Archive for the ‘Books and Writing’Category

Diseases That Changed The World

In the book Twelve Diseases That Changed Our World, Irwin Sherman describes how microbes have impacted populations, altered history, devastated populations, felled great thinkers and, in the process, transformed politics, public health, and economics. He discusses how smallpoxtuberculosissyphilisAIDSinfluenzabubonic plaguecholeramalariayellow fever, hemophilia, porphyria, and the plant disease behind the Irish Potato Famine have altered history in an informing and entertaining manner.

Bubonic plague is mainly a disease in rodents and fleas (Xenopsylla cheopis).

US News and World Report interviewed Sherman about his book and about What Disease Mean in the Modern World. A related article from Nursing Degree.net’s blog entitled 10 Diseases That Totally Changed the World similarly discusses the ways in which diseases have impacted the course of history.


Global Health Watch 3-Add your Case Studies to the Alternative World Health Report

Global Health Watch 3
Examining the World’s Health from an Alternative Perspective
Call for Case Studies and Testimonies
Contribute to the Alternative World Health Report

The Global Health Watch provides a platform for activists  to share experiences and inform each other with practical examples and theoretical analyses  to strengthen local, national, regional and global campaigns towards  Health for All!

This is a great way to get involved with the People’s Health Movement from a research/academic standpoint.

How you can voice your views:

The Global Health Watch is putting out a call for the submission of country or region specific case studies and testimonies. These case studies and testimonies will form part of the electronic platform of the alternative world health and selected case studies shall also be incorporated into the final document of Global Health Watch 3 – scheduled for publication in 2011.

Some suggestions: Read the rest of this entry →

30

04 2010

Global Pulse Blog now on MedPedia

Some exciting news to share: Global Pulse Blog is now syndicated on MedPedia’s News & Analysis section!  About MedPedia:

The Medpedia Project is a long-term, worldwide project to evolve a new model for sharing and advancing knowledge about health, medicine and the body among medical professionals and the general public. This model is founded on providing a free online technology platform that is collaborative, interdisciplinary and transparent. [Read more.]

As a fellow organization that believes in open-access publishing, peer review, and online innovation, we applaud MedPedia’s work, and are proud to be part of it.  If you have a Medpedia profile, we invite you to check out ours, follow our blog and join our discussions!

23

04 2010

The Danger of a Single Story by Chimamanda Adichie

Katherine Ellington shared this video with us last weekend at the 2009 AMSA Global Health Leadership Institute in Virginia.  Chimamanda Adichie, author of the acclaimed novels Purple Hibiscus and Half of a Yellow Sun, gives a TED Talk on her childhood in Nigeria and her personal discovery of how biases and assumptions are embedded in the stories we hear and read: Read the rest of this entry →

23

10 2009

New Book on Reproductive Health and Human Rights

From the University of Pennsylvania Press, comes a new book titled Reproductive Health and Human Rights: The Way Forward.  Edited by Laura Reichenbach of the Population Council and Mindy Jane Roseman of Harvard Law School, the book reflects on the past fifteen years of international efforts surrounding health, poverty, and gender inequality, with special focus on the consequences of the 1994 United Nations International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD) and its resulting Programme of Action.

From the publisher’s website:

The book grapples with fundamental questions about the relationships among population, fertility decline, reproductive health, human rights, poverty alleviation, and development and assesses the various arguments — demographic, public health, human rights-based, and economic — for an against ICPD today.

A number of the chapters address institutional challenges to ICPD and consider how the challenging political, religious, academic, and disciplinary contexts matter.  Other chapters engage operational and conceptual issues and whether ICPD has been able to move the reproductive health agenda forward on topics such as maternal mortality, abortion, HIV/AIDS, adolescents, reproductive technologies, and demography.  Finally, several chapters examine how ICPD has been sidelined by emerging health and development agendas and what could be done in response.  Unlike any book yet published, Reproductive Health and Human Rights: The Way Forward examines the state of the arguments for reproductive health and rights from a multidisciplinary perspective that provides policymakers, scholars, and activists with a better understanding of how reproductive health and rights have developed, their place in the global policy agenda, and how they might evolve most effectively in the future.

To read an excerpt from the book, click here.

11

07 2009

News Round-Up: H1N1, Technology, and More

A quick round-up of cool stuff in global health news:

The Global Health Magazine discusses use of technology for health in resource-poor settings.

The New England Journal of Medicine sets up an Online First page for H1N1 (a.k.a. Swine-Origin Influenza)

Doctors Without Borders / Médecins Sans Frontières release The Photographer, a graphic novel documenting their humanitarian missions in Afghanistan.

More coming soon!

14

05 2009