Joseph G. Allen

Joseph G. Allen is an American academic and public health expert. He is currently the director of the Healthy Buildings program at Harvard University's T. H. Chan School of Public Health, where he is also an associate professor. Much of Allen's work revolves around the emerging concept of healthy buildings and the impact of buildings and indoor air quality on human health.

Early life and education
Allen graduated from Boston College with a degree in biology, and from Boston University School of Public Health with a Master of Public Health degree (environmental health) and a Doctor of Science degree (exposure assessment, environmental epidemiology, biostatistics).

Author
Allen co-authored the book Healthy Buildings: How Indoor Spaces Can Make You Sick - or Keep You Well (Harvard Press), with John Macomber from Harvard Business School. The New York Times named the book a “Top 8 Book for Healthy Living,” and Fortune named it a book of the year. He has also written for The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Atlantic, and Harvard Business Review.

Service
Allen is a member of the Scientific and Medical Editorial Review Panel of the American Lung Association.

Covid-19
Allen served on The Lancet Covid-19 Commission and was Chair of The Lancet Covid-19 Commission Task Force on Safe Work, Safe School, and Safe Travel. He served on Harvard's Coronavirus Advisory and Governor Charlie Baker's (MA) Medical Advisory Board and was an advisor to The White House Covid-19 Response Team. During the COVID-19 pandemic, much of his public work concerned the role of building factors in public health, especially in the context of schools and the workforce returning to office spaces after an extended period of remote working during the pandemic. He publicized these considerations through over 60 op-eds in major publications, as well as with appearances on television news programs, and often used these platforms to correct misinformation surrounding transmission of the virus on surfaces and in the air.

Climate Change
Allen studies the role that buildings play in climate change and strategies to off-set building-related emissions. He has published several articles on the climate and health co-benefits of energy-efficiency measures in buildings. He authored an article in Harvard Business Review titled, "Designing buildings that are both well-ventilated and green," that provides recommendations for how to achieve a healthy building that is also energy-efficient. Allen is a faculty member with the Norman Foster Institute's Programme on Sustainable Cities.

Healthy Buildings
Allen created Harvard's 'The 9 Foundations of a Healthy Building', a report that synthesized the scientific research on factors that lead to better health indoors. He keynoted the first ever White House Summit on Indoor Air Quality. Allen holds a patent for "Intelligent Building Monitoring" and H.E.A.A.L., which is a system and algorithm for analyzing real-time data from indoor air quality sensors that bins data and scores building health performance into: Health-Optimized, Excellent, Action, Alert, Limit.