By David Woods, PhD, FCPP
The health––or specifically the nonhealth--of Philadelphia’s population presents a huge challenge: 23% of adults smoke; 31% are obese; the number of births to teenage girls is twice the national rate; and 59% of children live in single-parent households. Moreover, Philadelphia ranks as the poorest of the top 10 cities in the US, with fully one quarter of the population living in poverty. Even so, the city serves as a microcosm for health deficits affecting the nation as a whole
On the face of it, we have an
army of people to meet this challenge: 5% of the American healthcare workforce
is being trained here; there are five med schools; three major cancer centers,
and schools of nursing and podiatry.
Dr. David Nash is
well-equipped to serve as a general for that Army. Appointed as the inaugural
Dean of Jefferson’s School of Population Health in 2008, he says its mission is
to prepare leaders with global vision to examine the social determinants of
health and to evaluate and develop health policies and systems to improve the
health of populations.
Before becoming Dean, Dr Nash, 59, led
Jefferson's department of health policy. He has multiple achievements in the
fields of administration, academe, and publishing. He is the editor-in-chief of
Population Health Management and the American Journal of Medical Quality. His
many awards and honors include honorary Fellowship in the American College of
Physician Executives, and being listed in Modern
Healthcare as among the nation’s 50
most powerful physician executives.
In the broad field of
national health policy, Nash sees the 1600-page Affordable Care Act as volume,
to be sure; but not as value since, he argues, it doesn’t really offer cost
savings. Moreover, the ACA has left the public largely confused, with 18%
believing that the legislation has already been repealed.
Asked about the role and
purpose of organized medicine and about what the School of Population Health
will mean to local physicians, Nash says of the former that it's largely a
circle the wagons effort in self protection. So far as local physicians are
concerned, he says “I hope they'll view us as a source of unbiased and usable
information.”
David is married to Esther,
who is VP for a Plymouth meeting-based healthcare advocacy company. They have
twin daughters aged 27 and son of 23. When not adding to his voluminous 127
page curriculum vitae, he plays tennis, rides his bike and practices yoga.
In sum, David has the energy,
intellect and leadership skills to take his troops into the battle for
improving Philadelphia’s – and the nation’s – population health.