Why subscribe?

Hopefully, because you are interested in my perspective. This is a personal blog which reflects my own views and not the views of my employer or sponsors who support my research. Most posts will start with an idea or issue and be around 1,000 words. I research how social factors impact healthcare delivery, so that will be the main starting point for topics, but there will probably be a bit of range as well.

I am a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of Population Health Sciences at the Duke University School of Medicine and a National Institute of Aging F99/K00 fellow who researches how discrimination in healthcare impacts middle-aged and older adults. My academic interests range from healthcare inequities, social determinants of health, cardiovascular health, and aging, but I do spend a lot of time thinking about career progression and science communication.

Currently, there is only a free option because I do not think anything I am offering on the blog should be paid for and have the same standard that paid content is scrutinized with. If I ever expand this to a paid tier, it will probably be to bring on guests to share their perspective and maybe some additional staff, but that is not in the cards currently.

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Blog by Michael D. Green where I will think about health inequities driven by social factors, professional development, and other nuanced things.

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Green- inexperienced, naive, or gullible. A blog by Michael D. Green, a Population Health Sciences researcher focusing on social inequities, where he will think about topics that are nuanced. Primarily around healthcare but not always.