 I've been a doctor for 17 years and it turns out that 90% of what keeps people well is not medical care. Here in the US health and health care are often mixed together and conflated, but they're really very separate things. Health is really the life one lives. That's like a road through a mountain and at one point there's a particularly sharp turn and at that point people periodically careen over the cliff, fall to the bottom and hit the valley floor. And what we've effectively done in the United States is built a clinic at the bottom of the cliff to help the people there who ended up there. And over time we've recognized that we need to build a bigger clinic and a hospital. We may bring in specialists and fast ambulances and MRI machines, but we've done much less on working to keep people on the mountain. So keeping people on the road, preventing people from going off the cliff or building a net to catch them. That's really health and health prevention. And health care is the hospital at the bottom of the hill. I'm excited because SoCAP brings a whole new group of smart, clever, driven people to questions of health both nationally and globally. And public health needs new blood, new ideas and we hope that by bringing health to SoCAP it will provide a new framework, a new focus for the work that we do here. I'm Doug. I'm a pediatrician and public health professor and I make connections between the larger world and the health of the body.