invite each of the three funding agency representatives to give a brief overview of their relevant mechanisms (8-10 mins each). We will leave at least 20 minutes for Q&A. A member of the IAPHS student committee will moderate the discussion.
Webinar: Abstract Writing Workshop
Writing a clear and concise conference abstract can be difficult. This workshop will help students, whether they are interested in submitting to the upcoming IAPHS conference or a professional conference elsewhere. We will discuss the basics of a conference abstract, review samples, and share helpful strategies and resources.
Space is limited, register early!
Webinar: Communicating Research Through the Print and Broadcast Media
An expert panel discusses the keys to success when communicating with journalists or being interviewed about your research.
Webinar: Rewarding engaged scholarship in the academy: Strategies and successes
Conducting engaged scholarship is an essential component of using research to improve population health. Engaged scholarship includes community engaged research, research-to-practice and research-to-policy translation, media communication, and numerous other activities designed generate and disseminate relevant, applicable scholarship to improve population health. However, many scholars in academic positions experience barriers to engaged scholarship due to the structure of most university promotion and tenure standards, which prioritize traditional academic products over engaged, “public-facing” activities.
In this webinar, four panelists will discuss strategies for amending university incentive structures to recognize engaged scholarship and share success stories of changes at several major US universities. The panel will be moderated by Julie Maslowsky, PhD, Associate Professor of Community Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago.
Webinar: Interdisciplinarity and the Job Market
This event is sponsored by the IAPHS Student Committee
This webinar will help students and postdocs begin to navigate the job market as interdisciplinary researchers. We will discuss how to position oneself as an interdisciplinary scholar, and how to communicate the strengths of interdisciplinarity across various hiring committees. Additionally, we will incorporate a short reflection exercise for attendees to begin thinking through their own interdisciplinary applications.
Webinar: Race—The Power of an Illusion Part III: The House We Live In
This event is co-sponsored by IAPHS, ISEE, and ISR.
Webinar: Reflections on Interdisciplinary Research as a Spectrum
This webinar will focus on understanding interdisciplinary research as a spectrum. Panelists will speak to conducting interdisciplinary work in all its forms (e.g., from engaging other fields/disciplines in a more consultative way at just one stage or for one piece of a study, to fully integrated studies across all aspects of the study, to potentially “non-disciplinary” work where boundaries aren’t drawn based on how collaborators were trained). The event will take place virtually on: Thursday, May 27th, noon-1pm (eastern time). The session will consist of time for speakers to: (1) introduce themselves; (2) respond to questions about their experiences conducting collaborative interdisciplinary research across settings; and (3) answer questions from the audience.
Webinar: Race—The Power of an Illusion, Part II: The Story We Tell
This event is co-sponsored by IAPHS, ISEE, and ISR.
Webinar: Race—The Power of an Illusion, Part I: The Difference Between Us
This event is co-sponsored by IAPHS, ISEE, and ISR.
“COVID-19 and Health Equity for Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Communities: When No Data Equals No Disparities”
Roopa Kalyanaraman Marcello, MPH
Office of Ambulatory Care and Population Health, New York City Health + Hospitals
Brittany Morey, PhD, MPH
Department of Health, Society, & Behavior, Program in Public Health, University of California, Irvine
Data – a critical first link to the continuum of research, resource allocation and policymaking – describing the health of Asian American (AA), Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NH&PI) was sorely deficient in pre-COVID times and this deficiency has only been magnified during COVID. Since the start of the pandemic in March 2020, we have learned more about the AA and NH&PI COVID experience from community partners, social and mass media, and other countries (e.g., United Kingdom) than from the published scientific literature base in the United States. This blind spot towards AAs and NH&PIs as a community of color deserving of attention and resources reflects implicit bias in the scientific community and society at large.Read more
“Toxic Equilibrium: Structural Racism and Population Health Inequities”
The American social structure is composed of a resilient, symbiotic network of the formal and informal institutions that operate to maintain an equilibrium toward White privilege. Across time and place, changes in one institution can reverberate through other institutions, and importantly, when we attempt to intervene toward equity in one institution, other institutions can move to restore this toxic equilibrium. Cultural racism, which encompasses the socially accepted ideologies, values, and behavioral norms determined by the dominant power group, sets this equilibrium. Particularly insidious as it operates on the level of our shared social subconscious, the processes that comprise cultural racism are invisible to many because they are our “givens”, our assumptions, our defaults – but the result shapes our answers to the question: Whose life counts?
Read more“NIH early career development awards: Advice for interdisciplinary scholar applicants”
NIH offers a series of career development awards (i.e., K awards) for scholars at different career stages to develop new skills and knowledge to support. At the early career stage (i.e., post-doctoral, junior faculty), NIH offers both the K01 and K99/R00 awards that support substantial portions of scholar salaries for up to five years, protected time to develop these new skills and knowledge. However, there are many misconceptions about what these awards are (and what they are not) and how to prepare a strong application. IAPHS presents an interdisciplinary panel of scholars who have successfully secured either K01 or K99/R00 awards from a wide range of NIH institutes. Panelists will discuss how they decided to apply for this type of award, how they developed their applications, and how they have used this award to advance their careers. This webinar is open to IAPHS members and non-members; an archived recording will be available to IAPHS members only.
K01 from NHLBI
Danya Johnson
Assistant Professor of Epidemiology
Rollins School of Public Health
Emory University
K99/R00 from NIA
Grace Noppert
Research Investigator
Survey Research Center
Institute for Social Research
Epidemiology
University of Michigan
K01 - NCI
Tasleem Padamsee, PhD, MA
Assistant Professor of Health Services Management and Policy
The Ohio State University
College of Public Health
K99/R00 - NIA
Lauren Schmitz
Assistant Professor of Public Affairs
La Follette School of Public Affairs
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Session Organizer:
Margaret Hicken, MPH, PhD
Survey Research Center
Nephrology
Epidemiology
Population Studies Center
University of Michigan
Moderator:
Savannah Larimore
Post-Doctoral Fellow
Department of Sociology
Washington University in St. Louis
“Health Care – Population Health Science Partnerships: What Can and Can’t They Do”
The growing interest in population health approaches among health care entities is creating new opportunities for partnerships between health care systems and population health science. This webinar examines the potential, as well as the challenges and limitations, of these partnerships for advancing population health and equity. Organized and moderated by Sara Curran (University of Washington) and Chris Bachrach (University of Maryland).
Thursday, September 17, 2020
12:00pm – 1:00pm EST
Sponsored By:
“Understanding Interdisciplinary Career Paths in Population Health”
The IAPHS Student Committee is pleased to announce its new three-part training series “Launching a Career as an Interdisciplinary Scholar: A Training Series.” As a collaborative, cross-disciplinary population health organization, IAPHS is uniquely positioned to guide the next generation of population health scholars. The organization’s leadership and members bring a wealth of knowledge and training based on their graduate school experiences, post-graduate professional appointments, and current roles as mentors and supervisors. These experiences provide key insight into the methodological skills, substantive knowledge bases, and professional activities that are most valuable to the development of excellent population health scholars. Furthermore, these diverse experiences provide key insights into the nuances of navigating career paths and opportunities in population health.
The content of this event will focus on highlighting careers across all sectors, including government, industry, non-profits, and academia. Panelists will reflect on the highlights and difficulties of their training, career, and advice to young population health scientists.
Members of all organizations at any level of training (predoctoral, postdoctoral, or faculty) are welcome to participate! This is a moderated event, but attendees will have the opportunity to pose their own original questions to panelists.
Wednesday, August 12, 2020
12:00pm – 1:30pm EST
Sanne Magnan MD, PhD
Former Commissioner
Minnesota Department of Health
Philip Alberti, PhD
Senior Director
Health Equity Research and Policy
Association of American Medical Colleges
Bridget Goosby, PhD
Professor of Sociology
University of Texas at Austin
Frederick Zimmerman, PhD
Professor
Health Policy & Management
UCLA Fielding School of Public Health
“Balancing health and economic considerations in COVID-19 responses: Dilemmas and opportunities for population health”
The current COVID-19 pandemic has had major negative impacts on both health and economic conditions and has amplified existing health and economic disparities. This has raised many questions and debates about how to balance health and economic considerations in our responses to the pandemic. Join us as we convene an interdisciplinary panel to discuss dilemmas and opportunities for promoting population health in the time of COVID-19.
May 21, 2020
12:00 – 1:00pm EST
Erika Blacksher
Department of Bioethics & Humanities
University of Washington
RITA HAMAD
Society Collaboration Event
“Intersections Between Econometric and Epidemiologic Methods for Assessing Impact of Policies and Interventions on Population Health”
The Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) and Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science (IAPHS) held a joint webinar featuring Drs. Tim Bruckner and Rita Hamad.
Professional Development Webinar
“Getting your first NIH Grant”
12:00 – 1:00pm
Society Collaboration Event
“Causal Inference and Population Health” with Dr. Michael Oakes
The Society for Epidemiologic Research (SER) and Interdisciplinary Association for Population Health Science (IAPHS) held a joint webinar featuring Dr. Michael Oakes. Members of all organizations were invited to participate. The recording is available to current IAPHS members.
May 29, 2019
12:00 – 1:00pm EST