Friday, December 7, 2007
Wurz Prof Pollack Book on Adoption
Wurzweiler Proffs Visit Cuba, Study Health Care
The book, Community Health Care in Cuba: An Enduring Model will be published in 2008. It focuses on Cuba’s unique integrated health care system and examines health care at the local community level using an ecological perspective. Each chapter is grounded in data collected and analyzed by the authors themselves and is written by highly respected professionals in the health field and in the social sciences who either live in Cuba or who have traveled often to that country.
The authors have interviewed numerous officials of the Cuban government and have visited the homes of Cuban women and men to learn how their health system serves the people at the community level.Dr. Mason told the What's New blog:
The Cuban health system has its flaws, but it is known internationally for its effectiveness while utilizing limited resources. There may be important lessons we can learn from them to improve our delivery of health services.
Any trip to
Richard Joel Addresses Jewish Communal, Education Grad Students on Leadership
This past Wednesday, November 28, Yeshiva University president Richard M. Joel spoke candidly to students and faculty in the Jewish Communal Service Certificate program of the Wurzweiler School of Social Work and Azrieli Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration about leadership and organizational change.
Joel opened the discussion with a reflection on the lessons he learned as associate dean of Cardozo Law School, president and international director of Hillel, and his current position as president of Yeshiva University. Joel began bluntly enough:
I don’t believe in change, and I don’t believe in institutions. What I do believe in is G-d, civilization, and the destiny of the Jewish people. It is very easy to get caught up in helping to save or preserve an institution and forget that the institution itself is there to serve a higher purpose. I believe in change not for the sake of change, but rather for the sake of something else, something greater. Whenever you are involved in change, you must ask yourself where it is that you want to go.
I view the work I do much like my wife and I view the role of parents. To be successful as a parent, you need to do everything right—and then you still need mazel [luck]! Similarly, in your careers, you need to work hard, and even after that, there is still no assurance that things will work out.