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Explore every episode of the podcast Design Lab with Bon Ku
Dive into the complete episode list for Design Lab with Bon Ku. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| EP 128: Designing the Future of Food | Dan Barber | 20 Jul 2023 | 00:30:46 | |
This week we talk about how real food is the best medicine.
Dan Barber is chef and co-owner of Blue Hill and Blue Hill at Stone Barns in New York, and the author of The Third Plate. A fierce advocate for sustainable, ethical farming and cooking, Barber’s opinions on food and agricultural policy have appeared in The New York Times and other publications. He also co-founded Row 7 Seed Company, which brings together chefs and plant breeders to develop new varieties of vegetables and grains. Barber has received multiple James Beard awards including Best Chef: New York City (2006) and Outstanding Chef (2009). President Barack Obama appointed him to serve on the President’s Council on Physical Fitness, Sports & Nutrition. Barber continues his work to blur the line between the dining experience and the educational, bringing the principles of good farming directly to the table.
This episode was recorded live at the 2023 Aspen Ideas: Health Festival. Special thanks to the Aspen Ideas team for making this happen! Bon also wrote a blog post for the event, 5 Reasons Why Clinicians Should Think Like Designers.
Episode mentions and links:
Blue Hill Farm
Stone Barns Center for Food and Agriculture
Book: The Third Plate
Row 7 Seeds
Chef Dan Barber brings new veggie varieties to the aisle with Row 7 Seed Company
Michael Mazourek: Culinary Breeding Network
Dan’s photo credit: Richard Boll
Follow Dan: Twitter | Insta
Follow Blue Hill Farm: Twitter | Insta
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/128 | |||
| EP 127: Designing Brand Strategy | Howard Belk | 13 Jul 2023 | 00:36:24 | |
This week we talk about simplicity as a strategy.
Howard Belk pulls double duty as Co-Chief Executive Officer and Chief Creative Officer of leading global brand experience consultancy Siegel+Gale, which he claims is one (or two) of the six best jobs on the planet.
He is an entrepreneur who helped a 50-year-old branding firm reestablish industry leadership by embracing its disruptor legacy. Since his arrival at the firm in 2004, he and his colleagues have established Siegel+Gale as The Simplicity Company, truly the go-to firm to help untangle the mind-bending brand mash ups that result from the entrepreneurial adventures of the CEOs they love.
Over his career, he has partnered with Fortune 500 clients to embrace the power of simplicity, purpose, experience and design to transform and grow their companies. Today, he is one of those rare birds who understands both business and design, and more importantly how to embrace one to succeed at the other.
Episode mentions and links:
Siegel+Gale
Siegel+Gale: CVS Case Study
Siegel+Gale: BMS Case Study
Howard’s photo credit: Madeline King
Howard’s restaurant rec: Omen
Howard’s book rec: The Last Days of Night by Graham Moore
Follow Howard: Twitter | Insta | LinkedIn
Follow Siegel+Gale: Twitter | Insta | LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/127 | |||
| EP 118: Designing Health Equity | Adriane Ackerman & Robert Fabricant | 04 May 2023 | 00:41:34 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about designing for health equity.
Adriane Ackerman is a community convener, strategic innovator and life-long rabble-rouser. She currently directs several programs at the Pima County Health Department in Southern Arizona, including a $4 million grant program from the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of Minority Health to Advance Health Literacy, the department’s new Cultural Health initiative with its pilot project, SaludArte, the emerging Pima County Network for Equity and Resilience (PCNER), and the first ever Office of Health Policy, Resilience, and Equity, all of which aim to increase health literacy and equity through innovative models, by elevating and centering the leadership of historically and contemporarily excluded communities. Adriane holds dual Bachelor’s degrees in Political Science and Urban & Public Affairs and seeks to bring the depth of her lived experience to bear as she convenes, facilitates and uplifts the work of harm reduction from within bureaucracies and community partnerships.
Robert Fabricant is Co-Founder and Partner of Dalberg Design, where he brings human-centered design and innovation services to clients looking for new, creative approaches to breakthrough innovation and expanded collaborations in the field of social impact and international development. Before Dalberg, Robert Fabricant was the Vice-President of Creative for frog design, where he managed frog’s global leadership across Design Research, Product Design, Software Design, and Experience Strategy. Robert writes about Design and Social Impact for publications like HBR, SSIR, Fast Company, Rotman Business Journal, MIT Tech Review, ChangeObserver, and Core77. He is a member of the adjunct faculty at NYU and SVA. His client portfolio includes experience across verticals including financial services and financial inclusion, social impact, mobile and technology, healthcare and public health, and media. Robert has an MPS in Design and Technology from NYU and a BA from Yale University.
Episode mentions and links:
https://www.fabricant.design/
https://dalberg.com/who-we-are/our-leadership/robert-fabricant/
https://www.adrianeackerman.com/
Adriane’s previous work: https://www.portlandpeoplescoalition.org/
Adriane’s restaurant rec: La Indita (a mixture of native Sonoran, Pascua Yaqui, and Tarascan cuisine)
Robert’s restaurant rec: Le Succulent
Follow Adriane: LinkedIn
Follow Rob: LinkedIn | Twitter
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/118 | |||
| Ep 29: Designing Transparency in Healthcare | Liz Salmi | 15 Apr 2021 | 00:56:18 | |
Liz Salmi is Senior Strategist of Dissemination for OpenNotes at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. In this role, Liz helps hospitals and health systems understand the changing nature of patient-clinician communication in the digital age, and interpret and implement research emerging from the “open notes” movement. After being diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor at age 29, Liz immediately put her digital communications skills to use by blogging, chronicling her daily symptoms, and seeing how much she could learn from her online patient portal. Today, her research areas of interest include studying how healthcare professionals and patients are connecting through digital tools and joining as partners in research. Liz leads the Brain Cancer Quality of Life Collaborative, a multi-stakeholder group dedicated to advancing science and improving the quality of life for people with malignant brain tumors. Liz was named e-Patient of the Year by the Society for Participatory Medicine. | |||
| EP 28: Creating Future Designers in Africa | Guidione Machava | 08 Apr 2021 | 00:30:33 | |
Guidione Machava is an entrepreneur, designer and community builder. He has experience leading teams, coaching designers, and creating together products and services that positively impact people’s lives. He works across diverse industries and sectors, bringing early ideas and concepts to life for World Bank projects, scrappy startups and nonprofits in Africa. He is the author of “Design Sutra'', a collection of design principles for designers in the early stages of their careers and founded the World-class Designer School, the home of brightest design minds in Africa. He recently organized the World-class Designer Conference which included speakers such as Debbie Millman, Marty Cagan and designers from the largest companies in the world. In 2018, Google named him one of the best community builders in Africa. Bon and Guidione talk about creating the future of design in Africa, organizing a global design conference and life in Mozambique. | |||
| EP 27: Designing Patient Health Stories | Katie McCurdy | 01 Apr 2021 | 00:56:08 | |
Katie McCurdy is a design consultant, autoimmune patient and founder of Pictal Health. After years of struggling to communicate about her own mysterious symptoms, Katie created a new way for people to tell their health stories visually, so they feel heard and understood as they work with their doctors to get the right diagnosis and treatment. She’s also spent a decade joyfully using visual communication and human-centered design to facilitate team collaboration and improve our healthcare experience. She lives, skis, hikes, and eats chocolate in Burlington, VT. Bon and Katie talk about designing visual health histories, why hospitals should hire designers and improving communication between patients and healthcare professionals. | |||
| EP 26: Designing Relationships in Healthcare | Larry Chu | 25 Mar 2021 | 00:44:53 | |
Larry Chu, MD is a Professor of Anesthesiology, Perioperative and Pain Medicine and Director of the Stanford Anesthesia Informatics and Media (AIM) Lab. Dr. Chu is an NIH-funded clinical researcher and is Executive Director of Stanford Medicine X, the world's longest-running and most-discussed academic program on patient-centered emerging technology and medicine. He has written eight books, over 50 papers and over 50 book chapters in academic anesthesiology. He is a member of the editorial advisory board for The BMJ, one of the most influential general medical journals in the world. Bon and Larry talk about flattening hierarchies, creating safe spaces in healthcare, co-designing with patients and embracing curiosity in the culture of Medicine. | |||
| EP 25: Design as a Human Right | Mokena Makeka | 18 Mar 2021 | 01:00:57 | |
Mokena Makeka was raised in Maseru, Lesotho and New York. He is an accomplished architect, artist, curator, designer, global leader, scholar and urbanist. He is at the forefront of thinking on contemporary inclusive African Cities. Mokena studied architecture at the University of Cape Town and has executive leadership qualifications from the Harvard Kennedy School, Oxford University and Wits University. He is adjunct professor at Cooper Union, New York and at Carleton University, Canada. In 2015 he was a Young Global leader at the World Economic Forum and he is an Aspen Fellow in leadership. Currently Mokena is a Principal at Dalberg Advisors. He is also the founder of the House of Makeka, a premium lifestyle suite of design and product experiences. He has won international awards with his urban planning firm Makeka DesignLab/Works. Bon and Mokena talk about design as a human right, how hip hop culture informed Mokena’s architectural philosophy and understanding people through the environments they create. | |||
| EP 24: Designing for Global Health | Michael Ngigi | 11 Mar 2021 | 00:45:41 | |
Michael Ngigi is the co-studio Lead of ThinkPlace Kenya where he leads a team of designers drawn from over 8 different countries. He’s passionate about Africa and unlocking the potential of the continent through design thinking. Michael has traveled across Africa understanding the different cultures and connecting people with solutions to their challenges. Early in his career he acknowledged the power of supporting people to identify their own challenges and the magic of facilitating the process of solving these challenges on their own. Michael is a board member of Design for Health, a global initiative led by the United States Agency for International Development and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and sits on the Technical Advisory Group of Living Labs, an initiative by PATH. Michael is also currently studying at the Harvard Business School Program for Leadership Development. Bon and Michael talk about his incredible journey from living on the streets of Nairobi to becoming a designer, incorporating design in public health projects and throwing our biases out the window. | |||
| EP 23: Designing for Justice | Antionette Carroll | 04 Mar 2021 | 00:45:29 | |
Antionette D. Carroll is the founder and CEO of Creative Reaction Lab, a nonprofit social enterprise designing healthy and racially equitable communities for Black and Latinx populations through education and training programs, community engagement consulting and open-sourced tools. Creative Reaction Lab is a movement challenging racial inequities in the education, media, health and healthcare, and government and public service sectors. Prior to CRXLAB, Carroll spent 10 years in the advertising and marketing industry. Antionette has held national leadership positions on diversity and inclusion at the AIGA and multiple non-profit organizations. Bon and Antionette talk about what it means to be a redesigner for justice, the relationship between health and equity, and her journey in design. | |||
| EP 22: Redesigning Happy Hour | Ben Branson | 25 Feb 2021 | 00:54:15 | |
Ben Branson is the Founder of Seedlip and Æcorn Drinks, the world’s first distilled non-alcoholic spirits and aperitifs. His mission is two fold: Solve the dilemma of ‘what to drink when you’re not drinking’ and continue his family’s 300 years of farming heritage. With offices in the Chilterns, Los Angeles and Sydney, Seedlip is now available in 29 cities including New York, Barcelona, Shanghai & Singapore and served in many of the world’s most awarded bars, restaurants, hotels. Ben was named as one of the Top 50 most influential people in food and drink by The Telegraph and awarded Young Achiever of The Year by The Drinks Business. He continues to pioneer the non-alcoholic category forward with the launch of Æcorn Drinks in Selfridges and The Savoy in May 2019. Bon and Ben talk about tackling the public health challenge of excessive alcohol consumption, normalizing the choice not to drink alcohol and how peas can be turned into a delicious cocktail. | |||
| EP 21: Designing Equitable Places | Katherine Darnstadt | 18 Feb 2021 | 00:48:57 | |
Katherine Darnstadt is the founder of Latent Design, a boutique architecture and urban design firm leveraging civic innovation and social impact to design more equitable spaces and systems. Since founding her practice in 2010, Katherine and her firm have prototyped new design systems to advance urban agriculture, support small business, create spaces for youth makers, advance building innovation and create public space frameworks. Concurrently, she is the founder of Boombox, Chicago's first micro retail popup in a shipping container. To date the program has supported over 150 small businesses and built new models of finance and policy to support micro retail in Chicago. In addition, she recently co-founded a community design nonprofit, Design Trust Chicago to address ongoing spatial and social injustices in the built environment.
Bon and Katherine talk about the role of architecture in improving public health, repurposed buses acting as mobile produce markets and redefining public spaces. | |||
| EP 20: Designing Behavior | Kathleen Brandenburg | 11 Feb 2021 | 00:48:11 | |
Selected by Fast Company as a Master of Design and one of 50 Most Influential Designers, Kathleen Brandenburg is an internationally recognized founder, thought leader, educator and speaker on the global stage—from Delhi to Hong Kong to the Mayo Clinic. Named a “Creative Maverick,” Kathleen has devoted her career to elevating design as a strategic value for business, organizations, and society. An early pioneer and advocate of human-centered design, she was one of the first to link design, business strategy, and innovation when she co-founded IA Collaborative, the global design and innovation consultancy, in 2000.
Today, Kathleen is leading the conversation to elevate design’s impact even further, championing it as the way to solve our world’s most urgent problems. A Harvard Visiting Professor of Design for Social Innovation, she is at the forefront of a movement to change the way healthcare understands and applies design, and is the author of Design for Health: The Beginning of a New Dialogue Between Design and Public Health.
Kathleen and I talk about designing for behavior, how research is creative and bringing joy into healthcare. | |||
| EP 117: Designing Open-Source Medical Software | Maya Friedman & Kelly Watson | 27 Apr 2023 | 00:47:06 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about designing open source medical software.
Maya Friedman is a digital product design lead and art director who designs solutions for unmet needs in the health tech and femtech spaces. She currently leads the user experience, visual and sonic design for Tidepool's FDA-cleared, automated insulin dosing mobile application, Tidepool Loop. She is also the founder of The Period Project, which supports the creation of an ecosystem of software solutions, research initiatives, and education to address the unmet needs of women+ with diabetes, through the different phases of a woman’s life cycle including menstruation and pregnancy. Prior to joining Tidepool, Maya was a creative lead for Allbodies Health, designing education to improve sex, mind and body literacy. She also worked as a creative at Made Music Studios, driving the design and strategy for digital-audio experiences, most notably leading a partnership with the Cooper Hewitt Design Museum to develop an audio-first design exhibition around alarm fatigue in hospital settings. She thrives leading a team of product designers, illustrators, user researchers and sound designers to design solutions for topics such as health and body literacy, menstrual health and alarm fatigue. Maya has her MFA in Media Design practices with a focus on femtech and sextech design from ArtCenter College of Design.
Kelly Watson is VP, Product & User Experience for Tidepool, a digital health nonprofit building solutions for people with diabetes. Kelly has worked to ensure the patient, the clinician and care partners are at the center of the product design process, leading Tidepool to achieve rapid market adoption growing its global ecosystem to over 450,000 people with diabetes and 12,000 clinicians. At Tidepool, she has led partnerships with many of the world’s largest diabetes medical device companies and technology companies. Previously Kelly worked in bench research at the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, FDA (CBER-OVRR DVP) and the National Institute of Mental Health prior to building out a product design consultancy. She is an angel investor and advisor for emerging digital health startups. Kelly advocates for patient ownership of health data, interoperability and open healthcare standards.
Episode mentions and links:
https://www.tidepool.org
Tidepool loop has received FDA clearance
Tidepool loop origin story
Tidepool: Ways to give
Maya’s restaurant rec: Saffy’s
Kelly’s restaurant rec: Hook Fish Co.
Follow Maya: LinkedIn | Instagram
Follow Kelly: LinkedIn | Twitter
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/117 | |||
| EP 19: Designing a Patient Revolution | Maggie Breslin and Victor Montori | 28 Jan 2021 | 00:46:23 | |
Maggie Breslin is the director of The Patient Revolution, an action and advocacy movement for careful and kind care. She and her team work towards a vision of a healthcare future defined by unhurried conversations, seeing people in all their complexity, and care plans that make intellectual, emotional, and practical sense. Maggie has spent 15+ years as a designer and researcher in the healthcare space, including 7 years at the Mayo Clinic’s Center for Innovation. She has done extensive work on the development and implementation of communication tools and programs that aim to foster conversations in exam rooms, hospital rooms, homes and public spaces about our lives and our health. She also teaches in the Design for Social Innovation program at the School of Visual Arts in NYC.
Victor M. Montori, MD is a Professor of Medicine at Mayo Clinic. An endocrinologist, health services researcher, and care activist, Victor is the author of more than 690 peer-reviewed publications and is among the most cited researchers in clinical medicine and in social science. He is a recognized expert in evidence-based medicine and shared decision making, and minimally disruptive medicine. He works in Rochester, Minnesota, at Mayo Clinic's KER Unit, to advance person-centered care for patients with diabetes and other chronic conditions. He is the author of the book Why We Revolt, and is leading a movement, a Patient Revolution, for careful and kind care for all.
Bon talks with Maggie and Victor about the language of care, industrialized health care and why they started The Patient Revolution. | |||
| EP 18: Designing a User Friendly World | Cliff Kuang | 21 Jan 2021 | 00:45:20 | |
Cliff Kuang is a user-experience designer at Google and author of User Friendly: How the Hidden Rules of Design Are Changing the Way We Live, Work, and Play, which was called a “tour de force” by the New York Times and was also named an Amazon Best Book of 2019. Previously, he was head of UX and product at Fast Company; the founder of Fast Company’s design site, Co.Design; and an editor at Wired. Under his leadership, Co.Design became an award-winning source of insight and inspiration for a generation of designers. Bon and Cliff talk about how Three Mile Island was the worst design fail in U.S. history, feedback loops and why most unsexy wicked problems actually demand the most talented designers. | |||
| EP 17: Trauma Responsive Design | Rachael Dietkus | 14 Jan 2021 | 00:40:53 | |
Meet Rachael Dietkus. She’s a clinical social worker who has dedicated her career to trauma responsive practices in design. After a 10-year career working with social justice and human rights non-profits, she pursued a Master of Social Work and worked at Veterans Affairs across the patient advocacy, planning and construction, and housing and homelessness arenas. Since 2016, she has been working in higher education at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign as an Assistant Dean at the School of Social Work and the Associate Director of Programs at the new Siebel Center for Design. Bon and Rachael talk about how design and social work fit together, why designers should think more like social workers and about the journey of developing the field of trauma responsive design. You will also hear advice on how to respond to trauma that you may be experiencing during this pandemic. | |||
| EP 16: Health in All Design | Andrew Ibrahim | 08 Jan 2021 | 00:45:19 | |
Andrew M. Ibrahim is an Assistant Professor of Surgery, Architecture & Urban Planning at the University of Michigan and Chief Medical Officer at HOK, a global design and architecture firm. He completed his undergraduate and medical degrees education both with Honors at Case Western Reserve University with a year of coursework at University College London and The Bartlett School of Architecture. In addition to his health services research degree from the University of Michigan as a Robert Wood Johnson Clinical Scholar, he completed additional policy training as a Crile Fellow at Princeton University and as a Doris Duke Fellow at John Hopkins Hospital. Andrew’s research at the interface of healthcare, policy evaluation and architecture has resulted in numerous publications, book chapters, international presentations. Bon and Andrew talk about health in all design, failures in medicine, and so much more. | |||
| EP 15: Designing the Great Indoors | Emily Anthes | 31 Dec 2020 | 00:37:46 | |
Humans are an indoor species; we spend about 90% of our time inside buildings. What makes a building sick or a living room healthy? Explore the science of indoor spaces with Emily Anthes, the author of The Great Indoors: The Surprising Science of How Buildings Shape Our Behavior, Health, and Happiness. Emily and Bon talk about the design of modern hospitals, evidenced-based design and tips on creating healthier indoor spaces. | |||
| EP 14: Jam Session featuring Mike Natter | 22 Dec 2020 | 00:47:49 | |
In this special holiday edition of Design Lab, Dr. Mike Natter (from Episode 3) joins us as our return guest! In this fun meandering conversation, our producer Rob Pugliese asks Bon and Mike about their holiday plans, TikTok, quarantine puppies, Jeopardy, reducing pandemic stress and so much more. Enjoy and happy holidays! | |||
| EP 13: The Practice of Design in Health Care | MIYA OSAKI & TINA PARK | 10 Dec 2020 | 00:44:53 | |
Miya Osaki and Tina Park solve wicked problems in health care through design. They are partners at NYC-based Diagram, a design studio that’s fully dedicated to the healthcare industry. In their spare time, Miya and Tina host “Ya, No”, an engaging podcast that explores new ideas in health care. In their work, they use role-playing, narrative storytelling and participatory design to improve the experiences for both patients and clinicians. Bon chats with Miya and Tina about how design can make healthcare more human-centered, the challenges of explaining the job of a designer to their Asian parents, and why all clinical teams need designers. | |||
| EP 12: Designing through Storytelling | Emily Silverman | 03 Dec 2020 | 00:38:52 | |
Meet Emily Silverman. She’s an academic hospitalist in San Francisco and the founder of The Nocturnists, an independent medical storytelling community. Stories are her design medium. Emily has created a platform that invites healthcare workers to open up and share their stories, the good and the bad. She creates space for real talk, to bring taboos out into the open and transform the culture of medicine. Bon and Emily talk about tips to become better storytellers, fiercely protecting time for creativity, and challenging the status quo in healthcare to make room for humanity. | |||
| EP 11: Emancipatory Design | Lesley-Ann Noel | 26 Nov 2020 | 00:39:16 | |
Meet Lesley-Ann Noel. She's a Professor of Design and her research practice is guided by an emancipatory philosophy. Lesley introduces design to nontraditional audiences and has presented her work all over the world: Trinidad, Tobago, Jamaica, Brazil, Germany, and France. Originally from Trinidad, she moved to Brazil to study Industrial Design and earned her PhD at North Carolina State University. Bon and Lesley talk about conducting design research during a pandemic, confronting biases through emancipatory design, and the challenges Lesley has faced being a black female designer. | |||
| EP 10: Designing Death | BJ Miller | 19 Nov 2020 | 00:39:34 | |
BJ Miller, a palliative care physician, wants to redesign how we die. BJ is the co-author of A Beginner's Guide to the End: Practical Advice for Living Life and Facing Death, his TED talk has over 11 million views and he’s been interviewed by Oprah Winfrey, Tim Ferris and Krista Tippet. Bon asks BJ about the role of design in reimagining the dying experience, helping people navigate illness during the pandemic through his new company Mettle Health, and why majoring in Art History has made him a better physician. Discover how you can live a fuller and more meaningful life by redefining your understanding of death. | |||
| EP 116: Designing Hope in American Medicine | Ricardo Nuila | 20 Apr 2023 | 00:36:47 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about designing hope in American medicine.
Dr. Ricardo Nuila works as an internal medicine doctor and hospitalist in his hometown of Houston. It’s hard for him to imagine practicing medicine anywhere else but at a safety-net hospital, where he focuses on a person’s healthcare problem. His experiences as a doctor gives his writing its fuel. Ricardo focuses mostly on health disparities, how policies affect real people, and the interface between art and medicine. He has written for Texas Monthly, VQR, The New York Times Sunday Review, The Atlantic.com, and The New England Journal of Medicine. He has also covered Hurricane Harvey and the COVID pandemic for The New Yorker. His short stories have appeared in the Best American Short Stories anthology as well as in McSweeney’s and other literary magazines. The New England Review published one of his short stories and awarded him with its inaugural Emerging Writer’s Award. Ricardo directs the Humanities Expression and Arts Lab (HEAL) at Baylor College of Medicine. This lab develops educational materials and experiences that weave the arts and humanities into medical education.
Episode mentions and links:
www.ricardonuila.com
Made to Care For Those Left Behind, This Hospital Leads the Way (Book Review via NYT)
Humanities Expressions and Arts Lab (HEAL)
Ricardo’s restaurant rec: Nancy’s Hustle
Follow Ricardo: Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn | Facebook;
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/116 | |||
| EP 9: Spatial Justice | Craig Wilkins | 12 Nov 2020 | 00:57:29 | |
Craig Wilkins is an architect, activist, artist, author and academic. His work focuses on the intersection of design and social justice. He is the creative director of the Wilkins Project and a lecturer in architecture at the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. Craig, a leading scholar on African Americans in architecture, won the Cooper Hewitt National Design Award in 2017. In this episode, Bon and Craig talk about hip hop architecture, urban acupuncture and spatial justice. Learn how the bad design of the environment and urban policies have negatively impacted the health of black communities in the U.S. and what can be done to change that. | |||
| EP 8: Designing with Data | Giorgia Lupi | 29 Oct 2020 | 00:39:02 | |
Meet Giorgia Lupi. She’s an information designer and a partner at the global design studio Pentagram. Giorgia uses data as her materials for design — she is on a mission to make data more humane. The MOMA in NYC acquired her data visualization of soft power as one of its permanent collections and Fast Company named her one of the 100 Most Creative People in Business in 2018. Giorgia’s TED Talk on her humanistic approach to data has >1,000,000 views! Learn about Giorgia’s stunning data visualizations and why you should create your own personal data diary. | |||
| EP 7: Technology and Design | John Maeda | 22 Oct 2020 | 00:42:19 | |
John is a legend in design. Although he currently defines himself as a technologist, John is also an artist, educator, graphic designer, computer scientist and engineer. He is internationally known for his talks, books and thought leadership on the intersection of technology and design. His diverse career spans from teaching at MIT Media Lab to being the president of the Rhode Island School of Design. John is the recipient of nearly every prestigious design award such as the AIGA Gold Medal and the White House’s National Design Award. His latest book, How to Speak Machine, was published in 2019. Bon and John talk about computational design, John shares some sage tips on creativity, and they both make way too many Star Wars references. | |||
| EP 6: Food as Medicine | Nicole Marquis | 15 Oct 2020 | 00:42:51 | |
Food can be as powerful as medications in improving health outcomes. But most of us struggle to eat a healthy diet. Nicole Marquis is on a mission to make plant-based food accessible to everyone, even meat-obsessed humans like Bon. She is the founder and CEO of the plant-based fast casual restaurant HipCityVeg that has locations in Philadelphia and D.C. Listen to how Nicole’s vegan restaurants have helped Bon and others on their journey to eat healthier. Challenge your misconceptions about a plant-based diet and get inspired to redesign your pantry. | |||
| EP 5: Designing for Equity | George Aye | 07 Oct 2020 | 00:39:11 | |
Meet George Aye. He uses human-centered design to advance equity and creates solutions that improve society. He is a co-founder and principal at the Chicago based Greater Good Studio. His work spans diverse sectors from criminal justice to healthcare. Listen to Bon and George talk about how “gut checks” can inform our everyday decisions, their Asian identities, George’s journey to becoming a designer and why Bon was ashamed of the smell of kimchi. | |||
| EP 4: The Power of Making | Emily Pilloton | 24 Sep 2020 | 00:36:58 | |
Meet Emily Pilloton. She’s a designer who has developed mastery of any power tool. Emily’s love of teaching through building led her to found the nonprofit Girls Garage, where girls are empowered to change the world around them by making. Using everything from drills to band saws, girls work together in a creative community unlike any other. In this episode, you will be inspired to use your own hands to shape the world around you. | |||
| EP 3: Art, Storytelling & Medicine | Mike Natter | 17 Sep 2020 | 00:30:26 | |
Meet Mike Natter. He’s an artist turned doctor who uses comics, sketches and drawings to share his journey in Medicine. Mike is an Endocrinology Fellow in New York City where he finished his residency training treating patients with Covid-19. In his conversation with Bon, Mike shares how art helps him both as a doctor and a patient living with diabetes, embracing a creative mindset and being trolled on Instagram. | |||
| EP 2: Designing for Mental Health | Nzinga Harrison | 10 Sep 2020 | 00:41:43 | |
Are we hardwired for addictive behaviors? How can we quiet our brains? Do you need a mental health trainer? Dr. Harrison, a psychiatrist and addiction medicine specialist, is going to help us answer these questions and shine light to those things that we push into the dark. She is the co-founder and Chief Medical Officer of Eleanor Health and hosts the In Recovery Podcast. Bon and Dr. Harrison discuss the stigma around mental health, redesigning our lives for better brain health and Bon’s unhealthy addiction to surfing. | |||
| EP 1: Sharing the Power of Design | Ellen Lupton | 03 Sep 2020 | 00:34:20 | |
Meet Ellen Lupton, designer extraordinaire. Ellen has spent her career sharing the power of design beyond the design profession. She has written over 20 books on design, teaches graphic design at the Maryland Institute College of Art and is the senior curator at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum. Bon and Ellen discuss DIY design, why healthcare needs design and how each one of us can become more creative. | |||
| EP 115: Designing the Built World for our Bodies | Sara Hendren | 06 Apr 2023 | 00:39:58 | |
In this episode, we talk about what a body can do and how we meet the built world.
Sara Hendren is an artist, design researcher, writer, professor at Olin College of Engineering, and the creator and host of the Sketch Model podcast. She is the author of What Can A Body Do? How We Meet the Built World, published by Riverhead/Penguin Random House. It was chosen as a Best Book of the Year by NPR and won the Science in Society Journalism book prize.
Sara is a humanist in tech. Her work of 2010-2020 includes collaborative public art, social design, and writing that reframes the human body and technology. Her work has been exhibited on the White House lawn under the Obama administration, at the Victoria & Albert Museum, the DOX Centre for Contemporary Art, The Vitra Design Museum, the Seoul Museum of Art, among other venues, and is held in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art and the Cooper Hewitt Museum. She has been a National Fellow at the New America think tank, and her work has been supported by an NEH Public Scholar grant, residencies at Yaddo and the Carey Institute for Global Good, and an Artist Fellowship from the Massachusetts Cultural Council. At Olin, she was also the Principal Investigator on a four-year initiative to bring more arts experiences to engineering students and faculty, supported by the Mellon Foundation.
Episode mentions and links:
https://sarahendren.com/
Sketch Model Podcast
Engineering at Home
AccessibleIcon.org
When The World Isn't Designed For Our Bodies via NYT
Restaurants Sara would take you to: Clover Food Lab
Follow Sara: LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/115 | |||
| EP 114: Designing with Biology | Ritu Raman | 30 Mar 2023 | 00:32:19 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about designing with biology.
Dr. Ritu Raman is the d’Arbeloff Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering at MIT. Her lab is centered on engineering adaptive living materials for applications in medicine and machines. Professor Raman has received several recognitions for scientific innovation, including being named a Kavli Fellow and a Ford Fellow by the National Academy of Sciences engineering and Medicine, an Army Young Investigator by the U.S. Department of Defense, and L’Oréal USA for Women in Science Fellow. She has also been named to the Forbes 30 Under 30 and MIT Technology Review 35 Innovators Under 35 lists, and is the author of the MIT Press book Biofabrication. She is passionate about increasing diversity in STEM and has championed many initiatives to empower women in science, including being named a AAAS IF/THEN ambassador and founding the Women in Innovation and STEM Database at MIT (WISDM). Professor Raman received her BS from Cornell University and her PhD as an NSF Fellow at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
Episode mentions and links:
https://rituraman.com/
Biofabrication
At the forefront of building with biology via MIT News
Restaurants Ritu would take you to: Sofra Bakery and Cafe
Follow Ritu: Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/114 | |||
| EP 113: Designing a Good Death | Sunita Puri | 23 Mar 2023 | 00:42:32 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about designing a good death.
Dr. Sunita Puri is the Program Director of the Hospice and Palliative Medicine fellowship at the University of Massachusetts, where she is also an Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine. She completed medical school and residency training in internal medicine at the University of California San Francisco followed by a fellowship in Hospice and Palliative Medicine at Stanford. She is the author of That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour, a critically acclaimed literary memoir examining her journey to the practice of palliative medicine, and her quest to help patients and families redefine what it means to live and die well in the face of serious illness. A graduate of Yale University and the recipient of a Rhodes Scholarship, her writing has appeared in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Slate, JAMA, and, forthcoming, the New Yorker. She and her work have been featured in the Atlantic, People Magazine, PBS’ Christian Amanpour Show, NPR, the Guardian, BBC, India Today, and Literary Hub. She is passionate about the ways that the precise and compassionate use of language can empower patients and physicians to have the right conversations about living and dying.
Episode mentions and links:
https://sunitapuri.com/
That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour on Amazon
Why 'lost their battle' with serious illness is the wrong thing to say via NPR
We Must Learn to Look at Grief, Even When We Want to Run Away via NYT
Restaurants Sunita would take you to:
El Condor LA
Momed LA
Worcester: Mare E Monti Trattoria
Follow Sunita: Twitter | Instagram
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/113 | |||
| EP 112: Designing Careful and Kind Care | Dominique Allwood | 16 Mar 2023 | 00:35:01 | |
How can revolt against industrialized healthcare? Can we design careful and kind care?
Dr. Dominique Allwood is a healthcare leader with almost 20 years of experience working as a medical doctor and public health physician in healthcare in the UK. She enjoys variety and juggling multiple roles and is currently Chief Medical Officer of UCLPartners, a health innovation partnership across a population of 5.2 million people, and Director of Population Health at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, at a large teaching hospital in London. She is interested in a range of areas including improving equity, population health, anchor institutions, accelerating net zero in healthcare, clinical engagement, and quality improvement. She has worked extensively across healthcare in delivery, leadership, management and advisory roles for provider and commissioner organisations, academic institutions, national policy bodies, management consultancy, charities and think tanks. She holds an MPH, has previously undertaken a Darzi Fellowship in Clinical Leadership, and is an Associate Editor for BMJ Leader Journal. She is a Governor of University College Hospital and a Board member of The
Patient Revolution in the US. She was previously named a Rising Star in the Health Services Journal and shortlisted for a prestigious national mentoring award. She is currently completing an MBA at Henley Business School.
Episode mentions and links:
Careful, kind care is our compass out of the pandemic fog
Taking one step further: five equity principles for hospitals to increase their value as anchor institutions
Restaurant Dominique would take you to: Lefteris O Politis
Bonus: This is Athens: A beginners guide to souvlaki
Follow Dominique: LinkedIn | Twitter
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/112 | |||
| EP 111: Designing Sh*t | Saffron Cassaday | 09 Mar 2023 | 00:32:01 | |
Today, we are going to take a deep dive into the promising therapy of fecal transplantation
Saffron Cassaday directed her first documentary feature film called Cyber-Seniors in 2014. The film followed a group of senior citizens as they learned about the internet from teenage mentors and the connections made both on and offline. The film has been broadcast in 40 countries including on PBS, Netflix and CBC in North America. Cyber-Seniors screening events were supported by over 900 partners including AARP Foundation, Best Buy Foundation, BlueCross BlueShield Mn, and hundreds of schools, universities, and libraries.
In her new film “Designer Sh*t”, Saffron explores the efficacy of fecal transplant for her condition ulcerative colitis, using herself as a human guinea pig.
Episode mentions and links:
Designer Sh*t
Cyber Seniors
https://www.saffroncassaday.com/
Restaurant Saffron would take you to: Bud Namu Korean BBQ
Follow Saffron: Instagram | IMDb
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/111 | |||
| EP 110: Designing for Behavior Change | Sherine Guirguis and Michael Coleman | 02 Mar 2023 | 00:40:50 | |
Learn how behavioral designers are tackling the most complex health challenges on the planet.
As a founder and lead strategist at Common Thread, Sherine Guirguis turns data into powerful narratives. She brings over two decades of experience leading large-scale behaviour change strategies to tackle public health crises. She’s helped rid the world of polio, mitigate COVID-19, end West Africa’s Ebola outbreak, and respond to the Indian Ocean Tsunami. She spent 15 years working senior behaviour change positions at UNICEF and is widely published in public health and social and behaviour change. Sherine holds a MS in Public Health from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a MA in International Development and Economics from Johns Hopkins University. She’s a guest lecturer at NYU’s School of Global Public Health and participates in numerous Technical Advisory Groups, including the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, PATH and the Taskforce for Global Health. Sherine lives in Barbados and loves riding horses, diving, and design in all its forms.
As a founder and lead storyteller at Common Thread, Michael Coleman ensures that people weigh in on decisions that impact and depict their lives. Through senior communications posts with UN agencies in Angola, Pakistan, and Viet Nam, and experience in social development, documentary production and international journalism, Mike has gained invaluable experience crafting people-centred narratives. Through his work in polio eradication and responding to violence against health workers in Pakistan, he learned the importance of human-centred design. Mike holds a MA in Political Communications from Goldsmiths at the University of London. He is part of a USAID and Gates initiated Community of Practice called Design for Health. He has lectured at NYU’s School of Global Public Health and served as a lead trainer for the US Center for Disease Control’s STOP Polio Programme. Mike is based in Ireland, where he spends his days biking, camping, and coaching his girls’ soccer team.
Episode mentions and links:
Poland: Not settling for less than home
Zambia and Kenya: Sprinting towards a stronger workforce
Global: Tracking vaccination the fun way
Restaurants Sherine and Mike would take you to:
Local and Co. Barbados
Birchalls Pub Dublin
Glas Restaurant Dublin
Follow Common Thread: Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn
Follow Sherine: Twitter | LinkedIn
Follow Mike: LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/110 | |||
| EP 109: Designing Harm Reduction | Kimberly Sue | 23 Feb 2023 | 00:34:56 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about designing harm reduction.
Dr. Kimberly Sue is an Assistant Professor of Medicine with the Program in Addiction Medicine (Division of General Internal Medicine) at Yale University School of Medicine. She is the former Medical Director of the National Harm Reduction Coalition, New York, NY, which strives to improve the health and wellbeing of people who use drugs. Currently, she serves as an Attending Physician at the Central Medical Unit, APT Foundation, which provides primary care to patients receiving methadone and other substance use treatment services and supervises fellows and trainees within the Yale Addiction Medicine Fellowship program. She also is an Attending Physician on the hospital-based Yale Addiction Medicine Consult Service. She holds board certification in both Internal Medicine and Addiction Medicine. Dr. Sue trained at Harvard's MD-PhD Social Science Program, and has a PhD in sociocultural anthropology. Her book, Getting Wrecked: Women, Incarceration, and the American Opioid Crisis (2019), is based on her research on women with opioid use disorder in Massachusetts prison and jails. Her current research interests include harm reduction, stigma, gender/women and substance use, and overdose response strategies on local, state, and federal levels.
Episode mentions and links:
https://www.drkimsue.com/
Yale Medicine
Harm Reduction Coalition
Kim's Book: Getting Wrecked Women, Incarceration, and the American Opioid Crisis
NEXT Distro (mail based harm reduction service)
On Point NYC
Restaurant Kim would take you to: Frank Pepe’s Pizzeria Napoletana (or Sally’s or Modern or any one of the many highly revered New Haven Pizza joints)
Follow Kim: Twitter | Instagram | LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/109 | |||
| EP 126: Designing with Neurodivergent People | Katie Gaudion | 06 Jul 2023 | 00:30:43 | |
This week we talk about designing for diverse perspectives
Katie is a designer and researcher; she is a design consultant and Senior Research Associate at the Helen Hamlyn Centre for Design which is an Inclusive design Centre based at the Royal College of Art in London. Katie is neurodivergent (Dyslexic and Dyspraxic) and for the last 16 years has collaborated with neurodivergent people to explore ways to make their everyday lives comfortable and enjoyable. Katie has worked within a range of contexts: Supported living accommodation, mental health hospitals, garden design, healthcare services, developing design standards for the built environment and street design.
An important aspect of Katie’s PhD called: A designer’s approach: Exploring how autistic adults with additional learning disabilities experience their home environment, was to explore how to connect and engage with people beyond verbal speech. A great lesson learnt was the importance of empathy, something that can grow and develop.
Katie speaks not as an expert but as a person with lived experience and the privilege of collaborating with lots of different people.
Episode mentions and links:
Design Lab Podcast Ep 36 with Rama Gheerawo
Heart n Soul: Believe in Us
Streets for Diversity
Streets for Diversity Survey
Katie’s restaurant rec: The Jetty
Follow Katie: Twitter | LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/126 | |||
| EP 108: Designing Through the Lens of Policy | Rick Griffith | 16 Feb 2023 | 00:48:07 | |
On today's episode, we are going to talk about design through the lens of policy.
Rick Griffith is a British-West-Indian collagist, writer, letterpress printer, designer, and optimist futurist based in Denver, Colorado. As a designer, he works at the intersection of programming, policy, and production. He is a columnist for PRINTmag.com, the two-time programming chair for the AIGA National Conference, and the 2023 Acuff Chair at Austin Peay State University. Rick’s works are collected and exhibited worldwide and can be found in the permanent collections of The Denver Art Museum, The Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum, Columbia University’s Rare Book & Manuscript Library, and The Tweed Museum at the University of Minnesota, Duluth. He is a founder and partner with Debra Johnson of the graphic design consultancy MATTER, the designer behind the Black Astronaut Research Project (BLARP.org), The Pledge for Spaces, and the Introductory Ethic for Designers and Other Thinking Persons. One of his favorite long-term design projects is a bookstore for designers and revolutionaries. He DJs a live Internet radio show, Design To Kill, every Tuesday 6 pm Eastern Time.
Episode mentions and links:
MATTER Studio
Shop at MATTER: For designers and other thinking persons
Rick Griffith: A Love Letter to Design, a List of Demands, and a Stern Look via Print Magazine
Rick’s Book Recommendations:
The Black Experience in Design
You Need a Manifesto
Buy Health Design Thinking via Shop at MATTER
50% OFF until 3/31/23 if you use discount code: designlab
The Restaurant Rick would take you to in NYC:
B&H Dairy Kosher Restaurant
Follow Rick: Twitter | Insta | LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/108 | |||
| EP 107: Designing the Hospital at Home | Helen Ouyang | 02 Feb 2023 | 00:29:47 | |
Can hospital care be delivered at home? Will the hospital of the future only consist of ERs, ORs and ICUs?
Dr. Helen Ouyang is an emergency physician, Associate Professor in Emergency Medicine at Columbia University, and contributing writer for The New York Times Magazine. She has written for The Atlantic, Harper’s, Los Angeles Times, New York, The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and others. Her writing has been a finalist for the National Magazine Award, anthologized in The Best American Science and Nature Writing, and funded by The Pulitzer Center. Helen has worked in 20 countries across five continents in public health and humanitarian assistance. Her publications have also appeared in many academic medical journals, including The Lancet and JAMA, and she currently serves as a reviewer for Annals of Emergency Medicine and Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness. She is also a mentor-editor for The OpEd Project. Until 2015, Helen was the Associate Director of Columbia’s International Emergency Medicine Fellowship. After graduating with a bachelor of arts from Brown University, Helen went to medical school at Johns Hopkins and studied for a master’s in public health at Harvard, where she was also a Zuckerman Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government’s Center for Public Leadership. Upon completing her training at Harvard, at the Massachusetts General Hospital and Brigham & Women’s Hospital, she moved out to the Pacific Northwest before finding her way back to the East Coast.
Episode mentions and links:
https://helenouyang.com
Your Next Hospital Bed Might Be At Home via NY Times Magazine
Can Virtual Reality Help Ease Chronic Pain via NY Times Magazine
Restaurant Helen would take you to: Bernie’s Restaurant
Follow Helen: Twitter | LinkedIn
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/107 | |||
| EP 106: Designing Health Across Scales | Joanne Cheung | 26 Jan 2023 | 00:34:34 | |
Health is not a luxury product. But why have our systems commodified health? How might we design health into our everyday lives?
Joanne Cheung is an artist and designer. She formerly served as a Director of Systems Change at the global design firm IDEO. In her ongoing effort to amplify the public impact of research and policy through design, she spearheaded creative collaborations with institutions including the Icelandic Glaciological Society, Harvard Earth and Planetary Sciences Visualization Lab, Harvard Office of Sustainability, Harvard Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation, and Dartmouth Life Sciences Center. She has been a Fellow at the Harvard Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society and the American Association of University Women, an Artist-in-Residence at the Icelandic Association of Visual Artists, and a speaker at Duke Center on Law & Technology and the National Academy of Sciences, and her work has been featured in Wallpaper, Wired, Azure Magazine, Fast Company, and the New York Times. She lectures at the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford University and the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley.
Episode mentions and links:
https://joannekcheung.com
https://medium.com/@jcheung
IDEO: First Mile Health via Building H
Upstreaming Health, a d.school class by Joanne Cheung, Stephen Downs, and Sara Singer
Joanne would take you to a Thai Temple Backyard Brunch at: Wat Mongkolratanaram
Follow Joanne: Twitter
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/106 | |||
| EP 105: Designing for Creativity in Medicine | Vidya Viswanathan | 13 Jan 2023 | 00:39:07 | |
What role does creativity play in the field of medicine?
Vidya Viswanathan is a writer and primary care pediatrician in Philadelphia. She founded Doctors Who Create, a community focused on medicine and creativity, and led the Creativity in Medicine conference in Philadelphia in 2019. She has published longform journalism and narrative nonfiction in outlets including The Atlantic, Vox, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and JAMA. Vidya trained at The Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia for pediatrics residency. She attended undergrad at Harvard College where she majored in Social Studies and studied Mandarin Chinese, and spent the year afterward on a Fulbright scholarship teaching English in Taiwan. She did her post-bac studies after her return, and moved to Philadelphia for medical school–and hasn’t left since. Currently, Vidya is dabbling in fiction writing and working on a novel about women of color in medical training. She lives in Philly with her husband and their twin toddlers, and reads several (children’s) books a day.
Episode mentions and links:
https://vidyaviswanathan.com/
Sara Nović - Author and Educator
“The House of God,” a Book as Sexist as It Was Influential, Gets a Sequel - New Yorker
Blue Stoop
Suzanne Koven - Letters to a Young Female Physician
Restaurant Vidya would take you to: L’anima
Follow Vidya: Twitter | LinkedIn | |||
| EP 104: Designing the Future Healthcare Workforce | Norma Padrón | 05 Jan 2023 | 00:32:33 | |
Did you know that the healthcare industry is the largest employer in the U.S.? Learn how an economist turned healthcare entrepreneur is redesigning how we train the workforce of tomorrow.
Dr. Norma Padrón is a Latina and first-gen economist with a doctorate in health economics who founded EmpiricaLab—a company specializing in peer–to–peer training within healthcare organizations to accelerate their digital transformation.
She earned a Ph.D. in health policy and management from Yale University; a master's degree in economics from Duke University, as well as another master's degree— in public health-from Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, Spain; She has a bachelor's degree in economics with a math minor, from the University of Texas, Rio Grande Valley.
She has held leadership roles across the healthcare industry, including in academia, nonprofit and private sector. Her teams have leveraged data analytics and technology to improve digital health products for patients and providers, design value-based care models, and quality and performance measurement and training.
In addition to her work in health economics and analytics, Norma has held board positions in STEM education and technology, including as Chair of the industry advisory board for an NSF Industry-University Cooperative Research Center focused on improving healthcare through organizational transformation.
Her company, EmpiricaLab, is in Beta and has received funding from programs like the AWS Impact Accelerator for Women Founders and the Techstars Workforce Development Program.
Episode Links and Mentions:
EmpiricaLab
US Census Bureau: Who Are Our Health Care Workers?
Norma’s fav restaurants:
Launderette Austin
Bar Ciccio Alimentari - NYC
Follow Norma: Twitter | |||
| EP 103: Designing Planetary Health | Chethan Sarabu | 29 Dec 2022 | 00:38:30 | |
Did you know that the U.S. healthcare system is responsible for 10% of national greenhouse gas emissions? Learn how a pediatrician trained in landscape architecture is using clinical informatics and design to address the health impacts of climate change.
Chethan Sarabu, MD trained in landscape architecture, pediatrics, and clinical informatics builds anastomoses across these fields to design healthier environments and systems. He is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at Stanford Medicine, Director of Clinical Informatics at Sharecare. Across these roles, he works on designing and implementing a wide array of innovations ranging from patient portals, EHR transformation, virtual clinical trials, and A.I. driven digital biomarkers, to health information policy initiatives all through a lens of health equity and patient privacy. Drawing on his background in landscape architecture, Chethan implements and researches nature based health solutions such as the health benefits of urban green and blue spaces and Park prescriptions with the Stanford OurVoice and Natural Capital teams. Finally, he is shaping the emergent field of climate health informatics, which brings together emergency preparedness, sustainability, and environmental health, with a technology framework for climate health adaptation and mitigation.
Episode mentions and links:
Olmsted.health
Lancet Countdown
Chethan’s restaurant suggestion: https://omsabor.com/
Follow Chethan: Twitter | LinkedIn | |||
| EP 102: Designing the Stage for Better Health | Upali Nanda | 22 Dec 2022 | 00:40:11 | |
Learn how an architect is setting the stage for better health by design, the relationship between neuroscience and architecture and design diagnostics.
Dr. Upali Nanda is Global Practice Director for Research at HKS, a 1500 person international architecture firm. She also teaches as Associate Professor of Practice at the Taubman School of Architecture and Urban Planning at University of Michigan and serves as the Executive Director for the non-profit Center for Advanced Design Research and Education (CADRE). She is the author of the book “Sensthetics: a crossmodal approach to designing for the senses”. Her widely published research on health and wellbeing, neuroscience and architecture, and outcome-driven design has won numerous awards. In 2015, Dr. Nanda was recognized as one of the top 10 most influential people in Healthcare Design by the Healthcare Design Magazine. In 2018, she was honored by Architectural Record with the Women in Architecture Innovator Award and in 2020 she was featured in the book on 100 women who changed architecture. Her design research is anchored on the art, and the science, of being human.
Episode mentions and links:
HKS Research
CADRE Research
UM Health BY Design course
Upali on Point of Decision Design
Article: Design Diagnostics
Outcomes examples:
CADRE Living Learning Lab
HKS Generations of Care Tower
Upali’s restaurant suggestion: Roti Wraps at Jiti’s
Follow Upali: Twitter
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/102 | |||
| EP 101: Designing the Immune System of Mental Health | Susan Swick | 15 Dec 2022 | 00:54:11 | |
Learn about how Dr. Susan Swick is challenging the paradigm of mental health, redesigning the future of behavioral health facilities and why every community needs a gym for building our mental health resilience.
Susan Swick, MD, MPH is the Executive Director of Ohana, designing and leading the development of this Center for Child and Adolescent Behavioral Health at the Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula in Monterey, California. In addition to evaluation and treatment programs that are evidence-based and family-focused. Ohana programs will also emphasize the cultivation of mental health at the individual, family and community level. This Center is being created with the support of a landmark $100 million gift from a single donor in the hospital’s community, reflecting a recognition on both the hospital’s and the community’s part that the resources available to families seeking care for their children’s mental health challenges were sorely lacking. Dr. Swick has a long-standing interest in how adversity affects children and families, and in how well-timed interventions can make a critical difference. Prior to relocating to California in 2018, Dr. Swick served as the Chief of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at Newton Wellesley Hospital for five years. While at Newton-Wellesley Hospital, she created a new community health initiative called “The Resilience Project,” partnering with local High Schools to promote the mental health and well-being of youth and their families. She also directed the Parenting At a Challenging Time (PACT) program at Newton-Wellesley, a parent guidance program available to cancer patients who were still raising young children. She was an Instructor in Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and at Massachusetts General Hospital, where she created and ran a course on Parent Guidance for the Child Psychiatry fellows. She attended Medical School at Columbia University, where she also received a Masters in Public Health. She, her husband and their four children are all east-coasters originally, but are happy to call California home.
Episode Mentions and Links
AIA 2022 Healthcare Design Awards: Montage Health Ohana Center
NBBJ Architects: Ohana Center for Health
NBBJ Architects: Hope, Healing, and Healthcare
A New Tool in Treating Mental Illness: Building Design via NYT
Donate to Ohana
Episode Website: https://www.designlabpod.com/episodes/101 | |||
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