Author: ihsection
Students: Internship in Maternal Mortality for Summer/Fall 2011
This opportunity was originally posted on the Maternal Mortality Daily blog. Please contact the referenced individuals for details about the program.
The Safe Motherhood Program at UCSF is accepting applications for an upcoming internship opportunity in the Copper-belt of Zambia. The intern will spend the majority of their time in the labor and gynecology wards at a district hospital and several peri-urban clinics, gaining an understanding of front-line maternal health service delivery and research.
Position Description:
This internship is based in the Copperbelt Region of Zambia. The intern will work on a study that aims to reduce maternal mortality and morbidities in Zambia and Zimbabwe caused by obstetric hemorrhage. This is a cluster randomized control study that compares outcomes based on evidence from intervention and control clinics. The intervention clinics in this study are the clinics that are using the NASG (Non-pneumatic Anti-Shock Garment) as a first aid device for patients suffering from hypovolemic shock caused by bleeding during pregnancy.
Some of the duties of the intern include:
-Providing logistic support for the local Zambian team – distributing supplies, copies, etc.
-Reviewing data collection forms
-Encouraging protocol adherence
-Conducting trainings with local hospital and clinic staff
-Visiting the study clinics
-Following up on cases
-Liaising with the San Francisco office and the in-country staff
Desired qualifications: Experience in international settings, interest in maternal health, research experience, familiarity with clinical environments. Must be highly detail-oriented, be well organized and have excellent follow-through skills.
Time requirements: Must be able to commit a minimum of 2 months in the Copperbelt, although 3 months is preferred.
Compensation/Funding: Interns must secure their own funding for travel and lodging. There is no funding for these positions but it is valuable experience for someone who wants to make a huge difference in women’s lives.
To learn more about the NASG (Life Wrap), visit: www.lifewrap.org.
If interested, please send your CV and cover letter to Elizabeth Butrick at ebutrick@globalhealth.ucsf.edu, with a copy to Kathleen McDonald at kathleen.p.mcdonald@gmail.com
Global Health News Last Week
The IH Newsletter is up! The Winter 2011 edition features several articles written by section members on various topics, a social media corner, fellowships and internships, and member publications. Check it out, and please consider contributing to the Spring edition!
On Tuesday, USAID administrator Dr. Rajiv Shah gave the 2011 David E. Barmes Global Health Lecture at NIH. His speech, titled “Addressing Grand Challenges:The Role of Science in Global Health Development,” can be viewed here. The transcript can also be downloaded, or you can read it on USAID’s website here. Also, you can check out commentary by Amanda Glassman, Sarah Arnquist, and K4Health.
Cholera, as usual, remains in the news: experts say the outbreak in Haiti has plateaued, while the one in Papua New Guinea rages on, and it is just getting started in Ghana. Meanwhile, health officials in Bangladesh prepare to launch the world’s largest cholera vaccine trial near Dhaka, the capital.
Scientists from Edinburgh University claim that the malarial parasite is particularly deadly because it competes with other strains of the infection by focusing on producing quickly-replicating cells, thus “duking it out” in the bloodstream. On a more positive note, Kenyan scientists believe that a spider that is attracted to the smell of human sweat may aid in the fight against the disease.
UN experts maintain that the laws in many Asian countries obstruct access to HIV/AIDS care and services. Nineteen countries in the region outlaw same-sex relations, and 29 criminalize prostitution. The remarks were made just before the Global Commission of HIV and the Law took place in Bangkok, where experts from around the world gathered to discuss HIV-related legal and human rights issues. Also, China has declared its intention to bring the spread of AIDS under control by 2020.
According to the WHO, Moldova has emerged as the world leader in per-capita alcohol consumption.
Experts have been sounding the alarm about rising food prices, and many analysts have linked the crisis to the recent riots in north Africa and the Middle East.
Obama and the Republicans continue to battle over the budget, as the president requests a modest increase in global health funds while Congressional Republicans try to slash spending.
And The Band Played On: Politics, People and the AIDS Epidemic (Book Review)
Guest blogger: Barbara Waldorf, RN
For everyone concerned about public health, HIV-AIDS, MSM and human rights are key issues. Homosexuality is illegal in 80 countries worldwide. A major battle is brewing in Uganda, with a virulent anti-homosexuality bill in parliament and donors like Sweden threatening to cut all aid if it is passed. There are implications for all public health projects. Randy Shilts wrote eloquently about these issues at the beginning of the AIDS epidemic. Despite the extraordinary progress that has occurred over the last 30 years, what he explored is as relevant today as it was when it was written.
Marginalized groups of people die while the world does nothing, despite key players being able to stop the slaughter. Randy Shilts states he wrote this book, so “…it will never happen again, to any people, anywhere.” “Never again” was said after the holocaust in Europe. The AIDS epidemic can be seen as another holocaust. The overarching issues this book reveals are universal. It forces us to contemplate: What would I do? What is the impact of our prejudices? How do we treat the “other”? And how do we care for those that society has disenfranchised – whether they were Jews in Europe in the 1930s, American gay men in the 1980s or undocumented aliens today?
And the Band Played On is a compelling account of the first five years of the AIDS epidemic. Shilts takes us on a journey, starting with an unknown disease in Africa, to the first CDC case report of unusual pneumonia appearing in young gay men, to the growing awareness of the disease by the mainstream society. The breadth of research is staggering, covering the growing controversy within the gay community; the scientists researching a cause while competing for fame; the politicians more worried about popularity than people dying; and the impact of the conservative fiscal policies of Ronald Reagan that cut funding for the CDC and government health facilities, just when they needed to engage the biggest pubic health threat of the century. Shilts delineates the complex response to the emergence of AIDS that was impacted by prejudice against gays and other marginalized people. He was a journalist, and wrote this book to catalogue the lack of response, that caused a huge number of deaths and allowed the virus to spread virtually unchecked for years.
His premise was that because the virus emerged in groups the mainstream culture wanted to ignore, scientists, doctors and politicians were blinded and failed to halt the spread of AIDS. Shilts forces us to question the social and political milieu this medical crisis arose within, which prevented any unified response. It always takes enormous energy and commitment to see our own blind spots. For anyone interested in public health, the important questions that arise are: Who is the “other” now? Do I have the vision and courage to respond to the next crisis, no matter where it arises? Given these questions, this book becomes a contemporary cautionary tale. Shilts warns us to chronicle the ways that AIDS was ignored so that we can have the humility not to repeat history with the next disease that appears among the disenfranchised. He makes the point that despite apparent differences, we are all human beings, intimately connected. He leaves us to contemplate how to create a world where there is no “other.”
Barbara Waldorf is an RN and working on her MPH at Boston University School of Public Health with a concentration in International Health. Having lived and worked in Asia, Europe and Australia, her current interest is in the emerging field of Global Health nursing and learning from other nurses who are active in this field.
Recent Blog Maintenance
We would like to express my gratitude toward all of the recent guest bloggers who have contributed posts about their experience and/or interests over the last few weeks. Taking a break from writing for the blog has allowed me to focus on the Winter newsletter and do some much-need maintenance here:
- The blogroll has been updated, and several blogs have been added. Check it out, and feel free to suggest other global health blogs to include!
- Past entries have been consistently classified into appropriate categories, and several new topic categories have been created. You can now read posts that discuss research topics, chronic diseases, technology, human rights, disaster response, pharmaceuticals, vector-borne disease, eHealth, and policy-related topics.
- All of the weekly global health news round-ups can be seen here, and all of the guest blog posts can be found here.
