Thursday 19 July 2012

MC and Global Health--5

Health for All:
Taking a Tour of Global Health

Note, image above: Cover of brochure from the Geneva-based NGO Forum for Health, a coaliton of 25+ organisations dedicated to making health for all a reality.  One of its many contributions is through the Mental Health and Psychosocial Working Group.
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Let’s take a fascinating tour of GH via Global Health TV. Below you will find seven short video reports on a variety of global health issues/organisations in a variety of coutries/settings. 
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 The video reports are useful to those of us in member care for at least three reasons:
1. They help us stay informed about important global (health) issues and innovations (e.g., health disparities).
2. Some of the resources mentioned can inform and equip our member care work (e.g., psychological first aid).
3.We can also learn from the types of approaches to heath that are being developed (e.g., e-health). 
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We start in Geneva at the 64th World Health Assembly (2011). “The term "global health diplomacy" aims to capture the system and the method for reaching compromise and consensus in matters pertaining to health in the crowded global arena. Global Health TV reports from the World Health Assembly.”
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Next we head to San Francisco, California. “Global Health Sciences at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) strive to address the poverty, health disparities and the scourge of chronic diseases and pandemics in developing nations’ communities.” One of their projects is featured, in Tanzania.
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Off now to Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) Center for Global Health (CGH) highlighting their work in Uganda, South Africa, and Haiti. “In 2006 the CGH was established to build upon MGH's long and distinguished history of international work and humanitarian assistance.”
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Kenya and Asia are the sites in this video about the World Bank Institute's Health System Practice (WBIHS). WBIHS forms partnerships for “capacity building products including structured learning through courses, knowledge exchange, peer-to-peer problem solving, coalition building and partnerships to scale-up impact.”
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Addressing Global Mental Health Needs (Humanitarian/Settings) Moving now into the realm of humanitarian emergencies, Inka Weissbecker addresses mental health needs in such settings, most of which are not understood or neglected. She is with the International Medical Corps. Note: here are links to some of the resources she mentions: Psychological First Aid: Guide for Field Workers, IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings.
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This video takes us to Columbia University in the USA and one of their programs they support in Nigeria, the New Creation Empowerment Centre. “The International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Programs (ICAP) at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health supports high-quality, HIV-related activities around the world. ICAP works with host countries and other organizations, principally in sub-Saharan Africa, to build capacity for family-focused HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and treatment programs.”
Our final destination takes us to Afghanistan to look at how the internet and telecommunications are increasing access to quality health care. The focus is on the work of the Aga Khan Development Network.
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Going Further
**Review the new article in the 16 May 2012 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, A Framework Convention on Global Health: Health for All Justice for All by Lawrence Gostin.  If you get a bit lost (in spite of how well-written it is) don’t fret, since there are probably several new terms, organisations, ideas, and issues that you will come across and which are all part of becoming more conversant with GH. Why read this article? Because GH needs to inform our thinking and work in MC.
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**See also the historic Alma-Ata Declaration (1978, three pages), on primary health care/health for all.
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Reflection and Discussion
**Which of the GH videos interested you the most?
**What are some resources and ideas that you can use for your work in member care?

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