Description
Book SynopsisReading this book is like sitting down with Dr. David Satcher to hear stories of leadership and lessons learned from his lifetime commitment to health equity. Dr. David Satcher is one of the most widely known and well-regarded physicians of our time. A former four-star admiral in the US Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, he served as the assistant secretary for health, the surgeon general of the United States, and the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention before founding the eponymous Satcher Health Leadership Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine. At the core of his impact on public health, he is also a lifelong leader for civil rights and health equity. Born black and poor in the deep South, Dr. Satcher was a victim of an unjust health care system: he almost died of whooping cough at the age of two because Jim Crow laws meant that his black doctor could not admit him to a hospital. That experience was the first of many that shaped him as a leader and
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. Lessons Learned from Fifty Years of Leadership
Chapter 2. From Health Disparities to Global Health Equity
Chapter 3. When Leadership Confronts Failure
Chapter 4. The Need for Clear Communication
Chapter 5. The Need for Continual Learning
Chapter 6. A Three-Dimensional Perspective on Leadership
Chapter 7. Discipline in the Quest for Health Equity
Chapter 8. Leading from Science to Policy to Practice
Chapter 9. Confronting the Epidemic of Overweight and Obesity
Chapter 10. The Advancement of Reproductive Health
Chapter 11. Overcoming the Stigma of Mental Health Problems
Chapter 12. Leadership beyond Expertise
Chapter 13. The Team Approach to Leadership
Chapter 14. Leading for Institutional Sustainability
Frequently Used Acronyms
References
Index