Broadband and Healthcare: Collaboration, Funding, and Policy
Join us on March 11 at 3:00 p.m. ET for a webinar about the intersections of health, broadband access, and digital inclusion. The relationships tying technology access and use to access to health care, quality of care, and health outcomes have become more visible than ever. As health care and digital inclusion organizations alike recognize that connectivity, devices, and digital skills shape our health, collaboration across sectors is essential.
This webinar will offer ideas for how organizations can collaborate, illustrated with real-world examples. The conversation will also address how health care funding sources can be marshaled to support patients’ and providers’ access and use of technology, as well as the policy considerations associated with expanding technology-enabled healthcare.
Available on the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society’s YouTube page, the webinar will feature Benton Opportunity Fund Fellow Sara Raza, discussing a series of issue briefs about broadband access and healthcare that she authored, published jointly by Benton and the Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation of Harvard Law School.
Sara Raza, currently Visiting Lecturer at the University of Washington School of Law, will moderate a discussion with:
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Matt Christie works for the Washington State Health Care Authority in the office of the Medicaid Transformation Project. He oversees the development and implementation of the Health-Related Social Needs (HRSN) services under the state’s 1115 Medicaid waiver. Prior to this work, Matt led the state’s Foundational Community Supports program, which delivers crucial supportive housing and supported employment services to the state’s most vulnerable Medicaid recipients.
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Jon Morrison Winters is the Digital Equity Program and Broadband Manager for the City of Seattle. Prior to coming to Seattle IT in 2022, Jon was a planner with Aging and Disability Services, the Area Agency on Aging for King County, Washington. He holds a Master of Urban Planning degree from the University of Washington.
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Amy Sheon is a Digital Health Equity Consultant in Rockville, Maryland, helping ensure that all individuals are able to use technology for health and health care. Amy holds adjunct faculty positions at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine and Arizona State University. She co-authored Digital Inclusion is a Social Determinant of Health (2021, NJP Digital Medicine) and two recent Policy Briefs for Health Affairs. Amy holds a PhD in Public Health from Johns Hopkins University.
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Jamila McLean is the Director of Health Equity for the State Health and Values Strategies program at Princeton University. She supports states in their efforts to transform healthcare systems to be more affordable, equitable, and innovative. Throughout her career, she has championed policy and practice innovations that improve access to Medicaid and other healthcare-related benefits, providing technical assistance to state agencies and their partners. She also conducted research at the Rutgers Institute for Health focused on understanding the role of race, ethnicity, and nativity status on the physical and mental health outcomes of African Americans and Black Caribbeans. She holds a Master of Public Health from the Rutgers School of Public Health and a B.S. from the Rutgers Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy.
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Dr. Pablo Buitron de la Vega is a general internist and preventive medicine physician with a longstanding interest in health professional education and the impact of patients’ attitudes, health beliefs, and social determinants of health (SDOH). He provides clinical care to a majority of Hispanic and Latino patients, an underserved population in healthcare. He is also Program Director of the Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine (BUSM) Preventative Medicine Residency and an Assistant Professor of Medicine. Dr. Buitron de la Vega is the Medical Director for Boston Medical Center (BMC) THRIVE, a program that systematically screens patients for SDOH and refers them to resources when requested.
Tune in to learn more about the ways in which digital inclusion and healthcare organizations can join forces and contribute to healthy, connected communities.