Public Health On Call
A podcast by The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
336 Episodes
-
606 - What Happens Next with Mifepristone?
Published: 28/04/2023 -
605 - World Immunization Week: The Big Catch-Up and Preventing a Large-scale Global Outbreak of Measles
Published: 26/04/2023 -
604 - Malaria Advocates Go to D.C.: Meet the Americans Passionate About Ending Malaria For Good
Published: 24/04/2023 -
603 - Adjusting for Reality: Rethinking Goals to Address Climate Change
Published: 21/04/2023 -
602 - How The Use—and Overuse—of Antibiotics is Making Us Sicker
Published: 19/04/2023 -
601 - How Health Care Algorithms and AI Can Help and Harm
Published: 17/04/2023 -
Public Health in the Field: What is the Black Maternal Health Crisis and How Can It Be Solved?
Published: 14/04/2023 -
599 - Book Club—“Under the Skin: The Hidden Toll of Racism on American Lives and the Health of Our Nation” with Linda Villarosa
Published: 12/04/2023 -
BONUS: Mifepristone On Trial: An Unprecedented Overreach
Published: 11/04/2023 -
598 - A Court Decision Reducing Access to Preventive Services Under the Affordable Care Act
Published: 10/04/2023 -
597 - Intimate partner violence, guns and the courts
Published: 07/04/2023 -
596 - Building a Better CDC
Published: 05/04/2023 -
595 - How to be a Climate Advocate: Antha Williams on Bloomberg Philanthropies’ Work to Tackle Climate Change and Improve Public Health
Published: 03/04/2023 -
594 - Could Patent Reform Lower Drug Prices?
Published: 31/03/2023 -
593 - Do COVID’s Origins Still Matter?
Published: 29/03/2023 -
592 - Anopheles Stephensi: The Invasive Mosquito Threatening to Worsen Malaria in Africa
Published: 27/03/2023 -
591 - Avoiding Clots After Fractures: Why Clinical Research Matters
Published: 24/03/2023 -
590 - Fatbergs Can Dance!? Behind The Scenes Of A Public Health Water Ballet
Published: 22/03/2023 -
589 - World Water Day: Fatbergs — The Public Health Menace Beneath Our Feet
Published: 22/03/2023 -
588 - Public Health and Food Assistance
Published: 20/03/2023
Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.
