Bringing Knowledge Home
Effecting Change
Bringing Knowledge Home
Effecting Change
Many fellows return home from their time in Washington feeling inspired. During the program, they applied their practical experience in healthcare to the world of policy. After the fellowship, many reverse course, applying their newly acquired policy expertise to the world of healthcare. Whether implementing programs on a large or small scale, the outcomes of their post-fellowship efforts continue to improve the health of the nation, carrying forward the momentum of their work on Capitol Hill.
It’s not uncommon for fellows catch a case of “Potomac fever” and make Washington, DC their new home. Some fellows choose to stay on with their placement office. Others may transition to work in government agencies such as the Department of Health and Human Services or the National Institutes of Health. Beyond that, fellows may leave the Hill entirely for health or policy positions with private companies and foundations. Whatever the case may be, for those who contract “Potomac fever,” there is no known antidote.
Watch the video below to hear first-hand accounts of those afflicted with this “malady.”
Continue scrolling or select a button to learn more about RWJF alumni efforts related to:
Implementing New Programs
Click through the tabs below to learn more about health policy-related programs spearheaded by RWJF alumni.



Enacting State-Level Legislation
Click through the tabs below to learn more about RWJF alumni efforts related to enacting state-level legislation.




Developing Health Policy Programs Within Their Universities
Watch this video and click through the tabs below to learn more about how RWJF alumni are impacting academia.



Karen Armitage, formerly a pediatrician and public health physician, was a health policy fellow in 2014-2015 and worked with the health team in the office of Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI). Prior to this fellowship, she had a long career in public health, including serving as Chief Medical Officer for the New Mexico Department of Health. Although she had intended to apply for the position of Director of Health Policy at the University of New Mexico after her fellowship, the resignation of the current dean and potential foreclosure of the college, motivated Armitage to step into this new and unfamiliar position.
“I would never have done that if I hadn't been in Washington. If I hadn't pretended that I knew what I didn't know and faked it until I made it, I wouldn't have been that brave.”


Becoming Leaders and Focusing on the Nation’s Health
Watch the video and click through the tabs below to learn more about how RWJF alumni are impacting the nation’s health for good.



“Without [the fellowship] experience, I don't think that I would be able to help guide this organization that is trying to create new policy for people with brain disease.”


“The RWJF Health Policy Fellows program takes you from being a really good checker player to being able to play four - dimensional chess.”
