Global Think-Tank on Steatotic Liver Disease featured on “Surfing the MASH Tsunami” podcast

Keeping the conversation going on liver health, integration, and impact
The Global Think-Tank on Steatotic Liver Disease (SLD) continues to shape the international conversation on liver health—most recently featured in the widely followed podcast Surfing the MASH Tsunami, hosted by Roger Green.
In a special segment titled “Roundtable I: From the Global Think-Tank on SLD”, Think-tank co-director and hepatologist Dr. Jörn Schattenberg reflects on the evolution of the initiative’s first four flagship events. He highlights how the Think-tank has expanded beyond professional medical education to engage a wider ecosystem—bringing in politicians, non-hepatologist clinicians, and public health voices to break down siloes and drive more integrated awareness of steatotic liver disease.
Fellow co-host Louise Campbell, Founder and Clinical Director of Tawazun Health, reinforces this shift, emphasising the importance of cross-disciplinary collaboration to fully address the growing burden of SLD. Drawing from her work using transient elastography and the MyLife365.me app, she describes how behavioral support tools can help drive meaningful health improvements.
Dr. Kristina Curtis, a behavioral scientist and Director of the UK-based consultancy Applied Behaviour Change, brings further insight into how people actually make changes that last. She describes the importance of “hybrid interventions—digital tools with a human in the loop”—and stresses that it’s well-delivered feedback, not just diagnostics, that leads to real behavioral change.
The episode also references late-breaking results presented at EASL that support these insights and looks ahead to how artificial intelligence could enhance medical practice and patient engagement in the future.
By participating in trusted forums like Surfing the MASH Tsunami, the Global Think-Tank on SLD is continuing to do what it set out to do: amplify the urgency, widen the circle, and ensure liver health remains a priority on the global public health agenda.
















































