Details

Foundations for Global Health Practice


Foundations for Global Health Practice


1. Aufl.

von: Lori DiPrete Brown

72,99 €

Verlag: Wiley
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 02.01.2018
ISBN/EAN: 9781118603635
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 576

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Beschreibungen

<b>An essential introduction to global health in the modern world</b> <p><i>Foundations for Global Health Practice</i> offers a comprehensive introduction to global health with a focus on ethical engagement and participatory approaches. With a multi-sectoral perspective grounded in Sustainable Development Goals, the text prepares students for engagement in health care and public health and goes beyond traditional global health texts to include chapters on mental health, agriculture and nutrition, water and sanitation, and climate change. In addition to presenting core concepts, the book outlines principles for practice that enable students and faculty to plan and prepare for fieldwork in global health. The book also offers perspectives from global health practitioners from a range of disciplinary and geographic perspectives.</p> <p>Exercises, readings, discussion guides and information about global health competencies and careers facilitate personal discernment and enable students to systematically develop their own professional goals and strategies for enriching, respectful, and ethical global health engagement.</p> <ul> <li>Understand the essential concepts, systems, and principles of global health</li> <li>Engage in up-to-date discussion of global health challenges and solutions</li> <li>Learn practical skills for engagement in health care and beyond</li> <li>Explore individual values and what it means to be an agent for change</li> </ul> <p>Prevention, cooperation, equity, and social justice are the central themes of global health, a field that emphasizes the interdisciplinary, cross-sector, and cross-boundary nature of health care on a global scale. As the world becomes ever smaller and society becomes more and more interconnected, the broad view becomes as critical as the granular nature of practice. <i>Foundations for Global Health Practice</i> provides a complete and highly relevant introduction to this rich and rewarding field.</p>
<p>List of Figures, Tables, and Boxes xix</p> <p>Preface xxii</p> <p>About the Author xxv</p> <p>Contributors xxvii</p> <p>Acknowledgments xlv</p> <p>Introduction xlvii</p> <p><b>Part I Global Health Concepts</b></p> <p>1 <b>Developing a Global Perspective </b>3<br /><i>Lori DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>Sharing Perspectives in a Diverse Learning Community 5</p> <p>Sources of Global Health Information 7</p> <p>Literature and the Arts 21</p> <p>Chapter Summary 24</p> <p>Review Questions 25</p> <p>Key Terms 25</p> <p>References 25</p> <p>2 <b>What Is Global Health? </b>27<br /><i>Lori DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>Global Health: An Evolving Concept 28</p> <p>Definitions of Global Health 33</p> <p>What Are the Challenges to Human Health? 38</p> <p>Measuring Global Health Status 39</p> <p>Social Determinants of Health and the Social-Ecological Model 46</p> <p>Chapter Summary 51</p> <p>Review Questions 52</p> <p>Key Terms 52</p> <p>References 53</p> <p>3 <b>Global Health Care Systems and Universal Health Care </b>57<br /><i>Lori DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>Health Systems and How They Work 58</p> <p>Universal Health Care 65</p> <p>Chapter Summary 69</p> <p>Review Questions 69</p> <p>Key Terms 69</p> <p>References 69</p> <p>4 <b>Global Health Policy and the Sustainable Development Goals </b>71<br /><i>Lori DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>From Alma-Ata to the Millennium Development Goals 72</p> <p>The Sustainable Development Goals 76</p> <p>Chapter Summary 80</p> <p>Key Terms 81</p> <p>Exercise: Young Leaders Speak Out 81</p> <p>Review Questions 81</p> <p>References 81</p> <p>5 <b>Global Health Challenges for the 21st Century </b>83<br /><i>Sean McKee and Katherine Leach-Kemon</i></p> <p>What Is the Global Burden of Disease? 84</p> <p>How to Access and Use GBD Findings 88</p> <p>Main Findings from the GBD Study 91</p> <p>Using the GBD to Inform Health Policy in the Coming Years 102</p> <p>Chapter Summary 104</p> <p>Key Terms 104</p> <p>Review Questions 104</p> <p>Suggested Reading 105</p> <p>References 105</p> <p>6 <b>The Right to Health and a Framework Convention on Global Health </b>107<br /><i>Eric A. Friedman, Fernanda Alonso, Ana Ayala, Andrew Hennessy-Strahs, and Sarah Roache</i></p> <p>The Right to Health 109</p> <p>A Framework Convention on Global Health 111</p> <p>Precedents and Examples of Governance for Global Health 116</p> <p>Chapter Summary 119</p> <p>Key Terms 120</p> <p>Review Questions 120</p> <p>Suggested Reading 120</p> <p>References 120</p> <p>7 <b>Global Mental Health, Behavioral Medicine, and Wellness </b>125<br /><i>Giuseppe Raviola</i></p> <p>Defining Global Mental Health, Behavioral Medicine, and Wellness 126</p> <p>Burden of Illness and the Treatment Gap: The Need for Integration 128</p> <p>Gaps in Governance, Policies, and Financing: The Need for Systems 131</p> <p>Strategies for Program Design and Sustained Service Delivery: The Need to</p> <p>Strengthen Existing Health Systems 136</p> <p>Global Health Worker Wellness: The Need for Professional and Personal</p> <p>Development 137</p> <p>Conclusion 138</p> <p>Chapter Summary 139</p> <p>Review Questions 139</p> <p>Key Terms 139</p> <p>References 140</p> <p>8 <b>Water, Sanitation, Hygiene, and Health </b>143<br /><i>Eric Hettler</i></p> <p>Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene: Contextual Considerations 144</p> <p>Chapter Summary 163</p> <p>Key Terms 163</p> <p>Review Questions 163</p> <p>Suggested Reading 164</p> <p>References 164</p> <p>9 <b>Food, Agriculture, and Nutrition </b>167<br /><i>Michele Joseph Aquino</i></p> <p>Global Food System, Local Solutions 168</p> <p>The Farm Spectrum 169</p> <p>Introduction to Food Security 173</p> <p>Waste and Wealth 178</p> <p>Agricultural Technology and Public Health 180</p> <p>Sustainability and Equity: Highlights from Successful Programs 184</p> <p>Chapter Summary 186</p> <p>Key Terms 187</p> <p>Review Questions 187</p> <p>Exercise: Thinking Critically about Genetically Engineered Crops 188</p> <p>Suggested Reading 188</p> <p>References 189</p> <p>10 <b>Climate and Health </b>193<br /><i>Jonathan Patz and Evan DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>What Is Climate Change? 194</p> <p>Public Health Risks of Climate Change 196</p> <p>Public Health Responses to Climate Change 204</p> <p>Chapter Summary 208</p> <p>Key Terms 208</p> <p>Review Questions 209</p> <p>References 209</p> <p>11 <b>Information Communication Technology and Health </b>217<br /><i>Laura E. Jacobson and Alain B. Labrique</i></p> <p>The Landscape 218</p> <p>Considerations 228</p> <p>Conclusion 230</p> <p>Chapter Summary 230</p> <p>Key Terms 231</p> <p>Review Questions 231</p> <p>References 231</p> <p>12 <b>Scaling Up in Global Health </b>233<br /><i>Richard Cash and Sophie Broach</i></p> <p>What Is Scale-Up? 234</p> <p>The Story of BRAC: Experiences in Successfully Scaling Up Public Health</p> <p>Programs 236</p> <p>Engaging in Global Health Practice with Scale in Mind 241</p> <p>Chapter Summary 244</p> <p>Key Terms 244</p> <p>Review Questions 244</p> <p>References 245</p> <p><b>Part II Global Health Practice</b></p> <p>13 <b>Global Health Experiences </b>249<br /><i>Katarina M. Grande and Lori DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>Global Health Experiences: A Focus on Learning 250</p> <p>Types of Global Health Experiences 251</p> <p>Applying for and Funding Global Health Experiences 257</p> <p>Chapter Summary 259</p> <p>Activity: Develop a Country Profile 259</p> <p>Key Terms 268</p> <p>Suggested Reading and Resources 268</p> <p>References 269</p> <p>14 <b>Global Health Competencies for the Health Sciences </b>271<br /><i>Gabrielle A. Jacquet, Jessica Evert, and Kevin Wyne</i></p> <p>Background 272</p> <p>Levels of Experience and Training 273</p> <p>Timing of Experience 274</p> <p>Scope of Practice 275</p> <p>Additional Competencies 275</p> <p>Chapter Summary 277</p> <p>Case Study for Group Discussion 278</p> <p>Key Terms 279</p> <p>Suggested Resources 279</p> <p>References 280</p> <p>15 <b>Working with Communities </b>281<br /><i>Lori DiPrete Brown and Sophia Friedson-Ridenour</i></p> <p>Community-Based Participatory Research: Core Concepts 282</p> <p>Insights for CBPR Practice: A Case Study from Ecuador 286</p> <p>CBPR Methods and Global Health: A Mixed-Methods Approach 293</p> <p>Chapter Summary 297</p> <p>Review Questions 297</p> <p>Key Terms 298</p> <p>References 298</p> <p>16 <b>Transformative Engagement and Leadership for Global Health </b>299<br /><i>C. Perry Dougherty</i></p> <p>A Framework for Transformative Leadership 301</p> <p>Three Lenses of Reflection and Discernment 302</p> <p>Historical and Cultural Context of Your Leadership 302</p> <p>Centrality of Relationship 303</p> <p>Skills of Transformative Engagement and Leadership 304</p> <p>Practicing Transformative Engagement and Leadership: A Three-Part</p> <p>Exercise 308</p> <p>Chapter Summary 311</p> <p>Key Terms 312</p> <p>Review Questions 312</p> <p>Suggested Reading 312</p> <p>References 313</p> <p>17 <b>Guidelines for Planning a Global Health Learning Experience </b>315<br /><i>Sweta Shrestha</i></p> <p>Elements of a Global Health Field Course 316</p> <p>Case Example: Nepal Global Field Course 322</p> <p>Chapter Summary 329</p> <p>Key Terms 329</p> <p>Suggested Reading 329</p> <p>18 <b>Navigating Global Health for Student Organizations </b>331<br /><i>Alexis Barnes and Alyssa Smaldino</i></p> <p>Students as Global Health Partners 332</p> <p>Student Organizations and Harnessing the Power of Partnership 334</p> <p>Structures of Accountability 338</p> <p>Chapter Summary 340</p> <p>Review Questions 340</p> <p>Key Terms 340</p> <p>Recommended Reading 341</p> <p>References 341</p> <p>19 <b>Planning for Health and Safety </b>343<br /><i>Katarina M. Grande</i></p> <p>Before You Go 343</p> <p>While You Are There 346</p> <p>Chapter Summary 349</p> <p>Key Terms 349</p> <p>Discussion and Practice Assignment 349</p> <p>Suggested Reading 349</p> <p>References 350</p> <p>20 <b>Global Health Professional Skills and Careers </b>351<br /><i>Sharon Rudy and Angelina Gordon</i></p> <p>What Are the Various Careers in Global Health? 352</p> <p>What Does Success Look Like? 353</p> <p>What Are Employers Looking For? 355</p> <p>How to Build Your Skills for the Road Ahead 357</p> <p>Chapter Summary 363</p> <p>Discussion Questions 364</p> <p>Activity: Skills Inventory 364</p> <p>Key Terms 367</p> <p>Suggested Reading 368</p> <p>References 368</p> <p><b>Part III Global Health Perspectives</b></p> <p>21 <b>So You Want to Save the World? First, You’ve Got to </b><b>Know It </b>371<br /><i>Brian W. Simpson</i></p> <p>References 374</p> <p>22 <b>Since You Asked </b>375<br /><i>Lori DiPrete Brown</i></p> <p>Honduras 375</p> <p>Nicaragua 377</p> <p>Guatemala 378</p> <p>Your First Global Health Experience 379</p> <p>23 <b>Leadership Lessons from the Last Mile </b>381<br /><i>Carrie Hessler-Radelet</i></p> <p>Walking “the Last Mile” with Daisy Duarte in Mozambique 381</p> <p>Leadership Lessons 383</p> <p>Recommended Reading 384</p> <p>24 <b>How Global Health Identity Politics Harms Local Communities </b>387<br /><i>James Kassaga Arinaitwe</i></p> <p>Ebola Orphans in Africa Do Not Need Saviors 388</p> <p>What It Means to Be an Orphan 388</p> <p>Rethinking How to Provide Aid 389</p> <p>Community versus Institution 390</p> <p>Implications for the Future 390</p> <p>References 391</p> <p>25 <b>Gender and Community Well-Being </b>393<br /><i>Araceli Alonso and Teresa Langle de Paz</i></p> <p>Come on a Journey to Lunga Lunga 394</p> <p>The Situation upon Arrival 394</p> <p>Women as Agents 395</p> <p>What Can Be Done? 397</p> <p>What Happened: The Surface and the Layers 398</p> <p>A Model to Replicate: Health by All Means 401</p> <p>Key Terms 403</p> <p>Recommended Reading 403</p> <p>References 403</p> <p>26 <b>Strengthening Immunization Programs </b>405<br /><i>James Conway</i></p> <p>Herd Immunity and Immunization Goals 406</p> <p>Decision Making and Vaccine Hesitancy 406</p> <p>Vaccine Access 408</p> <p>Vaccine Development 409</p> <p>Suggested Reading 410</p> <p>References 411</p> <p>27 <b>HIV: US to Global Perspectives </b>413<br /><i>Katarina M. Grande</i></p> <p>HIV Background 414</p> <p>Strategies for Ending HIV 414</p> <p>Working in HIV Globally and Locally 415</p> <p>Suggested Reading 416</p> <p>References 417</p> <p>28 <b>Tuberculosis and the Long and Winding Road toward a Global Health Career </b>419<br /><i>Carolina Kwok</i></p> <p>Recommended Reading 422</p> <p>References 422</p> <p>29 <b>Linking Research to Applied Field Work </b>423<br /><i>Devy Emperador</i></p> <p>From Basic to Applied Research: The Public Health Laboratory Scientist 423</p> <p>Public Health Laboratory in a Resource-Limited Setting 424</p> <p>Conclusion 425</p> <p>Recommended Reading 426</p> <p>References 426</p> <p>30 <b>A Call to Surgeons to Advance Global Health </b>427<br /><i>Girma Tefera</i></p> <p>Addressing the Surgical Workforce Shortage 428</p> <p>The Way Forward: Partnerships 430</p> <p>Recommended Reading 431</p> <p>References 431</p> <p>31 <b>Stories and Balance </b>433<br /><i>James F. Cleary</i></p> <p>Devastating Impacts 434</p> <p>Balance 436</p> <p>Recommended Reading 437</p> <p>References 437</p> <p>32 <b>The Global Burden of Avoidable Childhood Blindness </b>439<br /><i>Luxme Hariharan</i></p> <p>Discussion Questions 443</p> <p>Recommended Reading 443</p> <p>References 443</p> <p>33 <b>Global Health Nursing </b>445<br /><i>Linda C. Baumann and Karen D. Solheim</i></p> <p>Global Perspective of Nursing 445</p> <p>Contributions 446</p> <p>Challenges 447</p> <p>Resources 448</p> <p>Insights 448</p> <p>Reflective Questions 449</p> <p>Suggested Reading 449</p> <p>References 449</p> <p>34 <b>Contributions of Pharmacists in Global Public Health </b>451<br /><i>Trisha Seys Ranola and Connie Kraus</i></p> <p>Suggested Reading 455</p> <p>References 456</p> <p>35 <b>Reflections and Stepping-Stones to a Career in Global Health </b>457<br /><i>Cindy Haq</i></p> <p>Family and Values 457</p> <p>Medical School and Residency 458</p> <p>Early International Experience 458</p> <p>Negotiating Professional Responsibilities 459</p> <p>Stepping-Stones 459</p> <p>36 <b>Global Health and Education </b>463<br /><i>Nancy Kendall</i></p> <p>Suggested Reading and Resources 467</p> <p>References 468</p> <p>37 <b>The Importance of Narrative to Global Health Research and Practice </b>469<br /><i>Louise Penner</i></p> <p>References 473</p> <p>38 <b>The Urban Opportunity for Global Health </b>475<br /><i>Jason Vargo</i></p> <p>Recommended Reading 479</p> <p>References 479</p> <p>39 <b>Building Effective Health Systems in Transitional Societies </b>481<br /><i>Augustino Ting Mayai</i></p> <p>Investments and Impacts in Health 481</p> <p>Successful Practices: Health Extension Workers in Ethiopia 483</p> <p>Successful Practices: Decentralization, Access, and Coordination in Rwanda 483</p> <p>Ongoing Efforts in South Sudan 484</p> <p>Lessons for South Sudan and Other Transitional Societies 485</p> <p>References 486</p> <p>40 <b>Grand Challenges in Global Health and the Role of Universities </b>489<br /><i>Keith Martin</i></p> <p>Universities as Partners in Global Health 489</p> <p>The Consortium of Universities for Global Health 490</p> <p>A Triple Challenge 491</p> <p>Addressing the Neglected Foundation of Development 492</p> <p>Priorities for Action 493</p> <p>Conclusion 495</p> <p>References 495</p> <p><b>Glossary </b>496</p> <p><b>Index </b>505</p>
<p><b>Lori DiPrete Brown</b> has been engaged in global health education at the University of Wisconsin-Madison for fourteen years, where she serves as a Distinguished Faculty Associate in the School of Medicine and Public health and the School of Human Ecology. She is an Associate Director of the Global Health Institute at UW-Madison. DiPrete Brown began her career as a Peace Corps Volunteer in Honduras, where she lived and worked in a residential program for teenage girls who had been orphaned or abandoned during childhood. Her subsequent global health practice, research, teaching, writing and public speaking has focused on providing quality health care and social services that address the needs of women, children and historically marginalized populations in low-resource settings. DiPrete Brown has collaborated with international agencies including the U.S. Peace Corps, USAID, the Pan American Health Organization, WHO, Care, and Save the Children. She has worked with partners to strengthen systems of care fifteen countries around the world including Costa Rica, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Chile, Mexico, Ecuador, Cameroon, and Ethiopia. DiPrete Brown holds degrees from Yale University, the Harvard School of Public Health, and the Harvard Divinity School. In 2012, she was awarded the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health Dean's Teaching Award for her contributions to global health education. She blogs about global health and social change, and has written a novel about her work with young women entitled <i>Caminata: A Journey</i>. <p><b>Blog: http://globalhealthreflections.wordpress.com</b>
<p><b>An Essential Introduction to Global Health in the Modern World</b> <p><i>Foundations for Global Health Practice</i> offers a comprehensive introduction to global health with a focus on ethical engagement and participatory approaches. With a multi-sectoral perspective grounded in Sustainable Development Goals, the text prepares students for engagement in health care and public health and goes beyond traditional global health texts to include chapters on mental health, agriculture and nutrition, water and sanitation, and climate change. In addition to presenting core concepts, the book outlines principles for practice that enable students and faculty to plan and prepare for fieldwork in global health. The book also offers perspectives from global health practitioners from a range of disciplinary and geographic perspectives. <p>Exercises, readings, discussion guides and information about global health competencies and careers facilitate personal discernment and enable students to systematically develop their own professional goals and strategies for enriching, respectful, and ethical global health engagement. <ul> <li>Understand the essential concepts, systems, and principles of global health</li> <li>Engage in up-to-date discussion of global health challenges and solutions</li> <li>Learn practical skills for engagement in health care and beyond</li> <li>Explore individual values and what it means to be an agent for change</li> </ul> <p>Prevention, cooperation, equity, and social justice are the central themes of global health, a field that emphasizes the interdisciplinary, cross-sector, and cross-boundary nature of health care on a global scale. As the world becomes ever smaller and society becomes more and more interconnected, the broad view becomes as critical as the granular nature of practice. <i>Foundations for Global Health Practice</i> provides a complete and highly relevant introduction to this rich and rewarding field.

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