Alma Mata Global Health Network

Ethiopia (46)

 

Alma Mata Global Health Network is for all interested in global health issues.

It provides regular updates on news, events, education and careers related to global health via its website, Facebook group, Twitter account and mailing list.

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May 15 2013

Global health: developing leaders – Launch of RCP/Alma Mata Seminar Series

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Free seminars to develop global health advocates

Seeking refuge – effective advocacy for refugees and asylum seekers

This seminar aims to build awareness of the key issues that refugees and asylum seekers may face and how best we can protect and promote their health and wellbeing.

Chair: Dr David McCoy, Medact

Medact is a global health charity led by a network of health care professionals, which advocates for the prevention of violent conflict and its devastating effects on health. Medact has campaigned for more that 10 years against charging asylum seekers and other vulnerable groups for healthcare. This summer, the Government will launch a consultation on charges for NHS care, including primary care. Medact was a founding member of the Entitlement Working group, whose members will be preparing strong responses to the consultation.

Speakers to include:

Dr Naomi Hartree, Medical Justice

As part of the controversial changes that our health system underwent on April 1st, the NHS in England took over responsibility for the healthcare of people detained in immigration removal centres. Could this be a golden opportunity to improve the poor standards of healthcare and injustices that immigration detainees currently face? Dr. Naomi Hartree from Medical Justice recently wrote on this subject in the BMJ. Medical Justice is a charity that exposes and challenges inadequate healthcare provision to immigration detainees and has provided assistance to over a thousand individuals held in detention.

Zrinka Bralo, Migrant and Refugee Communities Forum

Zrinka Bralo is a journalist from Sarajevo and has been involved with refugee and human rights since she was exiled in 1993. She is executive director of the Migrant and Refugee Communities Forum in London and has served as a commissioner of the Independent Asylum Commission, the most comprehensive review of the UK protection system. She has previously written for Migrant Voice, The Guardian, openDemocracy, The Huffington Post and featured in Marcel Ophüls’ documentary Veillées d’armes. She is also a winner of the 2011 Voices Of Courage Award by the Women’s Refugee Commission in New York.

Anna Musgrave, Refugee Council

Anna Musgrave is the women’s advocacy officer at the Refugee Council. The Refugee Council provides practical and therapeutic support in a variety of languages to asylum seekers and refugees in the UK. She has been most recently working on the Refugee Council’s Dignity in Pregnancy Campaign, which is calling for a change in government policy to help protect pregnant women seeking asylum and their babies.

Thursday 30 May 2013

18:30 – 20:00

Followed by a drinks reception

 

Reserve your place: email international@rcplondon.ac.uk

Royal College of Physicians | Regents Park | London | NW1 4LE

 

Permanent link to this article: http://almamata.org.uk/global-health-seminar-series/

May 06 2013

RCPE Symposium Global Health: Paradigms, Progress, Priorities and Partnerships

Global Health: Paradigms, Progress, Priorities and Partnerships

This Symposium is part of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh’s ‘Hot Topic’ series.  It will provide an opportunity to hear world-leading experts speaking on a range of topical issues in global health. This will include global health governance, how to respond to non-communicable disease and stillbirth challenges in low- and middle-income countries, challenges in malaria control and reducing child mortality, new approaches to priority setting in global health, and successful examples of partnerships between UK health groups and organisations in low- and middle-income countries. The day will close with a session run by THET giving guidance for those who may be considering volunteering or setting up partnerships.

There will be an opportunity to present posters in two areas of global health work: 1) instutitional health partnerships, and 2) undergraduate student  health projects in low-income and middle-income countries.  Deadline for submission: Friday, 2 August 2013.  Prizes will be given for the best poster in each category.

Please see the RCPE website for full details.

Date: Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Venue:

Queen Mother Conference Centre
Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh,
9 Queen Street,
Edinburgh
EH2 1JQ

 

Permanent link to this article: http://almamata.org.uk/rcpe-symposium-global-health-paradigms-progress-priorities-and-partnerships/

Apr 12 2013

Turning the World Upside Down: new international relationships for health and development

Turning the World Upside Down: new international relationships for health and development
Arthur Lucas Lecture Theatre, King’s College London (Strand Campus), WC2R 2LS
15th of April, 14.00-17.00 (GMT+1)
We cordially invite you to attend (online or in person) a live panel debate on innovation, health and co-development, to mark the launch of Turning the World Upside Down – www.ttwud.org – a new online platform to collect examples of practices and innovation in health in low and middle income countries. The wTurning the World Upside Downebsite will go live on the 15th of April.
Tickets are free of charge and have limited availability. Tickets to attend in person will go online at 16.00 on the 29th March at ttwud.eventbrite.com, or you can register to watch online now.

Our panel will consist of:

  • Lord Nigel Crisp, crossbench member of the House of Lords, former NHS Chief Executive and site originator
  • Professor Paul Farmer, Professor of Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, co-founder of Partners in Health
  • Fiona Godlee, Editor-in-chief, BMJ
  • Maureen Bisognano, President and CEO, Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)
  • Dr Charles Alessi, Chairman, National Association of Primary Care and Chairman, NHS Clinical Commissioners
We have invited selected guests to pitch their ideas and experiences of innovations in low and middle income countries before our panelists in a ‘Dragon’s Den’ style, who will feedback on how these ideas can be relevant for Europe, the USA and other countries. There will also be the chance for the audience to contribute their ideas to our speakers.
The session will be followed by a reception with refreshments and snacks in the Great Hall, King’s most splendid historical space.
We have a limited number of tickets available to join us in person or the session will be broadbast live around the world (sign up at ttwud.eventbrite.com). Contribute to the debate on twitter with #TTWUDlaunch.
More information can be found in the attached poster.
Turning the World Upside Down – www.ttwud.org – is an open platform which anyone can contribute to, and is designed to:
  • Collect examples of practices and innovation in health in low and middle income countries which could be used in Europe, the USA and anywhere else in the world
  • Promote discussion and debate on mutual transfer of knowledge, 2 way innovation, co-development and frugal innovation
  • Help shape new international relationships for health and development
With best wishes,
Nigel Crisp

Permanent link to this article: http://almamata.org.uk/turning-the-world-upside-down-new-international-relationships-for-health-and-development/

Apr 11 2013

MSF Scientific Day 2013

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 MSF Scientific Day Online 2013

 
 
 MSF Scientific Day 2013 will be streamed live online from the Royal Society of Medicine, London, UK from 09.00 – 18.00 (GMT +1) on 10th May 2013.  View via the MSF web site.

MSF Scientific Day is a unique opportunity to showcase medical and scientific research carried out in MSF programmes around the world.  Presenting and debating the findings from our research is vital to improve the quality of our humanitarian programmes.  By streaming the event online, we hope to engage the wider humanitarian and global health community in this discussion.

The agenda 
for this year’s MSF Scientific Day has now been finalised.  

Highlights include:

  • The keynote speech by international health expert, co-founder of the Gapminder Foundation and TED talks alumnus Hans Rosling on the synergy and conflict between research and advocacy. This will be followed by a panel discussion on the impact of MSF’s research.
  • Treatment in conflict and emergency settings including TB in Somalia and hepatitis E in South Sudan
  • New approaches to preventing malaria in Mali and Chad, cholera vaccination in an outbreak in Guinea, and preventing malnutrition in Niger by cash transfer and food supplementation
  • Challenges for MSF including the introduction of a medical error reporting system and parenteral artesunate for severe malaria
  • The role of social media and health looking at the effect of MDR-TB patients blogging about their experiencesMail Attachment-1


This event is fully registered at the venue but everyone can still take part by watching the live stream online.


Online viewers can expect:  

  • live stream of Scientific Day presentations and talks
  • A Low-bandwidth stream for those with termperamental internet connection
  • real-time online discussion with the chance to submit questions to presenters
  • An online gallery of posters presented at the event
  • Live Twitter Q&A sessions with selected presenters

Get involved in the debate by following us on Twitter @MSF_UK using the #MSFSci hashtag.   

MSF Scientific Day news will also be posted on the Facebook Page


Sign up for email updates about the online stream 
here.

If you would be interested in hosting a group viewing on Scientific Day at your institution please contact either:

Kim WestScientific Day Digital Communications Officer: scientificday.online@london.msf.org Becky Roby, Conference Organiser: scientificday@london.msf.org 

MSF email subscribe

Permanent link to this article: http://almamata.org.uk/msf-scientific-day-2013/

Mar 19 2013

Update! Conference 2013: The changing role of aid in global health

We have been working on the programme for this eagerly-anticipated event and are pleased to have had some additional recent confirmations!  Please see the Programme section within the conference area of the website for more details. 

The speakers, coming both from front-line organisations and academic institutions, will delve into all manner of issues and controversies related to aid provision in the 21st century.  What are the current trends in international aid, in the context of the current political and economic climate?  What challenges are organisations on the ground finding themselves up against?  How can we tell whether efforts are making any difference to well-being and development?  What are the alternatives?  

Join the discussion!

…Don’t forget that there are discounts available for students and trainees.

…And for an opportunity to present a poster relevant to the content of the conference, please email proposals to dannikirwan@yahoo.com

See you on April 6th!

Permanent link to this article: http://almamata.org.uk/update-conference-2013-the-changing-role-of-aid-in-global-health/

Jun 27 2012

Stuck in the Middle: Foundation and Junior Specialty Trainees and Global Health Work

The dilemma should be a common one. You’ve completed your undergraduate medical training, gained an intercalated degree relating to Global/International Health and been on elective to a far-flung, exotic part of the world. Your desire is burning to make headway on that ambition to work as a qualified medical practitioner in a small community health centre, cut off from civilisation by everything but a dusty dirt-track or rickety highway to the nearest local hospital.

 

The evolution and facilitation of such ambitions for UK doctors has led to a recognition that all such trips should be fundamentally questioned in terms of firm ethical considerations. Principle to these is this: are you going to make a sustainable, positive difference to the health and lives of the community you will be serving? While enthusiasm for such a project will be spilling over, most high-profile charities, such as MSF and VSO, require a number of years of postgraduate training before allowing medical workers to work within their projects. This is with good reason, for the very point made earlier in this paragraph. While enthusiasm may be undying, if your skills and experience are not sufficient you may well end up doing little good, or even harm overall to the community you aim to serve, treat and protect.

 

However, being that bright eyed enthusiast myself, and resisting the temptation to work in such a setting yet for the reasons above, I am aware that we may be peddling attitudes that undergraduates perceive to be restrictive, even unhelpful to encouraging such students with these ambitions. There has, on my behalf at least, been a form of transition from one viewpoint to the other. But none of us who have got ourselves to grades where we are nearly or actually qualified to work as a medical practitioner abroad should forget the frustration of restrictions to ambition, especially when those restrictions are advocated by those who are seen to be working within the field. Perhaps we could be accused of a transition to ’party-poopers’.

 

We should not forget or neglect this group, who are ideally placed for Global Health work and can be a vital part of building capacity in such settings, for several reasons:

 

  1. They are the future in the field of global health. Encouraging their participation is essential to maintaining and increasing UK practitioners.
  2. They are often more ideally placed in their life – ie unattached, unmarried, without children – than older colleagues, making them more adaptable and easier for them to go abroad.
  3. Gaining experience of such work at an earlier career stage can accelerate clinical acumen and skills invariably, and make them more useful on return as a more qualified practitioner, with the reflections and past experience of such work.

 

While all the Royal Colleges, to varying degrees, are taking a lead in facilitating their trainees who wish to work abroad to do so, there are no outlets or official stamps of approval for foundation programme doctors to do the same and no mandate for them to do so within the foundation curriculum. So the recent changes to ‘Tomorrow’s Doctors’ could give the justification for including more global health related objectives within this curriculum.

 

There are several options and new ideas for this group of doctors. Mentor placements should be considered as a potential way for juniors with inappropriate experience to gain it, ahead of being a fully responsible practitioner. VSO, MSF or other development charities could attach end of foundation or mid-foundation doctors to a full practitioner, relating to their chosen/preferred speciality if necessary for a short period of time – say 3 months. This could be part of 6 month package that would see them do the DTMH or similar course.

 

There are also countless tales of specialist trainees who took time off for a year/2 years to work abroad on a project of some sort. These include jobs as research assistants or occasionally leading research as a development of undergraduate work, internships at Departments of Health, NGOs or Global Health Institutions such as WHO or UNICEF. On top of this, Educational Development such as Diploma’s or an MSc, with study leave used for such courses or time out being taken between foundation and specialist programmes, have become a regular option within junior trainees. This type of work, background academic and skill acquisition, may be the best way for junior trainees with such interests to feed their development in this area at this stage of their career.

 

The counter argument to foundation trainees with such interests ‘indulging’ themselves in such projects and ideas is that they should be focusing on developing their core clinical skills at this level, and be undistracted by such ambitions. The latter of these is of course true, although many may venture that these jobs taken on within the foundation programme use these trainees for service provision and do not allow them to develop these skills as intended. Furthermore, these trainees are adults, who have come through a challenging and stimulating undergraduate curriculum, who are perfectly capable of taking focussed initiative in an area where they feel they wish to develop their career.

 

In summary, I believe there is a case to develop a role for junior doctors who do not have membership exams or 4/5 years experience within the profession to work within low income settings. But in today’s environment, with limited funding within the NHS and our International Development budget not even achieving the paltry 0.7% GDP promised, such ideas are unlikely to be considered practical or implementable. But this is a debate within mentors, academics, doctors and employees within Global Health that is worthy of discussion and development. Who are we to stop the next generation taking it on?

Permanent link to this article: http://almamata.org.uk/stuck-in-the-middle-foundation-and-junior-specialty-trainees-and-global-health-work/

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