Presented on March 14, 2019 at 12:30 p.m. in the Clough Lounge, Room 205.David Addiss, MD, MPH is Adjunct Professor in the Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health. He is a senior scientist at the Task Force for Global Health and Adjunct Professor at the Eck Institute for Global Health, University of Notre Dame, where he teaches global health ethics. Current interests include global health ethics; the role of compassion in global health; mindfulness and global health; ethical reflection and formation for global health practitioners; moral distress and divided loyalties in global health; ethics of care in global health; and the ethics of mass drug administration for control and elimination of neglected tropical diseases.Hope Bussenius earned a doctor of nursing practice degree at Georgia Health Sciences University in 2012, a master's degree in nursing from Emory University in 1993, and a bachelor's degree in nursing from the Medical College of Georgia in 1990. In 2012, she started the Take 2 Heart: Pedia BP® Program, a smartphone app to simplify tracking blood pressure readings in pediatric patients.Michael Elliott is the associate director of Georgia Institute of Technology’s Center for Quality Growth and Regional Development (CQGRD) and an associate professor, jointly appointed to the Schools of City and Regional Planning and Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology. He is a co-founder and has served as co-director of both the Consortium on Negotiation and Conflict Resolution and the Southeast Negotiation Network.Rihana Nesrudin is from the Oakhurst Medical Center.Runtime: 56:02 minutesThe second panel of the Spring 2019 Liam's Legacy will engage global perspectives; however, both panels will highlight the connectedness of local and global community health challenges and innovations. Featured panelists include David Addiss of the Task Force for Global Health, Hope Bussenius of Emory's Urban Health Initiative, and Rihana Nesrudin of Oakhurst Medical Center. Hence, the symposium also explores how professionals from different disciplines and sectors view the concept of "community health" through the specific lenses of the communities--whether here in Atlanta or abroad-- with which they work