Our Team

Staff

Hermes Baez

Kait Guild

Piper Derenoncourt

Piper Derenoncourt

Michelle Jimenez

Jude Louis

Mary Kathryn Fallon

Michael Lawler

Ghislaine Firmin

Dina Martinez

Josephina Lin

Josephina Lin

Emmanuel Messele

Simone de Oliveira

Rainelle Walker-White

Mollie Williams

Leadership Council

Nancy E. Oriol, MD, Leadership Counsel President

Nancy E. Oriol, MD. is Faculty Associate Dean for Community Engagement in Medical Education at Harvard Medical School. As co-founder of The Family Van and the Mobile Health Map Project, both programs of Harvard Medical School, she specializes in investigating the role of the mobile health care sector in the United States. Her work has demonstrated the mobile health care sector’s return on investment in terms of quality life-years saved and emergency department visits avoided. She is currently building the Family Van’s community-based research program to extend this work and demonstrate the impact of mobile health clinics on chronic disease prevention and management. Dean Oriol also has an interest in disparities in health and access to health care in the United States, as well as training medical professionals in cultural competency and in fostering biomedical literacy in underrepresented minorities and socioeconomically disadvantaged youth.

Dr. Oriol has been awarded several Harvard Medical Student Teaching Awards, The YMCA Black Achiever’s Award, The Massachusetts Medical Society Special Award for Public Service, The Dr. Louis Sullivan Award for contributions to the delivery of quality health care to Black men, The New England Women’s Leadership Award in Health and was selected for inclusion in Footsteps: Profiles of Forty Remarkable Health Care Leaders, Stephen E. Gordon, editor, Puritan Press 2004. In her role as founder of the Van she received the Pri-Med 15th Anniversary Award and the 2006 Mobile Healthcare Leadership Award.

Khin-Kyemon Aung

Khin-Kyemon Aung is a graduate of Harvard Medical School and Managing Editor of Healthcare: The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation. Previously, she served as a fellow at the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation where she worked on developing and testing new accountable care organization models.  In addition, she has also worked on research projects at Beth-Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the Cleveland Clinic, and has interned with the Executive Office of Health and Human Services where she helped prepare the operational plan for Massachusetts’ State Innovation Model. Khin received her bachelor’s degree cum laude from Harvard College. 

Linda Clayton, MD, MPH

Linda Clayton, Instructor, Division of Public Health Practice, Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health; co-author of An American Health Dilemma: Race, Medicine and Health Care in the United States, 1900–2000. Dr. Clayton is a gynecologic oncologist-obstetrician gynecologist whose career has been concentrated in academic medicine and health policy and management. She is currently associate medical director for the division of medical assistance of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, an instructor and senior research scientist in the division of public health practice at the Harvard School of Public Health, and an instructor and staff physician at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston. Her focus is health policy and concerns impacting African American and other disadvantaged minorities in the US health system. A widely published author, Dr. Clayton also serves as a consultant and visiting faculty with the National Cancer Institute, the National Medical Association (NMA), and the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC). Dr. Clayton has testified before the US Congress on African American and disadvantaged health matters and serves as a member of the Congressional Black Caucus Health Braintrust and resource person for the Office of Minority Health and Indian Health Service. She was an NMA-CBC representative on the Clinton Health Reform Task Force.

Erik Erlingsson, MD, MS, MPH

Dr. Erlingsson is a health care innovator and leader with a diverse set of experiences in nonprofit management, health care, higher education, clinical research, and medical education. He earned his medical degree from Charles University, holds a Master of Public Health degree from the University of Utah School of Medicine, and also has a Master of Science in Geology. Dr. Erlingsson’s clinical work has ranged from orthopedic surgery and patient transport for the Alaska Native Health Hospital, a clerkship in general surgery and emergency medicine in Egypt, serving as an epidemiologist for the rural populations of southeastern Utah with the Utah Department of Health, and creating a health profile of the populations inhabiting the Marovo Lagoon in the Solomon Islands. Dr. Erlingsson is currently the Chief Science Executive at Medical+Intelligence.

Sachin H. Jain, MD, M.B.A

Dr. Sachin Jain is chief medical officer at CareMore Health System, an innovative health plan and care delivery system subsidiary of Anthem, Inc. with $1.2B revenue and over 100,000 members, 700 clinical staff and 40 care centers. He is charged with developing and leading a multi-year strategy to expand next-generation care management/care delivery model nationally.  Prior to joining CareMore, Dr. Jain was Chief Medical Information and Innovation Officer at Merck & Co, where he developed global partnerships to leverage health data to improve patient health. He also served as an attending hospitalist physician at the Boston VA-Boston Medical Center and lecturer in healthcare policy at Harvard Medical School.  Dr. Jain earned his M.D. from Harvard Medical School and M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. Dr. Jain is a founder of several non-profit healthcare ventures including the Homeless Health Clinic and ImproveHealthCare.org. Dr. Jain worked previously at WellPoint, McKinsey & Co., and the Institute for Healthcare Improvement. He has authored more than 50 publications and is Co-Editor-in-Chief and Co-Founder of Health Care: The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation.

Laura Weisel, MPA

Laura Weisel has been a senior administrator at Harvard Medical School since 1991.  First with the for the Microbiology department and for the past five years she has served as the Executive Director of Harvard Catalyst Harvard Catalyst | The Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center is dedicated to improving human health by enabling collaboration and providing tools, training, and technologies to clinical and translational investigators. As a shared enterprise of Harvard University, Harvard Catalyst resources are made freely available to all Harvard faculty and trainees, regardless of institutional affiliation or academic degree.

Laura serves on numerous boards including The Lawrence School and was first elected to Brookline Town Meeting in 2006.  She is a graduate of Williams College and Yale University School of Management. Prior to her tenure at HMS she served as the Deputy Executive Director of Oxfam America and Deputy Director of WNYC-AM/F.

Ella D. Auchincloss, MTS

Ella heads community engagement efforts for ReThink Health. She has been working with us on the Healthier Roxbury Coalition for the past few years. ReThink Health works with leaders to create healthier health systems – ones that bridge health and care in ways that improve people’s health, assure access to quality care, and enhance equity, productivity, and community vitality. An expert in community leadership development, Ella leads multi-site projects, trainings, and workshops and provides coaching for a wide variety of organizations and teams, helping them develop the skills needed to lead change. She holds a MTS from the Harvard Divinity School and a BS in Finance from Babson College.

Cheryl Dorsey, MD, MPP 

Cheryl Dorsey is president of Echoing Green, a pioneer in the social entrepreneurship movement. This global social venture fund has awarded over $33 million in start-up capital to nearly 600 next generation social entrepreneurs worldwide since 1987. Dorsey received an Echoing Green Fellowship in 1992 to help launch The Family Van.

Dorsey has served in two presidential administrations. She serves on several other boards including the Harvard Board of Overseers, the SEED Foundation, and Northeast Bank. In 2009, Dorsey was named one of "America's Best Leaders" by US News & World Report and the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard Kennedy School. For 2010 and 2011, she was named as one of The Nonprofit Times' "Power and Influence Top 50."

Dorsey received her Bachelor's degree in History and Science magna cum laude with highest honors from Harvard-Radcliffe Colleges, her medical degree from Harvard Medical School, and her Master's in Public Policy from Harvard Kennedy School. She completed her pediatric residency at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, DC

Natalia Gormley, MBA, MPH

Natalia Gormley is a Project Manager for the Computational Neuroscience Outcomes Center, an international research collaboration focused on improving patient-centered outcomes using technology, housed in the Department of Neurosurgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Her current work focuses on developing transitional care applications for the entire episode of care. She recently completed her Master of Public Health degree at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and completed her practicum work with The Family Van. The experience deepened her understanding of the challenges of behavior change in populations with scarce resources. Some of her projects at Harvard Chan focused on behavioral interventions to nudge providers to adopt evidence-based practices in several domains. Her areas of interest are public health, behavioral economics, health care communications, and performance improvement with a focus on chronic disease management and behavior change to improve adherence.

Born and raised in Mexico City to Spanish refugees, Natalia is bilingual and tricultural. She started her studies in International Relations at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City and completed her BA in Political Science and obtained her MBA from Wayne State University in the U.S.

Zirui Song, M.D., Ph.D

Zirui Song is a resident at Massachusetts General Hospital. He graduated from Harvard Medical School magna cum laude and from the Ph.D. Program in Health Policy (Economics track) at Harvard University. His research has focused on changes in health care spending and quality under global payment, the effect of Medicare payment changes on spending and physician behavior, and the economics of Medicare Advantage. He is a recipient of the AcademyHealth Article-of-the-Year award, the Daniel Ford Award for research achievement in health services and outcomes research from Johns Hopkins Hospital and the resident research award from the American College of Physicians. He was also named to the 2014 Forbes 30 Under 30 for Science and Healthcare. Formerly, he served on the
 Massachusetts Medical Society Task Force on Health Care Reform. He received his B.A. in Public Health Studies with honors from Johns Hopkins University.