News

    WHO Flag

    “This race will be intense”: a look at elections for Director General of the WHO

    May 26, 2016

    This week, the World Health Assembly is meeting in Geneva. Elections for the next Director General of the World Health Organization is a top item on the agenda. Liana Rosenkrantz Woskie, an author of a recently published article in the BMJ that outlines questions the world should be asking candidates for that position, joined us for a brief chat.

    Antibiotics

    We need to incentivize antibiotic R&D better

    May 31, 2016

    While clinical cases of patients suffering from drug-resistant bacterial infections continue to rise all over the world, innovation and the number of drugs in the development pipeline still remains far from sufficient. It is obvious that both big pharmaceutical companies and governments fail to address this issue and that the current research & development (R&D) system is not able to close this innovation gap.

    Malnutrition patient

    Reflections on a year of malnutrition

    June 6, 2016

    Malnutrition is frustrating. I often sit in the office, analyzing data from our programs, and feel helpless. Children who stay the same height for two or three months, gaining not even a millimeter, even as they receive micronutrients and protein supplementation. Kids who, instead of gaining weight with treatment with food supplementation, see their growth curves drop steadily downward, thanks to diarrhea and illness. 

    Vaccine

    Realistic portrayal of the scientific community needed to combat science denial

    June 20, 2016

    With the recent release of the movie “Vaxxed: From Cover-Up to Catastrophe,” I’m seeing a few blog posts and articles pop up about the hegemonic nature of science and the consensus culture that the field supposedly embodies. In fact, this argument is at the center of the anti-vaccine movement in general.

    Health care workers

    Publish in Healthcare: The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation

    June 22, 2016

    We invite readers and contributors to Global Health Hub to consider publishing global health-themed papers inHealthcare: The Journal of Delivery Science and Innovation. We’re piloting a new “Global Health Corner” and are excited to have contributions from a range of people!

    Gary Cohen

    A conversation with MacArthur Genius Gary Cohen of Health Care Without Harm

    June 27, 2016

    Gary Cohen is co-founder and president of Health Care Without Harm. His focus is global health care delivery and its role in promoting health equity, environmental health, and sustainable development.  For over 20 years, Gary has monitored the health care sector’s significant role in contributing to environmental degradation. He and his international networks have successfully advocated ways to improve human and ecological health through transforming health care practices....

    Read more about A conversation with MacArthur Genius Gary Cohen of Health Care Without Harm
    Committee on World Food Security

    Behavior Change: Global Nutrition and Food Security Policy and the Life of the Practitioner

    July 5, 2016

    Habits are hard to change. We can all relate.

    Yet I frequently tell my patients that they should make lifestyle adjustments. For the patient population I provide care for – largely middle-aged Hispanic women, many of whom work evenings cleaning hospitals and hotels – I tell them that they should not drink the cheap soda and eat salty snacks from the vending machines. But I know how ridiculous my request is. It’s not that I don’t have confidence that she understands the health risks of chronically eating poor quality food, or that she isn’t strong-willed...

    Read more about Behavior Change: Global Nutrition and Food Security Policy and the Life of the Practitioner
    Pharmacy in Venezuela

    Why smart government spending matters for the SDG medicines target

    July 11, 2016

    The World Health Organization’s first global report on diabetes highlights the disease’s “alarming surge” with rates that have quadrupled in fewer than three decades. The report reminds us that essential diabetes medicines and health technologies, including lifesaving insulin, are available in only one in three of the world’s poorest countries.

    Market

    Thoughts After 22 Years of Consumption and Organizing a Food System Symposium

    July 18, 2016

    During the fall of 2015, a few of us students at Davidson College began organizing what would become a two-day symposium on the U.S. food system. We hoped to deepen our and other students’ awareness about the confusing realities of why 15.3 million U.S. children are food insecure in one of the most wealthy nations, why obesity rates have stabilized at such high levels, and why the word “agriculture” seems dirtily tinged and old-fashioned to today’s youth.

    Guatemalan woman

    Sharing truths of terminal illness in rural Guatemala

    July 25, 2016

    Over the last four years I have visited communities in rural Guatemala with Wuqu’ Kawoq | Maya Health Alliance, a civil society organization providing health care and other services in these places. The organization has also come to specialize in caring for those with complex chronic and terminal illnesses, and therefore the staff provides quite a bit of palliative and end-of-life care. Observing interactions between caregivers and patients, I took interest in how people communicate in these pivotal encounters.

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