b'Beyond the Doctors Office: Housing is Healthcare how these organizationsincluding our own National In-Ask a healthcare professional what the most important factorteroperability Collaborativecan work together to accelerate is for making progress on the health and well-being of under- progress on achieving health equity and improving the lives of served populations, and the answer very often is going to bepeople and communities in our country that need help most housing. In other words, if a person or family doesnt haveurgently. Especially at a time when the Covid-19 pandemic has a secure and stable roof over their heads, its hard to improveunderscored the depth of the problems they faceand as the almost anything in their lives. This session examines whynation changes its leadershipwe believe this is a conversa-thats the case, as well as what concrete steps can be takention well worth having. to achieve a paradigm shift to address this too-often-unad- Moderator:dressed reality for the most at-risk and vulnerable people inDaniel Stein, President, Stewards of Change Instituteour communities. Moderator:Somava Saha, Executive Director, Well-being in the Nation Adam Pertman, Senior Consultant, Stewards of Change Laura Landy, CEO & President, Rippel FoundationInstitute Clare Tanner, Co-Director, Data Across Sectors for Health; Program Director, Michigan Public Health InstituteEric Marcus, Director, Social Determinants Programs - HealthCharlie Bruner, Network Director, InCK Marks; Freelance Child Choice Arizona Policy Agitator, ChildEquity.orgJill Govan Bauman, President & CEO, Imagine LANext Steps and ClosingMelissa Mowery, Vice President, CAMBA HomeBase Home-lessness Prevention3:50pm-4:00pmConnie.W. Mitchell, MSW, Associate Director, Permanent Supportive Housing, Housing For Health, Los Angeles CountyDaniel Stein, President, Stewards of Change InstituteDepartment of Health ServicesLessons from Abroad: Care Coordination across Sectors The American experience with the integration of health and social policy (or the lack thereof) is unique. Most countries,Project Unify:including not only the wealthy/developed ones but also many emerging economies, have achieved some degree ofPerson-Centered Care Modelcross-sector coordination. Furthermore, many can point to real successes in developing sound policies and best practic-es. This session will showcase a few significant international experiments with high relevance for the U.S. Participants have been asked to pay particular attention to the conditions that favor or obstruct implementation of their models.Moderator:Pierre-Gerlier Forest, PhD, Director, School of Public Policy, University of CalgaryAlfonso Lara Montero, CEO, European Social Network Anu Pihl, MSc, Director of Organizational Change, Aster Project, FinlandNicole Morin,MSc, BSc, Senior Occupational Therapist in Internal Medicine at University of AlbertaDave Ross ScD, President & CEO, The Task Force for Global Health Inc.; Director (former), Public HealthInformatics Institute2:50pm-3:50pmA Key to Accelerating Change: Leveraging the Power of CollaborationThe NAA symposium concludes with a Fishbowl conversation with several organizations that are driving change through thought leadership, collaborative approaches and innovative programs. Our intent is to generate a focused discussion on 6 6'