Announcement: American-Iranian Academic Exchange

Section members and other interested professionals! Please see the following announcement from Taraneh Salke, who is leading an effort to organize a public health exchange to Iran. This exchange, while modeled after APHA’s sponsored delegation to Cuba, is not directly affiliated with APHA. If you are interested in learning more, please contact her at taranehsalke@yahoo.com.

If you would like to publicize commentary on the exchange described below, you may do so in the Comments section here, or contact me directly at jmkeralis [at] gmail [dot] com.


Dear colleagues,

My name is Taraneh Salke, an APHA member. I am writing to invite the APHA community to join an academic exchange trip to Iran tentatively scheduled for October of 2014. The American Iranian Academic Exchange is the first of its kind in nearly four decades, presenting a historic opportunity for public health professionals to bridge the distance of culture and politics, taking advantage of new openings created by high level dialogue between the American and Iranian governments. The exchange aims to support global academic cooperation through scientific exchange with our Iranian colleagues. This exchange is open to all professionals from all health and medical fields.

The visit will help us gain an understanding of the Iranian medical care structure, its integration with public health systems. The country’s successful family planning and reproductive health programs have led to maternal mortality rates at levels comparable with the United States, a total fertility rate of 1.6, and rates of contraceptive use that are among the best in the world. Iran’s public health establishment has also pursued a rigorous immunization campaign, reaching 99% coverage rates for most indicators tracked by UNICEF.

To learn more about Iran’s health care system, we will visit hospitals, clinics and medical universities. Also on our itinerary are visits to the Pasteur Institute of Iran and a generic pharmaceutical manufacturing plant in Isfahan.

In joining this project, we also join in the prospect of fostering collaborative research and the sharing of ideas, culture and values between American and Iranian health communities. There is a strong desire among Iranian professionals of all fields and many government officials to improve relations with the United States. During our travels, we will also be exposed to Iran’s rich culture–including Persian culinary arts, a storied architecture and the country’s famous rug crafts–which had the Huffington Post calling Iran a top tourist destination for 2014.

This trip is led by myself, Taraneh Salke, and my team. Since 1999, I have been working to promote women’s health and rights in the Middle East, founding the nonprofit organization Family Health Alliance (FHA) in 2005 to carry out my vision. In my position as FHA’s Executive Director, I have designed and implemented over 30 capacity building programs in Afghanistan, training hundreds of local health providers on strategies to reduce maternal and infant mortality. I have also studied Iran’s health care system extensively, coordinating two previous projects with Iranian medical universities and public hospitals.

More information on me and the work of Family Health Alliance is available at the following links:
http://www.taranehsalke.com/
http://www.familyhealthalliance.org/

The American/Iranian Academic Exchange is modeled after an APHA-sponsored delegation to Cuba that I had the good fortune to be a part of. The APHA community has helped build bridges between the scientific communities around the world, and this is an opportunity to continue in that tradition.

In November 2013, I traveled to Iran meeting with university officials and medical professionals who have eagerly agreed to participate in and host the academic exchange. There is a great deal of excitement over this trip among members of the Iranian scientific community. I have been asked to convey their desire to establish connections with their counterparts in the American public health community. They are hopeful that interactions during the exchange will serve as a springboard for collaborative research and joint publications, as well as leading to American academics teaching in Iran, and vice versa.

They have also invited exchange participants to present before our Iranian colleagues at a major medical university in Tehran, an opportunity available to those joining us in the October. The deadline for submitting abstracts is in June.

I am approaching APHA members’ to explore your interest in participating in this historic trip. The deadline for submitting visa processing documents is April 30th. This will reserve applicants a spot to be considered for the exchange trip. The deadline for making a final decision and submitting a security deposit is in June. We have requested for an extension on the visa application, please let me know if you require additional time for the visa application.

Please, if you have any other questions, feel free to contact me.

Sincerely,
Taraneh Salke
Executive Director, Family Health Alliance
taranehsalke@yahoo.com

Violence against Women: An Important Global Health Priority

This is a guest post by Sarah M. Simpson.

Violence against women is a major health problem around the world and continues to be an important cause of morbidity and mortality among women.  Women suffer violent deaths either directly or indirectly, and this violence is also can important cause of morbidities such as mental, physical, sexual and reproductive health outcomes and is also linked to important risk factors for poor health, such as alcohol and drug use, smoking and unsafe sex.  The problem is so widespread that it has its own Millennium Development Goal 3 which seeks to “promote gender equality and empower women” along with Millennium Development Goal 5 which seeks to “improve maternal health”. However, in the light of several publicized acts of violence against women, this important issue is once again at the forefront of everyday discussion. Some key facts about violence against women from a United Nations factsheet:

  • A WHO multi-country study found that between 15–71% of women aged 15- 49 years reported physical and/or sexual violence by an intimate partner at some point in their lives.
  • These forms of violence can result in physical, mental, sexual, reproductive health and other health problems, and may increase vulnerability to HIV.
  • Risk factors for being a perpetrator also include low education, past exposure to child maltreatment or witnessing violence in the family, harmful use of alcohol, attitudes accepting of violence and gender inequality.
  • Risk factors for being a victim of intimate partner and sexual violence include low education, witnessing violence between parents, exposure to abuse during childhood and attitudes accepting violence and gender inequality.

In the wake of the world-wide Valentine’s Day  One Billion Rising events calling people everywhere to unite and bring an end to violence against women, The Guardian’s “Global Development podcast” has recently released a podcast proceeding  the United Nations Fifty-seventh session of the Commission on the Status of Women.

podcast

In this podcast, deputy editor of Guardian global development Liz Ford speaks with Irene Khan, head of the International Development Law Organization; Korto Williams, country director of ActionAid Liberia; Andrew Long from the U.K. Foreign Office’s prevention of sexual violence in conflict initiative; and Lakshmi Puri, deputy executive director of U.N. Women, about current global efforts to stop violence against women.

Against the backdrop of these movements to unite people world-wide, all eyes will be on policymakers at this upcoming session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women to produce and deliver results abroad and even in the United States.  Recently, two UN experts addressed the US State House of Representatives to approve the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) which lapsed in 2011. Overall, the impact of violence against women needs to continue to be researched and explored from a public health perspective.

Rave Review of “Rights-Based Approaches to Public Health,” by our own Dr. Elvira Beracochea

Congratulations, Dr. Beracochea! A glowing review of her new book, Rights-Based Approaches to Public Health, was recently published in PsycCritiques, a collection of reviews from the American Psychological Association. I have posted the review below. This is a wonderful accomplishment for Dr. Beracochea and her fellow editors and authors of this book. The IH section is fortunate to have you!


Public Health and Human Rights: Realigning Approaches to Improve Global Health Problems

Reviewed by
Will Ross

At a time of heart-crushing stories of human deprivation due to regional conflict, forces of nature, or uncaring and at times immoral state policies, the world’s attention turns to the public health community for problem assessment and effective deployment of resources and programs to stabilize critical conditions on the ground. With great timing, the editors of Rights-Based Approaches to Public Health offer a targeted and innovative strategy to
combat global health problems. Balanced, comprehensive, and steeped in the historical traditions of human rights, the book persuasively moves the reader from abstract conceptions of inalienable human rights to evidence-based, pragmatic solutions that highlight the systematic integration of human rights principles in human development work.

For the audience of public health students, seasoned and novice public health
professionals, health care practitioners, and policy experts, the editors provide an overview of a rights-based approach that is elegant in simplicity and highly executable in design, referencing the UN’s (2000) General Comment 14 on the Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Physical and Mental Health: “Every human being is entitled to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health conducive to living a life of dignity” (para. 1).

The editors and authors present a framework for a rights-based approach that is
normatively based on international human rights standards and that cannot be easily dismissed as political in nature or hegemonic. Most important, the editors charge some of the world’s most respected public health practitioners and human rights advocates to craft sensible methods of operationalizing the basic human rights principles outlined in the UN’s (2003) Human Rights-Based Approach: Statement of Common Understanding, which posits that human rights are universal, inalienable, interdependent, and interrelated. In essence,
they have created a veritable “how-to” guide that, when implemented, can in sustainable fashion uplift the human condition worldwide.

Universality of Rights-Based Approaches: Uniting Us All?

As detailed by the editors, a cardinal feature of a rights-based approach is its timelessness and universality, increasing its appeal to professionals who labor to keep the plight of marginalized communities on the global radar screen. By using the universal language of rights-based approaches, public health professionals may be better positioned to leverage greater social and political capital and enhanced resource allocation for their cause. Striking examples of rights-based approaches in diverse settings are outlined in the book, from demands for water rights in Haiti to conflict-affected settings such as the Gaza Strip and advocacy of children’s rights in Kosovo.

If the dramatic contemporary examples outlined in the book are not sufficient, the authors could easily extend the discussion further and call attention to the severe drought and attendant famine in Somalia, where the UN’s Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit (2011) found that nearly 250,000 people continue to face imminent starvation, or the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where U.S. researchers note that more than 400,000 women are raped each year (Peterman, Palermo, & Bredenkamp, 2011). In all instances a rights-based approach can reverse the erosion of socioeconomic stability that fosters such
injustices while holding the state accountable for protecting and fulfilling the rights of individuals in affected communities.

Inherent in a rights-based approach claim that individuals have the right to the highest attainable standard of health is the realization that health professionals cannot disentangle physical health from the myriad social and economic factors that influence health. If a rights-based approach empowers rights holders in asserting that human rights are universal and inalienable, then it is the incumbent responsibility of the duty bearer—entities sanctioned to protect society—to ensure the fulfillment of those rights. This conceptual framework is in contradistinction to traditional needs-based approaches, whose altruistic intent and actions may be perceived as both patronizing and lacking in accountability, and thus not amenable to legal redress in the event of adverse outcomes.

Marrying Rights-Based Approaches to Health Care Reform

A critical chapter for U.S. readers (Chapter 4) is “A Rights-Based Approach to Health Care Reform.” In the United States, profligate health care spending has not translated into improved health outcomes when compared with those of other developed countries. A fundamental, if not fatal, flaw in the U.S. health care delivery system is the disconnect between the high-quality acute, specialty care available to some who have the ability to pay in a system rooted in free enterprise and the haphazard primary and preventive care that is unevenly distributed across locales. Although unintended, this result is not unexpected in a country that has failed to embrace a full definition of health.

The divide on the proper role of government in health care in the United States was presaged in the response to the World Health Organization’s (1946) definition of health, promulgated in the 1948 UN convention:

a state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease and infirmity. . . . Governments have a responsibility for the health of their peoples which can be fulfilled only by the provision of adequate health and social measures. (p. 2)

This provision was rebuffed on the grounds that it was outwardly socialistic in intent and lacked legal standing, on the basis of the interpretation that health care was not among the enumerated rights in the U.S. Constitution.

The perennial argument surrounding the government’s role in health care has since devolved into rants about market-based reforms as opposed to moral-based claims of health care as a right for every citizen. Such a false dichotomy only promotes greater social division; consensus will be gained when every country affirms the connection between health and human rights. A rights-based approach to health, which has been relatively absent from the contemporary discourse on health reform, could effectively realign staunch political forces around the unassailable conceptual framework of health as a public good rather than a commodity.

The rights-based approach permits a more nuanced view of the roots of health
inequities; consequently, more systematic steps can be taken to ameliorate inequities since a framework exists that addresses the social determinants of health. Rights-Based Approaches to Public Health outlines several international treaties, such as the 1977 International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, which would reduce stillbirth rates and infant mortality by paving the way for special protection for mothers in the childbirth period. Although the United States signed the treaty, it did not ratify it and so failed to allocate the requisite resources to enforce the treaty.

Hopefully there will be greater U.S. embrace of the UN’s Millennium Development Goals—explicit milestones for the realization of global human development that offer an opportunity to reduce health inequities by spurring economic development. The United States, in its effort to reduce health inequities as outlined in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (2011) “Health Disparities and Inequalities Report,” will find willing partners in realizing two seminal Millennium Development Goals: reducing child mortality
and improving maternal health.

Limitations of Rights-Based Approaches

The authors and editors of Rights-Based Approaches to Public Health rightfully
acknowledge that the still-nascent field of rights-based public health has limitations that have constrained its widespread adoption. Rights-based approaches rest on the belief that individual empowerment and restored human dignity can be ensured through programmatic efforts that address the social determinants of health. Social determinants of health, as espoused by the World Health Organization’s Commission on Social Determinants of Health (2008, p. 2 of Executive Summary), are “the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work and age . . . . In their turn, poor and unequal living conditions are the consequence of poor social policies and programmes, unfair economic arrangements, and bad politics.”

Criticism abounds that such an approach is too costly, time intensive, and inherently difficult to measure since it involves restructuring the social fabric of disadvantaged communities and raises the potential for conflicts due to encroachment on national sovereignty. There is correspondingly a lack of solid evidence supporting the effectiveness of rights-based approaches. Finally, a rights-based approach in public health can come across as canonical, even prescriptive in its assertion that individual rights warrant the same protection as societal ones (Berman, 2008).

The book concludes, in powerful tones, that rights-based approaches provide public health professionals the framework and the infrastructure to address the needs of vulnerable populations and society at large. Public health students, academicians, and both medical and public health practitioners should feel empowered to act with this transformative approach that asserts the dignity of humankind.

References
Berman, G. (2008). Undertaking a human rights-based approach: Lessons for policy, planning, and programming. Bangkok, Thailand: UNESCO Asia and Pacific Regional Bureau for Education.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2011, January 14). CDC health disparities and inequalities report—United States, 2011. MMWR: Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 60(Suppl).

Peterman, A., Palermo, T., & Bredenkamp, C. (2011). Estimates and determinants of sexual violence against women in the Democratic Republic of Congo. American Journal of Public Health, 101, 1060–1067. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2010.300070

United Nations. (2000). The right to the highest attainable standard of health. Retrieved from http://www.unhchr.ch/tbs/doc.nsf/(symbol)/E.C.12.2000.4.En

United Nations. (2003). Human rights-based approach: Statement of common
understanding. Retrieved from http://www.unicef.org/sowc04/files/AnnexB.pdf

United Nations Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit. (2011, November 18). Famine continues: Observed improvements contingent on continued response. Retrieved from http://www.fsnau.org/in-focus/famine-continues-observed-improvements-contingentcontinued-response

World Health Organization. (1946). Constitution of the World Health Organization. Geneva, Switzerland: Author.

World Health Organization Commission on Social Determinants of Health. (2008). Closing the gap in a generation: Health equity through action on the social determinants of health. Geneva, Switzerland: World Health Organization.

One Step Forward, Two Steps Back: Court Decision in China Upholds HIV Employment Discrimination

China always seems to find its way into human rights headlines these days. Now that the sound and fury of Liu Xiaobo’s Nobel Peace Prize has died down, the People’s Republic is in the news again: this time for a landmark court decision in which a man lost a discrimination case for being denied a teaching job based on his HIV status. Wu Xiao (an alias that means “Little Wu”), a 22-year-old college grad, passed a series of written tests and an interview for the position, so he should have been perfectly qualified for the post. However, when his mandatory blood test revealed his HIV status, the local education bureau in Anqing rejected his application. The court ruled that the criteria for hiring civil servants (which disqualifies HIV-positive individuals from being hired) overrules a 2006 law that prohibits discrimination against persons with HIV and their families. The verdict is highly discouraging to Chinese AIDS advocates.

Discrimination against persons with HIV is nothing new. The history of the disease is littered with horror stories of stigma, persecution, and invasion of privacy, and discrimination continues all over the world in various forms, including cultural norms and, in some cases, even laws. In Chile, HIV-positive women are frequently pressured to get sterilized, and some are even sterilized without consent. Twenty-two countries, including Russia, Egypt, and South Korea, will deport foreign nationals based solely on HIV status, and other countries (such as Malaysia and Syria) will not allow students with HIV to apply for study. Gugu Dlamini, a SouthAfrican woman, was beaten to death after speaking openly about her HIV status at an AIDS awareness gathering on World AIDS Day in 1998.

China is certainly no stranger to HIV/AIDS discrimination. From the government’s frantic cover-up of the “Bloodhead Scandal” (in which 30,000-50,000 people were infected through blood transfusion programs in the 90s) to present-day violations of patient privacy laws, Chinese HIV patients face harsh stigma from healthcare providers, government officials, and their friends and neighbors. On the surface, the country has been somewhat proactive in mitigating this: it passed its first laws regarding HIV patient privacy in 1988, and it is illegal to disclose personal information of HIV-positive individuals. Chinese President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao make visible appearances with people with AIDS every year on World AIDS Day, and ARVs are available to AIDS patients for free. However, privacy laws are routinely violated, and people with HIV are ostracized from their families and communities. The government routinely harasses and often imprisons AIDS activists (Hu Jia, for example, was held under house in 2006 and has been in jail since 2008). Fear, ignorance and the threat of discrimination discourage individuals from getting tested and deter many who already know their status from seeking treatment. Chinese AIDS patients are encouraged by their providers to use fake names and IDs when seeking treatment and picking up medicines.

Wu’s lawyers plan to appeal the decision, but advocates are frustrated. “The entire H.I.V. community had high hopes, but now the door appears to be shutting for people who want to use the courts to fight against discrimination,” said Yu Fangqiang, whose organization represented Wu in his case. Others, however, urge patience, and point out that the fact that the case was even heard demonstrates progress. Either way, it is crucial to end the institutionalization of discrimination against HIV. Cultural norms will not change until the official government position changes, and, along with it, its laws. People will not seek treatment until they are no longer afraid to come out of hiding.