Health Dame With Robin Strongin

Living with Vitiligo: Jarrett Brown Shares His Advocacy Story and Coins the Term Disease Party

31 min · 16. apr. 2026
episode Living with Vitiligo: Jarrett Brown Shares His Advocacy Story and Coins the Term Disease Party cover

Description

Jarrett Brown, diagnosed with vitiligo at 3 years old, shares his experiences — the raw truths — about living with a visible skin condition. Over the years, Jarrett has found his voice and shares his reflections, advice, and advocacy with Health Dame's Robin Strongin.

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23 episodes

episode Jarrett Brown, Brain Tumor Survivor, Completes First Year of Law School artwork

Jarrett Brown, Brain Tumor Survivor, Completes First Year of Law School

Jarrett Brown [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jarrett-b-912b4427/] was diagnosed with a type-2 meningioma in August 2024.  He went into brain surgery to remove a tangerine-sized tumor on the same day he was scheduled to take the LSAT. Just 28 days after the surgery, he took the LSAT and is now a second-year law student at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock Bowen School of Law. His stated reason for entering law school is that he wants to spend the rest of his life speaking for people who do not have a voice. Before attending law school, Jarrett was a longtime food processing worker. Though he never played football, he likes to say he was a Green Bay Packer because he worked in a packing plant in Green Bay, WI.  During the nearly 20 years that he worked in food processing, Jarrett was a workers' rights advocate. He worked on his own, with unions, and with political organizations to advance the causes of individual workers, groups of workers, and the public.

30. juni 202625 min
episode Lawsuit Threatens Patient Safety Ratings with Leah Binder, Shawn Gremminger and Sue Sheridan artwork

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Medical errors are estimated to be one of the leading causes of death in the U.S. So why is it still so hard for patients to know which hospitals are safest? In this episode of Health Dame, Robin Strongin talks with Leah Binder, president and CEO of The Leapfrog Group [www.Leapfroggroup.org], Shawn Gremminger, president and CEO of the National Alliance of Healthcare Purchaser Coalitions [http://www.nationalalliancehealth.org/], and Sue Sheridan, president and CEO of Patients for Patient Safety US [http://www.pfps.us/]. Together, they discuss why Hospital Safety Grades [www.hospitalsafetygrade.org] matter, how patients and employers use quality data to make better decisions and what is at stake when transparency tools come under legal threat. They also discuss a recent lawsuit affecting The Leapfrog Group’s hospital safety grades and why it could limit access to information patients and families rely on. The episode looks at the human cost of medical errors, the role employers play in demanding safer care and why patients need trusted, accessible information before they are in crisis.

24. juni 202638 min
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In this episode of Health Dame, Robin Strongin talks with Dr. Karen Remley, former CEO of the American Academy of Pediatrics, former commissioner of health for the Commonwealth of Virginia and former director of the CDC’s National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental Disabilities. Dr. Remley reflects on a career shaped by pediatrics, public health and emergency medicine, and discusses the progress that has helped more children live safer, healthier lives. She explains why prevention still matters, from vaccines and car seats to bike helmets, pool safety and safe sleep practices, and why those gains cannot be taken for granted. The conversation also covers trust in medicine, misinformation, children with complex medical needs, the transition from pediatric to adult care, mental health, crisis communication and the role of families, communities and policymakers in protecting children’s health. At its core, this interview is about what children need to grow, thrive and be surrounded by what Dr. Remley calls “a cocoon of love.”

13. juni 202640 min
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8. juni 202624 min
episode Christine Malcolm and Dr. Shikha Jain on Women in Medicine, Leadership and Changing the System artwork

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Women now make up a major part of the medical workforce. So why are so many still missing from the highest levels of leadership? In this episode of Health Dame, Christine Malcolm and Dr. Shikha Jain join Robin Strongin for a conversation about women in medicine, leadership and the systems that still need to change. They discuss the progress women have made in entering the medical field, the barriers that still keep many from advancing into top leadership roles and the burnout that can push talented women out of medicine. Dr. Jain shares how her own experiences led her to create Women in Medicine, while Christine Malcolm reflects on the importance of mentorship, sponsorship, and helping women see themselves as leaders. The conversation also looks at how patients, caregivers, and colleagues can support women physicians in practical ways, from using their professional titles to recognizing, and advocating for their work.

2. juni 202627 min