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Welcome to the Lerner Center for Public Health Advocacy

Training leaders as effective advocates for solving the world's greatest public health challenges.

What is Advocacy?

We define advocacy as strategic actions taken to drive social, organizational, or policy change on behalf of particular health goals or population health. This encompasses a range of disciplines and practices that effectively engage and inform policymakers, media, and the public to act and embrace evidence-based solutions for public health challenges.

Policy is one of the most powerful tools for ensuring that everyone can have the fairest, most equitable opportunity for a healthy, prosperous life and environment. We will enhance the knowledge and skills of public health professionals to effectively translate the science, engage with decisionmakers, build political support and will, and use data to effectively drive change.

Public health advocacy has the power to improve all lives through evidence-based action.

What's New

Summer 2026 Advocacy Action Lab

Apply for the Summer 2026 Advocacy Action Lab

Learn how to transform your public health knowledge into policy impact. In this comprehensive program, public health and health professionals will learn fundamental advocacy skills, workshop specific policy issues, and gain real-world insights on how to achieve public health goals. 

Advocacy 101: Getting Started with Policy Engagement

New policy engagement training for public health professionals

Advocacy 101 is a foundational skill-building course designed to introduce public health and health professionals to the fundamentals of policy advocacy.

Harry Barbee and Mariana Socal

Winners: Sommer Klag Advocacy Impact Awards Lightning Pitch Competition

Congratulations to the award winners, Harry Barbee, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Health, Behavior and Society, and Mariana Socal, MD, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management.

The Power of Advocacy

If we want demonstrable improvements in the public’s health, we need to intervene in the larger political and social arena and more fully engage in advocacy to inform decisionmaking in our society. 
— Ellen J. MacKenzie PhD ’79, MSc ’75, Bloomberg Distinguished Professor, Dean Emeritus, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health