Logo
    Search

    Here's the Problem

    Here’s the problem...the world is a mess; but a mediator and political scientist think they have figured out a way to change the current disheartening trajectory of our society. Motivated by a shared passion for creating a positive change in the world and empowering others to rise as leaders, Matthew DeSantis and Kelly Nagle founded the Teen Think Tank Project, with the vision of giving a future generation of change agents a voice in the world they will inherit. In order to facilitate the goals of the Teen Think Tank Project and engage both our students and our listeners in thought-provoking conversations, we’ve created this podcast. Each week, thought leaders and experts will join Kelly to explore a specific problem facing our society. We will rely on fact-based information, listen to understand and challenge our own ingrained perspectives. Because at Here’s the Problem Podcast we believe that this is the only way to chart a course towards cooperation, empathy and ultimately effective change.
    enTeen Think Tank Project43 Episodes

    Episodes (43)

    S03 E13: Ensuring Equitable Access to Healthcare in America - 2022 Winter Research Cohort Policy Framework Launch Party

    S03 E13: Ensuring Equitable Access to Healthcare in America - 2022 Winter Research Cohort Policy Framework Launch Party

    The Teen Think Tank Project's 2022 Winter Research Cohort hosts their Policy Framework Launch Party to discuss the current state of the American Healthcare System.

    Our nine exceptional high school change agents conduct an in-depth analysis of the issues preventing meaningful healthcare reform in our country. Kimia Shahriyar, Avantika Malla, Moksh Patwari, Riya Mehta, Vaanya Salwan, Leyla Tiryaki, Jeyven Chhina, Gianna Grasso, and Keara Field discuss the economic, social, and legal impediments that have created a healthcare system that values profits over patients.

    In the season finale, the cohort not only gives us something to think about, as it relates to creating a more equitable healthcare system...they give us action items we can take to ensure that the basic human right of healthcare is attainable for all.

    S03 E12: Social Determinants of Health

    S03 E12: Social Determinants of Health

    On this week’s podcast we take a sneak peek into the inner workings of our Health Equity Research Cohort’s work on access to care in America.  For the past three months, the research associates have been exploring the impediments inherent in the American healthcare system.  Through their conversations with many thought leaders, educators and advocates, the cohort learned that economic and social conditions overwhelmingly influence the differences in health status for individuals and groups, otherwise known as social determinants of health. 

    First, Valerie White, who is the Community Impact Manager for Health at United Way of the Plains joins the cohort to lay out the basic definition of health status and social determinants of health.  

    Then, Dr. Laura Haselden, an emergency room physician and co-founder  of IMPACT In Healthcare, walks the group through a very engaging discussion on social determinants in action by examining the social, environmental, and economical influences that are affecting healthcare outcomes from members of society.  

    Finally, Dr. Ruthann Russo, Associate Professor at Kean University, talks about the existential threat to healthcare as laid out by the American Medical Association.    

    These conversations offer valuable lessons about healthcare in America. Enjoy…

    Here's the Problem
    enApril 11, 2022

    S03 E11: COVID-19 Vaccines: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

    S03 E11: COVID-19 Vaccines: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

    Teen Think Tank Project Co-Founder Matt DeSantis sat down with thought leaders and researchers back in January to talk about the economic, social, and political impediments that shape our societal response to the pandemic.   Matt is joined by Dr. Stacy Wood, the Langdon Distinguished University Professor of Marketing at North Carolina State who discusses Project Warp Speed in terms of “product roll out” and how society’s response to the vaccine compares to its acceptance of other market innovations.   Matt then chats with Dr. Carl Latkin, the VICE CHAIR of the DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH, BEHAVIOR, AND SOCIETY at Johns Hopkins University.  Dr. Latkin discusses the concept of vaccine hesitancy and what young change agents can do to help communicate with those who refuse to accept scientific advancement and dispel misinformation.  

    Finally, Scientific America Associate Editor and journalist Tanya Lewis talks about her experience reporting on the social impediments affecting Black and LatinX people’s ability to receive equitable access to the COVID Vaccine.  

    Here's the Problem
    enApril 04, 2022

    S03 E10: Awareness + Education + Advocacy = Healthcare Policy w/ Dr. Erin O'Neill

    S03 E10: Awareness + Education + Advocacy = Healthcare Policy  w/ Dr. Erin O'Neill
    Dr. Erin O’Neill is an Assistant Professor of Public Health Education in the Health Sciences Department at New Jersey City University.  Dr. O’Neill’s is a 2021 Fellow with the National Leadership Academy for Public Health (CDC). As a Master Certified Health Education Specialist (MCHES), she serves as a consultant to government and community health organizations for programmatic strategies to alleviate health disparities and to promote health justice and equity. She joins the podcast to explore the social and cultural aspect of public health and access to care.  We talk about the important role the community plays in crafting healthcare policy, the systemically rooted issues that create obstacles to health equity, and how policy and education work hand in hand.

    S03 E09 Local Government's Response to Health Equity w/ Sara Sooy

    S03 E09 Local Government's Response to Health Equity w/ Sara Sooy
    Today Somerset County (New Jersey) Commissioner Sara Sooy joins the podcast to talk about the impediments constituents face in accessing care, even in the digital age.  We also explore the logistical challenges policymakers contend with to provide solutions and how the partnership between public and private entities is important to overcoming these challenges, especially during the pandemic.  We end on a high note with the possibly of finding a solution to health equity at the intersection of capitalism and coverage.  Enjoy!
    Here's the Problem
    enMarch 21, 2022

    S03 E08: National Healthcare Policy vs. Local Politics w/ Matthew Moench

    S03 E08: National Healthcare Policy vs. Local Politics w/ Matthew Moench
    New Jersey is known as the capital of the pharmaceutical industry; and Somerset County, which is where Bridgewater Township is located, is its epicenter.  Sharing his insights as the mayor of a town with major pharmaceutical companies, Bridgewater Matthew Moench joins the podcast to explore the intersection of politics and healthcare. We talk about how the healthcare debate, especially around phama, impacts local and federal elections, leading a community through covid and the importance of local politics.

    S03 E07: Heteronormativity - A Barrier to Health Equity w/ Matthew Tirrell

    S03 E07: Heteronormativity - A Barrier to Health Equity w/ Matthew Tirrell
    Matthew is a Licensed Professional Counselor, National Certified Counselor, and Approved Clinical Supervisor in the state of New Jersey. He is the Director of Field Placement and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Professional Counseling at Monmouth University. His current research focus is on ethical disparities in the treatment of affectional and gender minorities.

    Today Matt joins the podcast to explore the cultural and psychological impediments to health equity

    S03 E06: The Intersection of Healthcare & Agriculture w/ Helen Labun

    S03 E06: The Intersection of Healthcare & Agriculture w/ Helen Labun

    To explore the intersection of agriculture and healthcare, we're talking to Helen Labun. Helen is the program manager for the Food Access and Healthcare Consortium, which works to integrate food and healthcare in Vermont.  Helen’s background spans economics, public policy and even the restaurant industry!  With all of this experience, Helen highlights how food access and agriculture integrate with healthcare, the challenges of rural access to care and how access to healthy foods is the responsibility of multiple industries, not just healthcare.  

    S03 E06: The Intersection of Healthcare & Agriculture w/ Helen Labun

    S03 E06: The Intersection of Healthcare & Agriculture w/ Helen Labun

    To explore the intersection of agriculture and healthcare, we're talking to Helen Labun. Helen is the program manager for the Food Access and Healthcare Consortium, which works to integrate food and healthcare in Vermont.  Helen’s background spans economics, public policy and even the restaurant industry!  With all of this experience, Helen highlights how food access and agriculture integrate with healthcare, the challenges of rural access to care and how access to healthy foods is the responsibility of multiple industries, not just healthcare.  

    S03 E05 Transforming Access to Behavioral Health w/ Gillian Gmitter

    S03 E05 Transforming Access to Behavioral Health w/ Gillian Gmitter
    Gillian Gmitter is a Licensed Professional Counselor in the state of Virginia. She is the Assistant Program Manager for one of the State's Community Service's Board Adult Behavioral Health Same Day Access Unit.  She currently sits on the Marcus alert response planning team for her local jurisdiction and has specialized leadership training in Racial Equity.

    Gillian is helping us dive deep into the mental health component of health equity and access to care.  We talk about  how to provide services to people who already have a hard time accessing care in the community, breaking down stigmas surrounding mental health and transforming behavioral healthcare in Virginia.  Enjoy!

    S03 E04: Nonprofits - A Cog in the Healthcare Delivery System w/ Dr. Mark Hurlbert

    S03 E04: Nonprofits - A Cog in the Healthcare Delivery System w/ Dr. Mark Hurlbert
    Dr. Marc Hurlbert, a pharmacologist by training, serves as Chief Science Officer for the Melanoma Research Alliance (MRA) where he guides scientific strategy, forges collaborations, and oversees the $10-million annual international grants program. Marc is a nonprofit leader for over 20 years, advancing biomedical research and programs to reduce or eliminate health disparities.  Today, he joins the podcast to discuss the roll of nonprofits in the healthcare delivery system, bias in healthcare, and disparities when it comes to accessing care.  

    S03 E03: Deconstructing Big Pharma w/ Phil DeSantis

    S03 E03: Deconstructing Big Pharma w/ Phil DeSantis

    Today we’re jumping into the pharmaceutical industry with Phil DeSantis. Phil brings over fifty years of executive experience with firms such as Merck, Squibb and J&J. He is also the past Chair of the Parenteral Drug Association Science Advisory Board and is active in the International society for pharmaceutical engineering. He has published numerous articles, technical reports and books in the area of pharmaceutical engineering and is the co-editor of the forthcoming book Handbook of Validation of Pharmaceutical processes.

    Phil and Kelly breakdown "Big Pharma" and shed some light on misconceptions about the pharmaceutical industry. They also talk about the balance between innovation and expense, how the pharmaceutical industry intersects with the larger conversation of healthcare policy and the effect of over regulation.

    S03 E02: The Future of Healthcare Systems w/ Vicki Loner

    S03 E02: The Future of Healthcare Systems w/ Vicki Loner

    Vicki Loner, the CEO of OneCare Vermont, joins the podcast to talk about healthcare reform.  Specifically, Vicki talks about  accountable care organizations, or ACOs, and the process of moving from a fee for service system to value based care.  Vicki covers a lot of ground to help us better understand the way our healthcare system currently exists, how innovative practices are changing how we deliver care, and what the future of healthcare may look like. 

    S03 E01: The Cost of Doing Nothing - Discussion with Health Economist Dr. John Essien

    S03 E01: The Cost of Doing Nothing - Discussion with Health Economist Dr. John Essien
    What a better way to kickoff a season about health equity and access to care than with John Essien, M.D., a Junior Consultant Health Economist with the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa.  Dr. Essien joins the podcast for an enlightening and wide-ranging conversation about health equity, economics, and public health policy.  

    Introducing Season 3: Health Equity - Breaking Down Barriers to Care

    Introducing Season 3: Health Equity - Breaking Down Barriers to Care

    How can a country with some of the most advanced medicines, practitioners, and facilities in the world still be struggling with affordable and equitable healthcare?  We isn't America making progress in closing gaps in healthcare?

    As Season 3 investigates these questions, host Kelly Nagle is joined by medical professionals, health economists, public policy professionals, pharmaceutical executives, and politicians to explore the issues, obstacles, and impediments that are preventing the United States from providing affordable and equitable access to healthcare as a basic human right.   

     

    Bonus: The Problem with Reimagining the First Amendment w/ Tom Leatherbury Esq.

    Bonus: The Problem with Reimagining the First Amendment w/ Tom Leatherbury Esq.

    In yet another behind-the-scenes look at the evolution of our Winter Research Cohort, we watch our change agents absorb, process, and adapt to new information.  In this episode, Tom Leatherbury, the Director of SMU Dedman School of Law's First Amendment Clinic, visits the cohort to discuss what happens when you try to incorrectly apply the First Amendment, helping our cohort avoid taking a costly wrong turn during the early stages of our research.    

    Here's the Problem is a production of the Teen Think Tank Project, a student-run policy institute that develops policy frameworks for social justice issues and empowers students to become agents of change.  

    Here's the Problem
    enJuly 12, 2021

    Bonus: Straight No Chaser - Q&A w/ Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf

    Bonus: Straight No Chaser - Q&A w/ Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf

    Former NBA player and social justice advocate, Mahmoud Abdul-Rauf stopped by the Teen Think Tank Project Winter Research Cohort earlier this season to chat about social protest, racial inequality in America, and the need for change agents to challenge existing constructs in order to bring about true change (as well personal growth.)  This compelling Q&A didn't make the cut from the original podcast's edit, but we are happy to bring it to you as part of a this bonus episode.

    Here's the Problem is a production of the Teen Think Tank Project, a student-run policy institute that develops policy frameworks for social justice issues and empowers students to become agents of change.  

    Here's the Problem
    enJuly 05, 2021

    S02 E13: Supporting Social Change in Sports - Winter Research Group Policy Launch Party

    S02 E13: Supporting Social Change in Sports  - Winter Research Group Policy Launch Party

    The Teen Think Tank Project's inaugural research cohort presents their public policy framework. The group outlines how to most effectively address racial inequality and systemic racism by outlining the obstacles that athletes face when attempting to affect change and how we as allies can help empower these individuals and elevate their voices.

    Teen Think Tank Members include: Jack Baranoksi, Jared Cannon, Jeremy Cimino, Gwyneth Craney, Nolan Eichorn, Jack James, Savannah Riera, Rohan Rathod, and Kyra Turpie. 

    The Teen Think Tank Project is a student-run policy institute that develops policy frameworks for social justice issues and empowers students to become future change makers.

     

    The Teen Think Tank Project is a student-run policy institute that develops policy frameworks for social justice issues and empowers students to become future change makers.

    Here's the Problem
    enJune 28, 2021

    S02 E12: Examining the Impact of the NBA's Social Protest Movement w/ Mark Medina

    S02 E12: Examining the Impact of the NBA's Social Protest Movement w/ Mark Medina

    Just after the conclusion of the NBA's 2020 season "in the bubble," USA Today's National NBA Reporter, Mark Medina, joined the podcast to talk with host Kelly Nagle about the social protest efforts of NBA players, former president Donald Trump's divisive rhetoric, human rights issues in China, and whether or not other sports can replicate the impact that the NBA has had when it comes to elevating athlete voices in furtherance of social justice issues.  

    Here's the Problem is a production of the Teen Think Tank Project, a student-run policy institute that develops policy frameworks for social justice issues and empowers students to become future change makers.

    S02 E11: Exploring the Economics of Social Justice in Sports w/ Sports Business Education Panel

    S02 E11: Exploring the Economics of Social Justice in Sports w/ Sports Business Education Panel

    This week the podcast drops in on the Winter Research Cohort as they host a panel of sports business educators who joined the conversation to discuss the impact that sport business has on social justice issues in society.  Professor Mike Finkelstein of Rutgers University, Professor Dave Torromeo of Manhattanville College, and Professor Dave Perricone of Centenary University join Teen Think Tank Project co-founder Matt DeSantis to talk about the impact that sports has on society, the economics of professional athletics, and the role sports industry sponsors play in facilitating social change.