Researcher, Innovator, Educator.
Scout Silverstein (they/them), MPH, is a PhD student and public health researcher focused on eating disorders, body image, and gendered embodiment. Their work examines how surveillance, gendered objectification, concealment, and transphobia shape disordered eating among gender-expansive individuals, while also demonstrating how these same mechanisms operate within cisgender populations. They have built large-scale programs for Equip Health and Project HEAL, and have provided over 60 trainings to clinical audiences.
Scout supports structural change to care delivery via medical education, providing training to practicing clinicians, and adapting clinical interventions to meet identity-based needs. Scout has worked with prestigious institutions, such as Brigham and Women’s Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Fordham Law School, Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, Brown University, Sidney Kimmel Medical College, Fenway Health, Northwell Health, New York City Department of Health & Mental Hygiene, and United States Department of Health and Human Services.
You can also find Scout strengthening legislative policy, providing consultation to clinicians, collaborating with academic research teams, speaking at conferences, and facilitating interACT’s annual youth healing retreat.
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Innovation in Clinical Care Delivery
By rethinking access, training, and structure, I help clinicians "get unstuck” and reconceptualize approaches to care.
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Translational Intelligence
I move seamlessly between research, clinical care, education, and strategy frameworks to help others create meaningful structural change.
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Complex Thinking Under Pressure
I work comfortably holding competing truths without collapsing nuance. I help individuals and organizations build bridges and resolve tension.
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Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry
My work draws from medicine, psychology, sociology, ethics, and critical theory. By integrating these ways of knowing, I generate insights that conventional silos overlook.