Dr. Francesca L. Beaudoin named School of Public Health dean at Brown

Currently serving as interim dean, the accomplished physician and scholar will advance academic excellence, expand research and provide strategic direction for the school.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — Dr. Francesca L. Beaudoin, a widely respected epidemiologist, emergency physician and addiction medicine specialist, has been appointed the next dean of Brown University’s School of Public Health (SPH), effective June 1, 2026. Beaudoin has been serving in the role on an interim basis since Jan. 1, 2026.

Beaudoin — an alumna of SPH who has served on the school’s leadership team for five years, most recently as academic dean — will provide strategic vision, intellectual leadership and administrative oversight to all aspects of the school. She will oversee the school’s four academic departments, 13 research centers, seven master’s programs, four doctoral programs and the undergraduate concentrations in public health and statistics, while driving the school’s strategic planning in collaboration with its faculty.

In announcing Beaudoin’s appointment in a Tuesday, May 19, message to the Brown community, Provost Francis J. Doyle III described Beaudoin as an exceptional scholar, a dedicated clinician and a proven academic leader who deeply embodies Brown’s mission of translating world-class research into real-world impact. She was named to the role after a national search.

“Francesca has demonstrated a deep commitment to building the strength of Brown’s School of Public Health and its capacity to improve public health locally and globally through scholarship and teaching that informs decisions on policy and practice,” Doyle wrote. “She brings an exceptional focus on the mission of the school to tackle complex health challenges with a sense of urgency to help real people every day.”

Doyle praised Beaudoin’s leadership in advancing public health initiatives that promise to have a major impact in areas that build on SPH’s core strengths in data science, health policy reform and behavioral sciences, in addition to rigorous research in areas spanning pandemic response and preparedness, overdose prevention, and public health interventions for Alzheimer’s and dementia — all in line with the University’s mission of service to society. She will oversee ongoing efforts to grow the size of the faculty and expand a research portfolio that currently ranks among the top 10 schools of public health for federal funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Beaudoin also will lead the continued strengthening of educational programs and steward the school’s commitment to educating the next generation of public health scholars. The SPH community includes approximately 820 students, including 660 graduate students and 160 undergraduate students.

“I feel privileged to lead the School of Public Health as it moves into its next era with an unwavering focus on generating knowledge, training leaders and building partnerships that allow Brown to respond to the world's most urgent health needs,” Beaudoin said. “At a moment when public health systems face global scrutiny, our faculty and students are not waiting for the next generation of solutions — they are actively building them every day, and that inspires me with immense hope and purpose as I step into this role.”

Reporting directly to the provost, Beaudoin will serve as a member of the provost’s Academic Priorities Committee; the Tenure, Promotions and Appointments Committee; and the President’s Cabinet and President’s Executive Committee, while also stewarding the SPH Board of Governors.

At a moment when public health systems face global scrutiny, our faculty and students are not waiting for the next generation of solutions — they are actively building them every day, and that inspires me with immense hope and purpose as I step into this role.

Dr. Francesca L. Beaudoin Incoming Dean, School of Public Health
 
headshot of Francesca Beaudoin

An accomplished scholar and public health practitioner

Beaudoin has an extensive track record in supporting public health solutions, with a commitment to local impact. Since 2021, she has provided stigma-free addiction treatment to patients in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, operating out of a 27-foot-long mobile recovery RV run by CODAC Behavioral Healthcare. Following the tragic Dec. 13 mass shooting at Brown, Beaudoin played a leadership role in SPH’s collaboration with offices across campus to establish a public health and trauma-informed framework to help shape the University’s Brown Ever True healing and recovery effort.

Members of the dean’s search committee were impressed by Beaudoin’s genuine care for the well-being of patients and communities, her sharp strategic vision, her record as a master relationship-builder and her proven ability to build on the school’s core research bedrocks.

“Francesca possesses a rare and powerful understanding of how to translate world-class data into real-world policy interventions, combined with her reputation as a decisive leader and a naturally collaborative problem-solver,” Doyle said. “I am excited to see her lead the School of Public Health to new levels of partnership across campus, the state and the global healthcare landscape to expand the school's public impact.”

A faculty member at Brown since 2010, Beaudoin holds joint professorships in epidemiology at SPH and emergency medicine at the Warren Alpert Medical School. Her research focuses on the intersection of pain management, the opioid epidemic and acute trauma recovery and has drawn funding from the NIH, the Department of Defense and numerous philanthropic foundations.

Beaudoin has authored more than 190 peer-reviewed articles, served as a member of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Anesthetic and Analgesic Drug Products Advisory Committee, served as a senior adviser for the Institute for Clinical and Economic Review, and is a member of the board of directors of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Rhode Island.

Prior to assuming the role of interim dean of the School of Public Health, Beaudoin served as academic dean for two and a half years. Previously she served as chair of Brown’s Department of Epidemiology.

She received her M.D. from the University of Massachusetts Medical School in 2006 and completed her residency in emergency medicine at Rhode Island Hospital. Beaudoin earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in kinesiology from the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 2000 and 2002, respectively, and completed a Ph.D. in epidemiology at Brown in 2017.