Read Jesse’s bio. See all 40 Under 40 honorees.
Five Questions for Jesse
1. Who or what inspired you to enter the field of public health?
My mother was an OB-GYN who prayed with me at my bedside every night. Her rule was I couldn’t just wish for another He-Man action figure; I had to pray for those who didn’t have enough to eat, a roof over their head, or a mommy and daddy who loved them. She died of colon cancer when I was a teenager. But I keep her with me by working for the health and well-being of my community. My career in social change is, in its way, a prayer.
2. What would success in public health look like to you?
There’s no final success. Public health, like every other form of the common good, is aspirational and incremental. It’s about more and more people enjoying opportunity and security. It’s about an ever-growing supply of positive liberty, with people not just free from legal constraints, but actually equipped to live the lives they want. There are, of course, concrete things to achieve like reduced rates of heroin overdose and African American maternal mortality. But public health is ultimately inextricable from the broader imperative of social justice.
3. As a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?
A Beatle. In second grade, however, I did make a campaign poster saying, “Lava: The Only Way for President.”
4. What are the greatest challenges you face in your work?
I’m always working to figure out how to make as much change as possible within the constraints of municipal government, whether operational, financial, or political. To maximize impact, I’ve found we have to be flexible and relentless. That includes working creatively in partnership with stakeholders to notice and pursue opportunities when they arise. When the timing works — or if we make the timing work by going under the radar or finding a creative path — we can move the needle for families and communities.
5. Describe yourself in three words
Making change, hopefully.