Graduate Student Fellowships In Humanitarian Shelter and Settlements (Habitat for Humanity International/USAID)

The deadline however for submission is June 23rd, 2017.

Fellowship Description: USAID/OFDA seeks to support the thesis or professional report writing efforts of two Fellows during the summer of 2017. Fellows will be graduate students currently enrolled full-time in accredited North American graduate school programs or North Americans studying abroad in similar graduate programs, in the following disciplines:

  • City, Urban, Environmental, or Regional Planning, and
  • Architecture or Architectural engineering

Ideally, successful candidates would be first-year, Masters-level, graduate students, in the programs listed above, who are interested in commencing work on a thesis or professional report as a requirement for graduation. The topic of this graduate student research would be focused on any of the following topics of interest:

  • Managing the transition of humanitarian shelter to permanent housing
  • Linking and incorporating hazard mapping efforts into settlements planning to promote risk reduction
  • Post-disaster neighbourhood-level planning efforts designed to promote safer, sustainable, and resilient shelters and settlements
  • Post-disaster emergency urban planning to reconfigure disaster-affected settlements to promote risk reduction, increase shelter opportunities, and accelerate recovery
  • Measuring the contribution of humanitarian shelter to the recovery of disaster-affected households and/or communities.
  • Identification and review of assessment tools (including GIS and open source mapping technologies) intended to better understand and deal with the urban context, thereby informing efforts to support effective and expeditious humanitarian S&S sector activities
  • Informal land management and tenure mechanisms that promote risk reduction or ensure occupancy of land and housing for displaced/vulnerable populations.

 

https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B7JS6r4wXAqWeUZuRGdpUHdtRGs

Global News Round Up

Politics & Policies

Member governments of the World Health Organization are increasingly talking about how to bring about “fair” pricing of medicines.  And what’s clear is that it should not be based on how much you would pay to save your life, a senior WHO official said this week.

“More than 11 million people are alive today thanks to this man’s creation of PEPFAR, the US AIDS program that has been saving lives and preventing new HIV infections for over 10 years, with strong support from political leaders right, left, and center,” the musician captioned a photo of the activists on Instagram. “That progress is all at risk now with President Trump’s budget cuts, which will mean needless infections and lives lost.”

Tom Frieden, head of the CDC from 2009 to 2017, told graduating medical students that we face challenges from pathogens, and from politicians.  “Einstein wrote, ‘Striving for social justice is the most valuable thing to do in life.’”

The Trump administration’s budget recommendation may take a “wrecking ball” to foreign aid but the development community needs to seize this opportunity to build a broader constituency, according to the chief executive officer of CARE USA.
Trump would cut the annual global health budget by about 26 percent, or around 2.2 billion in the 2018 fiscal year that begins October 1, decreasing it from about $8.7 billion in the current fiscal year budget to less than $6.5 billion.  The program that would be hit hardest would be family planning.

Canada has scored well in a global study to assess how effectively countries use their healthcare systems to avoid preventable deaths, but the country still has plenty of room for improvement.

Applause, cheers, Ethiopian flags, mobile phones held high and a crush of well-wishers greeted Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Tuesday evening after his election as WHO’s next Director-General.

Programs, Grants & Awards

UGA’s Global Health Institute begins search for Holbrook Endowed Professor in Global Health.

“When it comes to the issues of health, there are no walls dividing impoverished and the wealthy.  Illness and disability know no borders.  In today’s global environment, disease is no longer confined to one population, but has the potential to impact millions in disparate regions of the world in a very short period of time. That’s why the work of the Old Dominion University Center for Global Health is so vital.”

Research

Inhibition of programmed death-ligand 1 (PD-L1) with atezolizumab can induce durable clinical benefit (DCB) in patients with metastatic urothelial cancers, including complete remissions in patients with chemotherapy refractory disease.

In high-income settings, the prevalence of tobacco use has been shown to be significantly higher in people living with HIV than among HIV-negative individuals of the same age and sex distribution. This at-risk pattern is one of the biggest threats to the number of years of life saved with antiretroviral therapy (ART).

A new study reports the identification and early validation of a drug for treating cryptosporidiosis, a diarrheal disease which is a major cause of childhood mortality in low and middle income countries.

Diseases & Disasters

The Indian health ministry has confirmed its first cases of the Zika virus, the World Health Organization has said, the latest nation to be affected by the mosquito-borne virus that sparked global concern.

A new study led by Colorado State University researchers found that Aedes aegypti, the primary mosquito that carries Zika virus, might also transmit chikungunya and dengue viruses with one bite.

Indian officials who were aware of the country’s first Zika case months ago, failed to alert the public.

With rising number of measles cases, Germany plans to fine parents who do not seek medical advice on vaccinating their children.

A new Ebola vaccine is on its way to the DRC to help fight a recent small outbreak.

Unrefrigerated vaccine and syringe reuse has led to the death of 15 children in South Sudan.

Technology

Alma Sana, an immunization advocacy group has won a share of the $1 million Global Healthcare innovation award for a baby’s bracelet that would be punched every time the child gets vaccinated.

LimbForge, a non-profit organization is training local doctors and humanitarian NGOs in Haiti to create low cost, culturally appropriate prosthetic limbs for using 3D printing technology.

Environmental Health

Kabwe is the world’s most toxic town, according to pollution experts, where mass lead poisoning has almost certainly damaged the brains and other organs of generations of children – and where children continue to be poisoned every day.

Paraguay has made the most progress in providing access to safe water to about 94% of its rural population (up from 51% in 2000).

According to a new WHO report, resource intensive tobacco farming is environmentally costly and its impact include soil degradation and non-biodegradable litter in the form of cigarette butts.

Equity & Disparities

According to a survey conducted by the Human Rights Watch group, people with disabilities and older people are more likely to be caught in the fighting in South Sudan.

The first class of 24 students from 12 countries graduated from the University of Global Health Equity (UGHE) in Kigali (Rwanda) this year.

A new study of the mortality data between 2000 and 2013 after the roll out of universal health coverage in Brazil, reveals greater decreases in mortality rates among blacks and mixed race Brazilians.

An Indian TV soap that tackles domestic violence, acid attacks and abortion of female fetuses has become the most watched TV show with nearly 400 million viewers.

Maternal, Neonatal & Children’s Health

The murder of a 3 year old girl in South Africa has put the spotlight back on the high child and adolescent homicide rates in the country.

UNICEF warns that the number of suspected cholera cases in Yemen might reach up to 130,000 in the next two weeks.

According to a new study that analysed the death rates among twins in sub-Saharan Africa, nearly one in five children born as a twin die before they turn five years old.

 

Webinar Invitation: Investing in a Robust Environmental Health System

You’re invited to attend!

Investing in a Robust Environmental Health System

June 8 from 1:30–3 p.m. EDT                                        

The National Environmental Health Partnership Council and the American Public Health Association are proud to present a live conversation on Investing in a Robust Environmental Health System on June 8 from 1:30–3 p.m. EDT. We all deserve to live in healthy environments with clean air to breathe, clean water to drink and free from physical hazards. This webinar will bring to life the Environmental Health Playbook: Investing in a Robust Environmental Health System report compiled by the National Environmental Health Partnership Council – a group of environmental health thought leaders. Experts from the environmental health workforce, academia and policy will showcase various aspects that come together to produce an environmental health system. Register today.
Welcome:

  • Georges C. Benjamin, MD, Executive Director, American Public Health Association

Moderator:

  • Laura Anderko, PhD, RN, Professor, School of Nursing & Health Studies, Georgetown University, Director, Mid-Atlantic Center for Children’s Health and the Environment

Presenters:

  • Surili Sutaria Patel, MS, Senior Program Manager, Environmental Health, Center for Public Health Policy, American Public Health Association
  • Charles D. Treser, MPH, DAAS, Executive Director, Association of Environmental, Health Academic Programs, Senior Lecturer, University of Washington
  • Jack Rayburn, MPH, Senior Government Relations Manager, Trust for America’s Health
  • David T. Dyjack, DrPH, CIH, Executive Director and CEO, National Environmental Health Association

Stay involved! Follow the conversation on social media using the hashtags #APHAwebinar and #EH4All. The National Environmental Health Partnership Council strives to support healthy people by working for healthier environments. Find out more, please visit www.apha.org/nehpc.

This webinar was funded through cooperative agreement U38OT000131 between the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Public Health Association. The contents of this webinar are solely the responsibility of the presenters and do not necessarily represent the official views of the American Public Health Association or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

We’ve just launched our new and improved website, IH Connect!

Welcome to our new and improved website, IH Connect, the unofficial home of the American Public Health Association’s International Health Section. We hope this new website will help you stay engaged with the IH section and the broader global health community.

The IH Connect website contains information about the Section’s vision and mission, leadership, and major activities, and it links to information and documents about the Section’s history and operations. It also serves as a platform for Section members to share opinion pieces, relevant news to the Section and the field of global health, and other items of interest. We encourage you to subscribe to our website to get notified by email when there is new content.

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IH Connect is brought to you by a dedicated group of IH section volunteers. If you’re interested in learning more about our work and how to get involved, click here.

We welcome your suggestions and feedback. Please feel free to email us at ihsection.communications@gmail.com

APHA releases statement: Decision to withdraw from climate agreement is a disaster for public health

APHA Executive Director Dr. Georges Benjamin has released a statement regarding President Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Agreement.


Decision to withdraw from climate agreement is a disaster for public health

Statement from Georges Benjamin, MD, Executive Director, American Public Health Association

Washington, D.C., June 1, 2017 — “President Donald Trump’s decision today to renege on U.S. commitments to fighting climate change and withdraw from the Paris Agreement has disastrous consequences for human health.

“The climate accord, which establishes a long-term framework to reduce carbon emissions among more than 190 nations, marks a historic step toward addressing one of the greatest public health challenges of our time. As a leading emitter of greenhouse gases, U.S. participation and leadership is critical to reaching target global reductions and minimizing health threats.

“This administration has already taken significant steps to roll back progress we’ve made in addressing climate change. Today’s reckless decision is further abdication of leadership at the federal level to protect public health. But our work on climate change will not be stopped. Today’s announcement underscores the importance of continued action at the state and local level to address this threat.

“The science is clear. Climate change is happening and it’s affecting our health. A changing climate affects our food supply, the spread of infectious disease, our water systems and air quality, and much more. All have significant impacts on human health.

“We will continue our efforts to educate, advocate and mobilize action around this critical public health challenge. We have designated 2017 as the Year of Climate Change and Health and the APHA 2017 Annual Meeting and Expo will focus on climate change and health in November.”

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The American Public Health Association champions the health of all people and all communities. We strengthen the public health profession. We speak out for public health issues and policies backed by science. We are the only organization that influences federal policy, has a 145-year perspective and brings together members from all fields of public health. Visit www.apha.org.

For more information, please contact David Fouse, 202-777-2501.