Progressive Policy Institute
Alix W. serves as the Director of Health Care Policy at PPI since April 2025, following a role as Director of Health Policy at the National Alliance for Care at Home from December 2021 to March 2025. Alix has extensive experience in health policy, regulatory analysis, and communication, having collaborated with various teams to track and prepare materials on federal regulations and legislation while leading national surveys related to pediatric hospice care. Previous positions include Manager of Health Policy at NACCHO, legal internships focusing on public health and name change projects, and research roles at prominent institutions. Alix holds a Juris Doctor from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, a Master of Public Health from the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health, and a Bachelor of Science in Community Health from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
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Progressive Policy Institute
PPI's mission is to define and promote a new progressive politics for America in the 21st century. Through its research, policies, and perspectives, the Institute is fashioning a new governing philosophy and an agenda for public innovation geared to the Information Age. PPI's mission arises from the belief that America is ill-served by an obsolete left-right debate that is out of step with the powerful forces re-shaping our society and economy. The Institute advocates a philosophy that adapts the progressive tradition in American politics to the realities of the Information Age and points to a "third way" beyond the liberal impulse to defend the bureaucratic status quo and the conservative bid to simply dismantle government. The Institute envisions government as society's servant, not its master -- as a catalyst for a broader civic enterprise controlled by and responsive to the needs of citizens and the communities where they live and work. The Institute's work rests on three ideals: equal opportunity, mutual responsibility, and self-governing citizens and communities. Building on these cornerstone principles, our work advances five key strategies to equip Americans to confront the challenges of the Information Age: * Restoring the American Dream by accelerating economic growth, expanding opportunity, and enhancing security. * Reconstructing our social order by strengthening families, attacking crime, and empowering the urban poor. * Renewing our democracy by challenging the special interests and returning power to citizens and local institutions. * Defending our common civic ground by affirming the spirit of tolerance and the shared principles that unite us as Americans. * Confronting global disorder by building enduring new international structures of economic and political freedom.