Ari Johnson is co-founder and CEO of Muso, a global health organization working to stop preventable deaths in the world’s poorest communities. He is an associate professor of medicine at University of California San Francisco Institute for Global Health Sciences and treats patients at San Francisco General Hospital. Johnson has published peer-reviewed articles and essays in the fields of infectious disease, health systems design, socioeconomic determinants of health, AIDS, and migration. For his work at Muso, he is the co-recipient of the 2021 Charles Bronfman Prize, an annual award presented to a humanitarian under 50 whose innovative work, informed by Jewish values, has significantly improved the world.
Previously
Hear first-hand from four extraordinary social entrepreneurs who are working in communities around the world to solve some of society’s most complex issues from education to h...
Universal health care involves much more than providing insurance coverage to everyone. It also means ensuring that appropriate, affordable, and timely medical services are av...