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Events

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Upcoming Events

On May 13th at 12:00PM ET the Pandemic Center will host a webinar titled: Quo Vadis WHO?

The World Health Organization (WHO) is in a moment of crisis. The decision by the US to withdraw from the organization leaves the WHO with a deficit of about 15% of its total funding through the end of 2025 and 45% projected for 2026-27. The current crisis is new, but it lays bare long-standing, untenable realities:

  • The WHO is overly dependent on a single global superpower to function;
  • The WHO is doing too many things, which comes at the cost of effectively carrying out its core, essential functions;
  • Member states from low-middle-income countries are disproportionately dependent on the WHO to deliver essential healthcare.

To avoid falling into a new dependency trap WHO Member States should consider the following questions:

  • What are the core functions of the WHO that member states cannot lose without major negative consequences for their health status?
  • What functions of the WHO are duplicative of work done by another UN or global institution? and
  • Which local institutions can be leveraged in each member state to fulfil roles currently carried out by the WHO?

To discuss the issues, Pandemic Center senior adviser Wilmot James, Ph.D. will convene a panel of experts including:

  • Mitchell Wolfe, MD, MPH, RDML Senior Associate (Non-resident), Global Health Policy, Center for Strategic and International Studies, and former Chief Medical Officer for the US CDC.
  • Nahid Bhadelia, MD, MALD Founding Director, CEID; Founding Director, BEACON; Associate Professor, Infectious Diseases, Boston University School of Medicine; Global Health Security, Boston University Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies

This webinar is part of the Pandemics & Society series, which focuses on current pandemic threats and response systems as well as how to build preparedness for the future.

Register Here

Stay tuned for info on future events!

Previous Events

Check out our former events here

https://www.youtube.com/embed/1gE_AkEFXQ0

Pandemics & Society

 

4/22/25 - What we know (or don’t) about H5N1 transmission on farms

Are you interested in or working on projects that address the local, national or global challenges of pandemics? Are you looking to meet others on campus who are committed to understanding, preventing, and managing the impacts of pandemics—whether through research, policy, healthcare, or community-based solutions? Curious about biosecurity or biosafety?

On Wednesday, April 2, the School of Public Health’s Pandemic Center hosted a Pandemics and Biosecurity Interest Group coffee meet-up to:

  • Provide an opportunity to network with like-minded individuals and groups across campus

  • Share insights on pandemic and biosecurity-related work happening at the University

  • Foster potential research and grant-writing collaborations

  • Explore interest in building a collaborative space for exchanging ideas, sharing resources, and developing actionable strategies against pandemics and biosecurity threats

If you attended or are interested in working with the Pandemic Center in the future, please fill out this form.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/Sj0aOEG2coQ

Pandemics & Society

 

3/20/25 - African Countries Struggle to Contain Mpox Amid USAID Cuts

https://www.youtube.com/embed/wTKbqiknLlI

Game Changers Seminar

 

3/14/25 - Biosecurity Game Changers Seminar: Biosecurity, Biosafety, and the 100-Days Mission

https://www.youtube.com/embed/hkd-J0-WAq0

Presidential Faculty Award

 

3/10/25 Pandemic-Proofing the Future

About the Presidential Faculty Award Lecture
The Presidential Faculty Award was established by President Christina H. Paxson in Spring 2013 to recognize members of Brown’s distinguished faculty who are conducting especially important and innovative scholarship. The 2025 Presidential Faculty Award Lecture  “Pandemic-Proofing the Future,” featured Jennifer Nuzzo, professor of epidemiology and director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health.

About the Lecture
In this talk, Jennifer Nuzzo will discuss how we can prevent, reduce vulnerabilities, and increase resilience to pandemics and other biological emergencies, and the harms they pose to health, security, and prosperity.

Read more about this even here

 We will update again when a video of the event is available
 

https://www.youtube.com/embed/16A61-ah3VM

3/5/25 - The Next Global Pandemic: How ready are we?

This event was on March 5, 2025 as a panel discussion moderated by Director of the Pandemic Center, Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH, S.M.

This discussion featured expert panelists reflecting on the valuable lessons learned and progress made since COVID-19 was characterized as a global pandemic by the World Health Organization and ask: What have we learned, what have we done, and how should we continue preparing for the next global pandemic?

Panelists:

  • Adam Levine, Associate Dean of Biology and Medicine, Director of the Center for Global Health Equity, Professor of Emergency Medicine
  • Theresa Raimondo, Assistant Professor of Engineering
  • Scott Rivkees, Associate Dean for Education in the School of Public Health, Professor of the Practice of Health Services, Policy and Practice
  • Larry Warner, Chief Impact and Equity Officer at United Way of Rhode Island, President of the Rhode Island Public Health Association, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Health Services, Policy and Practice

This was an in-person event.

Brown Daily Herald wrote an article on this event that can be read here

https://www.youtube.com/embed/49Z-pNorBJA

Pandemics & Society

 

2/28/25 - The cost of defunding PEPFAR and the impact on the fight against HIV/AIDS

https://www.youtube.com/embed/cWJ4b4CTbf8

Pandemics & Society

 

1/24/25 - Meeting the Challenge of Public Health: What’s Ahead for Congress and the Administration

https://www.youtube.com/embed/xfCdFrCSTms

Game Changers Seminar

 

1/17/25 - Early Warning Systems, Disease Detection and Wastewater Biosurveillance

Pandemics & Society | 12/06/2024 - Regulatory Barriers to & Enablers of End-to-End Vaccine Manufacturing in Southern Africa.

Our final installment in the Our Storied Health for 2024 was Zurawski vs Texas held on December 2, 2024

Women denied abortions under Texas’ ambiguous and unforgiving abortion bans band together with a fearless attorney to sue Texas. While battling in court against the state and its immovable Attorney General, the extent of their traumatic experiences is revealed as they wrestle to regain their reproductive futures and set a precedent for millions of other women and families. ZURAWSKI V TEXAS reveals the dire impact of losing access to healthcare—and the extraordinary efforts of the women and men fighting on the frontline to regain those rights.

Reception and screening were followed by a panel and community discussion with the filmmakers, Maisie Crow and Abbie Perrault, and Brown School of Public Health and Alpert Medical School Associate Professor Liz Tobin-Tyler.

Our Storied Health Film and Media Series is a year-long integrated media experience that illuminates the importance of our collective health and what can be done to enhance it. Through film screenings, campus conversations, and how-to workshops, this series showcases the power of storytelling as a public health intervention. The Series is curated by Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, Director of the Pandemic Center of the Brown School of Public Health, with epidemiologist and documentary filmmaker Dr. Jennifer Galvin ’95

Seminar: Archaeological Perspectives on the Study of Pandemics in the Roman World

The Pandemic Center welcomeed Tyler Franconi, Assistant Professor of Archaeology and Classics as well as the Director of Undergraduate Studies at the Joukowsky Institute of Archaeology and the Ancient World, to the School of Public Health on December 3rd to present his talk: Archaeological Perspectives on the Study of Pandemics in the Roman World.

Professor Franconi’s talk focused on the three main pandemic events in the Roman world, as known from historical sources, what archaeology has added to these narratives, and what else it might yet add in the future.

Tyler Franconi is a Roman archaeologist whose research focuses on the economic and environmental history of the Roman Empire, especially in Western Europe. He co-directs the Upper Sabina Tiberina Project in central Italy, and is a specialist in Roman small finds and ceramics.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/0m6EKuVkRD0

Pandemics & Society

 

9/27/24 - Mpox: A Public Health Emergency of International Concern

Our fourth installment in the Our Storied Health for 2024 was Power of the Dream

A summary of the event is posted on this page!

Power of the Dream is a new documentary film about the empowering and unlikely true story of how a group of professional women's basketball players took on a WNBA team owner and rallied behind now-Senator Raphael Warnock, forever changing the landscape of their sport and the course of U.S. politics. Following a reception a panel was hosted and featured the film’s director and producer Dawn Porter, an award-winning filmmaker, founder of the production company Trilogy Films, and a recipient of a 2023 National Humanities Medal; and Dr. Lucia Hulsether, a 2024-25 Senior Fellow in Race and Ethnicity at Brown and an Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Skidmore College.

Our Storied Health Film and Media Series is a year-long integrated media experience that illuminates the importance of our collective health and what can be done to enhance it. Through film screenings, campus conversations, and how-to workshops, this series showcases the power of storytelling as a public health intervention. The Series is curated by Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, Director of the Pandemic Center of the Brown School of Public Health, with epidemiologist and documentary filmmaker Dr. Jennifer Galvin ’95.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/p5jKHCKmB8Q

Pandemics & Society

 

9/27/24 - Mpox: A Public Health Emergency of International Concern

https://www.youtube.com/embed/j9unq_FN4ZY

Pandemics & Society

 

8/16/24 - H5N1: Protecting High Risk Communities

https://www.youtube.com/embed/sOfE2kGj89w

Pandemics & Society

 

7/25/24 - Lamplighters: A Path Forward for American Democracy & Health Security

Thank you to all who attended or watched online.

The American Democracy and Health Security Initiative's website, which includes hundreds of stories from pandemic lamplighters and the urgent recommendations that were learned from them, is NOW LIVE.

Governors Asa Hutchinson and Deval Patrick wrote this opinion piece about the effort, published in STAT News.

The launch can be viewed in full here, and the event's original media advisory, posted in advance, follows:

View the event's agenda here.

Original event description follows:

The American Democracy and Health Security Initiative, bringing together the Brown University School of Public Health Pandemic Center, the COVID Collaborative, and the CSIS Bipartisan Alliance for Global Health Security, will release on Wednesday, June 5th, the findings of a groundbreaking, grassroots examination of America’s pandemic “lamplighters,” who innovated and bridged divides to illuminate the path forward in America’s darkest days of the COVID-19 pandemic. The American Democracy and Health Security Initiative spotlights these state and local lamplighters and harvests their hard-won lessons to ensure the most successful strategies can be sustained or replicated in future crises.

The findings, and urgent recommendations for action, will be the focus of a special forum at 2:00 pm ET on Wednesday, June 5th, at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, DC.

Confirmed Speakers

Asa Hutchinson
Former Governor
State of Arkansas

Gordon Larsen
Senior Advisor for Federal Affairs for Governor Cox
Former Policy Director for Governor Herbert
State of Utah

Anne Zink
Former Chief Medical Officer, State of Alaska
Former President, Association of State and Territorial Health Officials

Jeffrey Gold
Chancellor, University of Nebraska Medical Center
Incoming President, University of Nebraska System

Mitch Daniels (video)
President Emeritus, Purdue University
Former Governor, State of Indiana

Jenny Durkan (video)
Former Mayor, City of Seattle
Chair, Washington State Bar Association Task Force
on Emerging Technologies and the Practice of Law

Vicki Lowe
Executive Director
American Indian Health Commission

Christine Gregoire
Chief Executive Officer, Challenge Seattle
Former Governor
State of Washington

Raquel Bono
Retired Vice Admiral, U.S. Navy, Former Director, U.S. Defense Health Agency
Former Director, COVID-19 Health System Response Management
State of Washington

Kody Kinsley
Secretary, North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services
Former Chief Deputy Secretary for Health and Operations Lead for COVID-19 Response
State of North Carolina

David Bibo
Former Head of Response and Recovery
U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency

Tony Gillespie
Vice President of Public Policy
Indiana Minority Health Coalition

David Stegall
Former Deputy State Superintendent of Innovation and Chief Academic Officer
Department of Public Instruction, State of North Carolina

 

https://www.youtube.com/embed/57nYz0AX--g

Pandemics & Society

 

5/23/24 - Pandemic Accord: Partial Failure or Partial Success?

https://www.youtube.com/embed/nFotzzMv7Z0

Pandemics & Society

 

4/26/24 - H5N1: Gauging the Current Threat

Anonymous Sister event posterApril 3, 2024: Anonymous Sister Film Screening and Panel Discussion

Granoff Center for the Creative Arts | Presented by the Brown Arts Institute and the the Pandemic Center

“AN INTIMATE LOOK AT WHO WE SEE AT THE HEART OF ADDICTION.” – NPR

When a young woman turns to the camera for refuge, she ends up with a firsthand account of what will become the deadliest man-made epidemic in United States history. Thirty years in the making, Anonymous Sister is Emmy Award®-winning director, Jamie Boyle’s chronicle of her family’s collision with the opioid epidemic.

The screening was followed by a panel and community discussion with filmmaker Jamie Boyle, addiction specialist Dr. Josiah “Jody” Rich, and epidemiologist Dr. Alexandria Macmadu.

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Jamie Boyle is a two-time Emmy Award winning documentary filmmaker living in Brooklyn, NY. Her work has played at Sundance, Tribeca, and SXSW. Most recently, Boyle wrote and edited Breaking The News, which premiered at the 2023 Tribeca Film Festival and currently airs on PBS. Her feature directorial debut, Anonymous Sister, was shortlisted for the 2023 IDA Best Documentary Award and opened to critical acclaim in theaters June 2023. Produced by Big Mouth Productions (Dick Johnson Is Dead) and Vulcan Productions (Summer of Soul), Boyle directed, filmed, and edited Anonymous Sister, a chronicle of her family’s collision with the opioid epidemic that spans over three decades.

Dr. Josiah “Jody” Rich, MD, MPH is a Professor of Medicine and Epidemiology at Brown. Rich is a practicing infectious disease and addiction specialist providing care to patients at The Miriam Hospital and the Rhode Island Department of Corrections since 1994. He has advocated for public health policy changes to improve the health of people with addiction, including improving legal access to sterile syringes and increasing drug treatment for incarcerated and formerly incarcerated populations. More recently he has focused on addressing the opioid overdose epidemic. Rich has testified in congress multiple times and served as an expert advisor to the Rhode Island Governor’s Overdose Task Force since its inception in 2015.

Dr. Alexandria “Alex” Macmadu, PhD is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Epidemiology and a member of thePeople, Place and Health Collective (PPHC) at Brown. Macmadu is a substance use epidemiologist and her program of research: (1) examines the social determinants of drug use and overdose; (2) investigates evidence-based approaches to mitigate drug-related harms; and (3) advances justice and health equity in marginalized subgroups, including BIPOC communities, people who use drugs, and persons affected by the criminal legal system. Macmadu is a multi-Brown alumna, having received her PhD in epidemiology (’22), her MSc in behavioral and social sciences (’15), and her BA in ethics (’14).

––––––––––––

Anonymous Sister

94 minutes / USA / 2023
https://www.anonymoussister.com/

“Searing, achingly personal… an impressive feat of editing.” – Roger Ebert

“An authenticity and personal investment that few films on this subject could match.” – Film Threat

“A full-on cinematic disquisition on the terrible, rippling side effects and consequences of the pharmaceutical industry’s greed, which in turn reflects capitalistic rapaciousness more broadly.” – Golden Globes

https://www.youtube.com/embed/Ag1JPrAFFik

Pandemics & Society

 

3/22/24 - From Outbreak to Endurance: A Four-Year Journey Through the Covid-19 Pandemic and Toward Sustainable Health Security

https://www.youtube.com/embed/u_LS6sqpP0k

Pandemics & Society

 

02/27/24 - Health Equity in Pandemic Response: Lessons from Rhode Island

https://www.youtube.com/embed/x30hnQ8PT2A

Pandemic Center Interview: Reed V. Tuckson M.D., FACP

Pandemic Center director Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH, and Reed V. Tuckson M.D., FACP, managing director of Tuckson Health Connections, LLC, discussed his work, the impact of the COVID pandemic on public health, and the importance of rebuilding trust in science.

Tuckson Health Connections, LLC, is an organization dedicated to promoting health and preventing disease through innovative approaches in data analytics, care delivery efficiency, telehealth and biotech. Dr. Tuckson is also a co-founder of the Black Coalition Against COVID, leading efforts to combat the recent pandemic in Washington, D.C. and across the country.

See this page for key takeaways from Dr. Tuckson.

February 5, 2024

The second installment of the Pandemic Center’s “Our Storied Health” series highlights environmental injustice in the American South, and explores the potential of storytelling to advance public health.

Read the full article about this event from the Brown University School of Public Health. 

Mossville: When Great Trees Fall
55 minutes / USA / 2019
http://www.mossvilleproject.com/

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https://www.youtube.com/embed/jFVrj8OoFOU

Pandemics & Society

 

01/24/24 - AI Rewards, Risks, and the Future of Biosecurity by Design

Strengthening Capabilities to Manage and Respond to Biological Threats

Signature Initiative to Mitigate Biological Threats in Africa (G7-led Global Partnership and Africa CDC) and the University of the Witwatersrand

Venue: 1.6.1 – 1.6.4 Cape Town International Convention Centre 1

Date: Friday, 15th December 2023 Time: 07:00 – 09:00 am SAST

In the context of a major push to finalise a WHO convention on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response, a convening to provide an update on the implementation of the Signature Initiative to Mitigate Biological Threats in Africa supported initiatives in the domain of biosecurity and biosafety and the socialization of a policy brief on Strengthening Capacity and Capability for the Identification, Attribution and Consequent Management of Accidental and Deliberate Pathogen Releases in Africa. The 2-hour long convening will be organized into 3 sessions with presentation and discussion slots, bookended by opening and concluding remarks.

Co-Chairs: Zeblon Vilakazi (University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa); and Yenew Kebede (Africa CDC, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia).

Free for registrants of the ASLM conference, day visitors can attend for a fee.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/ug50gPqYGME

Pandemics & Society

 

11/16/2023 - Better Testing Now: A new Testing Playbook to aid planning & mitigate harms from biological emergencies

Original event description follows:

Our Storied Health Film and Media Series is a year-long integrated media experience that illuminates the importance of our collective health and what can be done to enhance it. The series, curated by Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, Director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown School of Public Health and Dr. Jennifer Galvin ’95, an epidemiologist and documentary filmmaker, opens with a screening of “Shot in the Arm,” a film by Scott Hamilton Kennedy.

Through film screenings, campus conversations, and how-to workshops, this series showcases the power of storytelling as a public health intervention. The Series is curated by Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, Director of the Pandemic Center of the Brown School of Public Health, with epidemiologist and documentary filmmaker
Dr. Jennifer Galvin ’95.

Scott Hamilton Kennedy (THE GARDEN, FOOD EVOLUTION) had begun investigating the global measles epidemic. It was long before anyone had heard of COVID-19. He was filming with top public health officials–including Tony Fauci–as well as rare interviews with anti-vaccine activists who were persuading parents by the millions to refuse vaccines for their children. Then COVID-19 happened. Acting quickly, Kennedy shifted his directorial eye to this once-in-a-century tragedy. Both skeptical and hopeful, SHOT IN THE ARM explores vaccine hesitancy historically and in the context of our modern pandemic. Can we replace cynicism with healthy curiosity and bridge the political divides that make us sick?

Our Storied Health Film and Media Series will include film screenings, campus conversations, and how-to workshops to showcase the power of storytelling as a public health intervention. The screening will begin with a panel discussion and a reception will follow.

Registration (free) is required.

This event is part of Brown Arts IGNITE Series.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/Dff6RgZ4c-U

Our Storied Health

 

10/30/23 - Panel Discussion with Jennifer Nuzzo, Jennifer Galvin, and Maggie Fox on narrative and communication in public health.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/ibamU28WPC8

Pandemics & Society

 

10/20/23 - Climate Chaos and Its Tolls on Health Systems

https://www.youtube.com/embed/mSMKj4g6IMk

Pandemics & Society

 

9/28/23 - The Road Ahead: Next Steps after the UN General Assembly

https://www.youtube.com/embed/Xqu4bW7gvuE

Pandemics & Society

 

6/28/23 - Another Species of Trouble: Khartoum, Lab Seizure and Upscaling Biosecurity

https://www.youtube.com/embed/4p0hR7g2ElE

Pandemics & Society

 

5/17/23 - Health Systems Resilience During COVID-19: Cross-Country Lessons for Future Public Health Emergencies

https://www.youtube.com/embed/X02RCGhVNHA

Pandemics & Society

 

5/4/23 - Vaccine Manufacturing in Africa

https://www.youtube.com/embed/hHg8b_DV-ew

Pandemics & Society

 

3/24/23 - American Democracy and Pandemic Security

https://www.youtube.com/embed/KpiYnKTUS4g

Brown SPH - Climate & Health

 

2/6/23 - Will climate change cause the next pandemic?

https://www.youtube.com/embed/0AbtkEoswlY

Pandemics & Society

 

2/17/23 - The Urgency of Protecting Older Americans and Nursing Homes against COVID-19

https://www.youtube.com/embed/jCd8vCCsGTA

Pandemic Center Launch Event

 

10/12/22 - "Pandemic-Proofing the Future" Kick-Off featuring a lecture by Jennifer Nuzzo, DrPH and Beth Cameron PhD, followed by a Q&A session.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/p5jKHCKmB8Q

Pandemics & Society

 

9/27/24 - Mpox: A Public Health Emergency of International Concern

Brown University School of Public Health
Providence RI 02903 401-863-3375 public_health@brown.edu

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