From Health Affairs Today <[email protected]>
Subject Back-To-School Essentials: Climate, Biosimilars, Poverty & More
Date September 2, 2021 8:07 PM
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On the Blog: The US trails other developed countries in diagnosis of
COVID-19
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The Latest Research, Commentary, And News From Health Affairs

Thursday, September 2, 2021

Dear John,

Today we feature Health Affairs' final set of Back-To-School
Essentials for future health policy leaders studying the field.

Back-To-School Essential Learnings

Today is the final day of Health Affairs' "Back-To-School
Essentials" series, in which we share content about health policy
topics essential for future policy makers and health care leaders.
Don't miss these must-reads for all health policy students.

Climate & Health: In our December 2020 theme issue, Climate & Health,
Renee Salas and coauthors outlined how policy makers can integrate a
climate lens
as
they develop interventions to protect vulnerabilities in the health
system from the effects of climate change.

Consumer Shopping: In a July 2017 blog post, Rachel Dolan broke down
what Health Affairs research tells us about consumer shopping

for health care services.

Biosimilars: On a recent A Health Podyssey podcast
,
Ariel Stern explained what biosimilars are and how the pharmaceutical
market is evolving in response to their market entry.

Heath, Income & Poverty: A series of Health Policy Briefs in October
2018 explored the intersection of health, income, and poverty
. In
the first, Dhruv Khullar and Dave Chokshi found that policies promoting
economic equity
can
lead to positive downstream health effects.

Plus, there is still time to take advantage of the Health Affairs
Student Subscription Rate!
Students can unlock all of our peer-reviewed articles and much more at a
reduced rate. Prices start at $81 for an online-only subscription.

Today on Health Affairs Blog, Frederick Nolte and Karen Kaul argue that
the US has trailed many developed countries

in ramping up diagnosis and characterization of SARS-CoV-2.

Alyssa Bilinski and Joshua Salomon discuss how, amid a fourth wave of
COVID-19 cases, we again face questions

of how to best anticipate and address further resurgences and prepare
for future pandemics.

Check out our COVID-19 Resource Center
for Health
Affairs content about all things related to the pandemic.

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**The Health Equity Fellowship for Trainees** is part of Health
Affairs' national initiative to advance racial equity in health policy
and health services scholarly publishing. Its objective is to

**value** and

**increase the quality**and

**quantity** of equity-related research published in Health Affairs that
is authored by members of racial and ethnic groups that have
historically been underrepresented in scholarly publishing.

In the program, fellows will receive multilayered mentorship from
experienced

**Health Affairs** authors and editorial staff for one year (from
January 2022 to December 2022). Mentors will work with fellows to make
fellows' manuscript submissions more likely to be accepted by the
journal or another journal within the fellowship year. Manuscript
submissions must be related to racial equity.

The application period closes on September 13, 2021.

Apply Now

Your Daily Digest

We Need A Robust And Coordinated Genome Sequencing Program To Detect,
Contain, And Slow The Spread Of SARS-CoV-2 Variants

Frederick S. Nolte and Karen L. Kaul

Pandemic Models Can Be More Useful: Here's How

Alyssa Bilinski and Joshua A. Salomon

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mailto:[email protected]

About Health Affairs

Health Affairs is the leading peer-reviewed journal
at the intersection of health,
health care, and policy. Published monthly by Project HOPE, the journal
is available in print and online. Late-breaking content is also found
through healthaffairs.org , Health
Affairs Today , and Health
Affairs Sunday Update .  

Project HOPE is a global health and
humanitarian relief organization that places power in the hands of local
health care workers to save lives across the globe. Project HOPE has
published Health Affairs since 1981.

Copyright © Project HOPE: The People-to-People Health Foundation, Inc.

Health Affairs, 1220 19th Street, NW, Suite 800, Washington, DC 20036, United States

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