Upcoming Events
Harvard Pop Center Social Demography Seminar: “Impacts of pandemic-era food assistance policies on health and health equity”
HCPDS, 9 Bow Street, Harvard Square, Cambridge, MA and online via Zoom 9 Bow Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United StatesSpeaker Information Organizers
ID Epi Seminar Series – Justin Lessler
ID Epi Seminar Series Justin Lessler - How should we be evaluating planning scenarios? Meditations inspired by the US COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub
Population Research Exchange (hybrid): “The impact of structural sexism on health and healthcare: Current evidence and future research priorities”
9 Bow Street Cambridge, and onlinePatricia Homan, PhD, associate professor of sociology and director of research and strategic initiatives for the public health program, Florida State University; and visiting scholar at the GenderSci Lab, History of Science Department, Harvard University, presents “The impact of structural sexism on health and healthcare: Current evidence and future research priorities.” This event is co-sponsored...
Harvard Pop Center Social Demography Seminar: “Women’s socioeconomic advantage over their partners and relationship dissolution: A 29-country study”
9 Bow Street Cambridge, and onlinePilar Gonalons-Pons, PhD, Alber-Klingelfhofer Presidential Associate Professor, department of sociology, University of Pennsylvania, presents “Women’s socioeconomic advantage over their partners and relationship dissolution: A 29-country study.” Speaker Information Organizers
ID Epi Seminar Series – Ted Cohen
ID Epi Seminar Series Ted Cohen - Spatial and genomic epidemiology of drug-resistant tuberculosis in the Republic of Moldova
Harvard Pop Center Social Demography Seminar: “Priceless benefits: Effects of school spending on child mortality”
9 Bow Street Cambridge, and onlineSpeaker Information Organizers
Happiness in Motion: The Power of Exercise
On Tuesday, February 25th, from 1-1:50 PM in Kresge 202A, all Harvard students, faculty, and staff are welcome to join us for a well-being workshop led by Student Steering Committee...
Policy Relevant Effects in Infectious Disease Studies
VirtualAbstract: The treatment of one individual often affects the outcomes of others. A canonical example occurs in infectious disease settings, where vaccinating one individual can reduce disease transmission and thereby...
Harvard Pop Center Social Demography Seminar: “Advancing the scientific study of systemic racism: Theory-driven methods for population health research”
9 Bow Street Cambridge, and onlineThe Social Demography Seminar (SDS) series at the Center for Population and Development Studies provides a lively forum for scholars from across the university to discuss in-progress social scientific and...
The future of journalism: How creators are changing the news
FXB G12 and ZoomJoin us for a discussion about how content creators are shifting the news landscape with Ryan Kellett, Nieman-Berkman Klein fellow and former VP of Audience at Axios Media. Lunch will be...
How to Make People Immortal and Why it is Not a Good Idea: Improving the Causal Analyses of Healthcare Databases
Kresge 502 677 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA, United StatesAbstract: The generation of "immortal time" is a frequent blunder in survival analyses for causal inference. Immortal time explains why medical treatments often look suspiciously amazing. After two centuries of...