Rebekah Lewis to Direct Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion and Population Health
April 21, 2025
She will oversee the center’s public health promotion activities and programs.
Rebekah Lewis will serve as the new director of the Maxwell-based Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion and Population Health starting April 21. She joined Maxwell as a faculty fellow in public health and Lerner Center affiliate in the fall of 2024.
“I am thrilled to begin the director position and look forward to collaborating with center staff and faculty affiliates to expand its crucial work, said Lewis, who has more than 15 years of experience in health and higher education settings.
In her previous role at the Ottawa University Heart Institute, Lewis provided program evaluation and qualitative research expertise for a variety of women’s cardiovascular disease prevention projects at the Canadian Women’s Heart Health Centre. Her current evaluation research focuses on improving primary prevention of cardiovascular disease among high-risk women. She received a master of public health from Boston University School of Public Health in 2001.
“We are pleased to welcome Rebekah Lewis to the Lerner Center as its new director,” says Shannon Monnat, Lerner Chair in Public Health Promotion and Population Health, director of the Center for Policy Research and professor of sociology. “Rebekah brings a wealth of expertise in health education, program evaluation and research. Her forward-thinking orientation and ideas for program development align perfectly with the Lerner Center’s mission.”
The Lerner Center was established in 2011 with an endowment from Sidney Lerner ’53, a marketing executive and public health advocate, and his wife Helaine. Its mission is to improve population and community health through research, education, advocacy and programming focused on the social and structural determinants of health and health disparities. It supports numerous programs, assistantships and training opportunities for undergraduate and graduate students, including the popular DeStress for Success course, an undergraduate social impact competition and internships.
The center recently announced that it will host national Healthy Monday programming, a signature public health campaign that aims to reduce the risk of chronic disease by offering prompts about healthier habits. Hosting the national Healthy Monday campaign was made possible by an organizational restructuring and a $2.52 million gift to the Lerner Center and Syracuse University’s Forever Orange Campaign by Helaine Lerner in 2023.
By Michael Kelly
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