Joseph Allen | Associate Professor of Exposure Assessment Science, Harvard

Joseph Allen

Associate Professor of Exposure Assessment Science, Harvard

Fee Range
$18,500

Joseph Allen
Featured Keynote Programs

The Must-Have Office Amenity in 2022
Fresh Air

If you’re sitting in a typical American home, office building, or school, about 3 percent of the air you inhaled recently came out of the lungs of the people in the room with you right now. Before the coronavirus pandemic, the interior designers and HR professionals who decide how offices look paid little attention to ventilation—an invisible variable that determines whether people can think well at their desk and whether coughs and colds will circulate within a company. But as companies and their employees ponder what the post-pandemic office will be like, the cool new amenity won’t be a foosball table. It’ll be something we should have had all along—clean air. In this keynote, Dr. Joseph G. Allen will discuss why your building manager has a bigger impact on your health than your doctor—and relatively low-cost upgrades that will improve offices for everyone inside.

**For HR professionals, executive leadership, office managers, and concerned employees**

Is Bad Indoor Air Dulling Your Brain?

More of us than ever are now worried about indoor air quality because of Covid-19. But we should be talking about indoor air long after the pandemic ends. In this keynote, Dr. Joseph G. Allen shares the latest research conducted by his team at the Harvard Healthy Buildings Program that shows the quality of indoor air—for example, at work or school—can influence the number of sick days you or your child takes and may even affect how well your brain works. Dr. Allen and his team found that poor indoor air quality is associated with subtle impairments in several cognitive functions, including our ability to concentrate and process information. The good news is that many of the changes being made to prevent the spread of Covid-19 are the same improvements that need to be made to improve the overall air quality linked with cognitive function and worker productivity.

**For HR professionals, parents, employees, and anyone who has fallen asleep in the middle of an important meeting**

The Business Case for Healthy Buildings

In the late 1970s, in response to the global energy crisis, we started to tighten up our buildings and, in the process, choked off the air supply to conserve energy. In doing so, we ushered in the sick building era. In this keynote, Dr. Joseph G. Allen shows how better air quality and ventilation can actually lead to bottom-line gains for businesses. His Harvard research and financial simulations found that the benefits of higher ventilation alone are estimated to be between $6,500 and $7,500 per person, per year. That’s because greater ventilation leads to significantly better cognitive function performance of employees. It’s good for worker health and productivity.

**For office managers, executive leadership, commercial real estate investors, and building developers**

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Joseph Allen

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