Abstract:
Health care and community-based organizations continue to face uncertainty, with shifting policies, funding instability, and mounting operational challenges that require high-stakes decisions with incomplete information. Building on the foundations introduced in part one on April 8, 2026, this session focuses on applying decision intelligence frameworks in practice, helping teams strengthen decision quality, avoid cognitive traps, and translate insights into measurable impact.
About this event:
Every day, health care professionals and leaders make complex decisions, often with limited data and high emotional load that have real consequences for staff, patients, and communities. In part two of this series, participants will move from concepts to application building on the Decision Intelligence 4 Health framework introduced in part one.
This interactive workshop provides an opportunity to apply structured decision-making approaches to real-world challenges. You will apply structured decision processes to your own decision challenges, hear from other healthcare professionals on their decision challenges, practice aligning decisions with values and goals, and identify next steps for making decisions within your workplace setting.
If you are interested in joining this session and missed part one, we encourage you to watch the recording and review the materials from the previous session to help prepare. We will also provide a quick refresher on the foundational concepts at the start of this workshop.
This workshop is intended for:
Health care and community leaders, operational managers, program staff, and others committed to improving organizational decision-making, especially in environments marked by uncertainty, policy change, and complex trade-offs.
At the end of the workshop, you will:
- Apply structured decision-making frameworks to a real-world decision challenge
- Identify and address cognitive biases and reasoning traps in team-based decision processes
- Use practical tools to improve decision quality, alignment, and follow-through in your organizational context
The speaker will be:
Tomás J. Aragón, MD, DrPH, Adjunct Faculty and Impact Fellow at the UC Berkeley School of Public Health