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Healthcare delivery and access to medicines

  • Neglected diseases
  • Innovative healthcare for chronic diseases
  • New threats to access to medicines: drug resistance, counterfeits, etc.
  • Impact of global health Initiatives
  • Primary healthcare: measuring progress
  • Community participation in health systems
  • Access to emergency obstetric care
  • Hospitals: new challenges in the context of globalization

In this Category

From the BC era to Cyberknives

An interview with Dr. Krishnan Ganapathy

April 23, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, Health information, training, and technologies
From the BC era to Cyberknives
The Stereotactic Radiotherapy and Radiosurgery team at Apollo Cancer Hospitals, Madras, Dr. Krishnan Ganapathy third from the left.
Following his morning presentation on mobile healthcare (mhealth) in rural India, Dr. Krishnan Ganapathy of Apollo Hospitals, Chennai, India, granted International Communications Volunteers (ICV) an interview to discuss the impact of Information and Communications Technology on healthcare. As a pioneer in the areas of telemedicine and mhealth, Dr. Ganapathy gave us a balanced history of medical technology, outlining its benefits and drawbacks. He also critiqued the current state of medical Information Technology (IT), offering his recommendations to ensure a bright future for healthcare technology.
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PL05 - IT and the Future of Healthcare: "Cough into a phone, and get a diagnosis"

April 21, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PL05 - Global Access to Health, Health information, training, and technologies
PL05 - IT and the Future of Healthcare: "Cough into a phone, and get a diagnosis"
Satellite dish in rural Mali, near Niafunke. Photo by V. Krebs, ICVolunteers.org
The benefits of Information Technology (IT) in healthcare are creating "boundless opportunities in a borderless world", according to speaker Dr. Ganapathy. Access to healthcare and support for care professionals in remote rural areas is being transformed by the internet and telecommunications. Resources are being better utilised as the need for physical mobility of equipment, care providers and patients is minimised.
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PS14 - Web-based Health Communities: What's Behind the Hype?

April 21, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PS014 - Web-Based Health Communities, Health information, training, and technologies
PS14 - Web-based Health Communities: What's Behind the Hype?
In the midst of rapid technological advances, Dr. Margaret Usher-Patel hosted an interactive session concerning web-based health communities and how we can improve global access to information. Presenters collectively identified the need to create low bandwidth solutions for developing countries and avoid duplication of services through partnerships between platforms. Although these systems are still in their infancy, this session was filled with exciting prospects for what is yet to come!
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Six months in Gaza

An interview with Claire Colliard, Founder and Executive Director, Centre for Humanitarian Psychology, Switzerland

April 21, 2010
Type/Items(s): Health threats and access to health at times of crisis, Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PS015 - Global Mental Health
Six months in Gaza
Photo by Mariam Hamed, submitted to ICVolunteers.org in the context of the GreenVoice call for creative photography
Following her presentation on Capacity Building for Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Humanitarian Emergencies in the Gaza Strip, Claire Colliard, Founder and Executive Director, Centre for Humanitarian Psychology, Switzerland agreed to do a short interview with the Conference Reporters Team. She described her work in the Gaza Strip, where she is putting in place a mapping of the mental health systems in the region.
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Crises Management: SARS, Avian Flu, and now H1N1 - what Changed?

Interview with Dominique Legros, WHO Medical Officer

April 20, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, Health governance and policies, PS035 - Pandemic Preparedness and Response
Crises Management: SARS, Avian Flu, and now H1N1 - what Changed?
Dr Dominique Legros (right) carrying out surveillance activities at a small health centre near the village of Bakua Mayi, Democratic Republic of Congo, in the context of an ebola haemorrhagic fever outbreak. Photo: Christopher Black, WHO.
An interview with World Health Organization (WHO) Pandemic Medical Officer, Dominique Legros, about lessons learned during the H1N1 flu pandemic in 2009. SARS, Avian Flu and now H1N1 - what changed?
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Interview with Ellen t'Hoen of UNITAID in Geneva, Switzerland

April 20, 2010
Type/Items(s): Health threats and access to health at times of crisis, Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PS034 - HIV/AIDS Programmes
Interview with Ellen t'Hoen of UNITAID in Geneva, Switzerland
How can the leading pharmaceutical companies be convinced to join the Medicines Patent Pool Initiative? When can production of the first new therapies by generic drug makers be expected? What would be a reasonable price? We talked to Ellen t`Hoen of UNITAID, Geneva, an organisation seeking to increase access to treatment for HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis, about these issues and his participation in the Geneva Health Forum.
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PS01 - Migrant Access to Health in Switzerland: From Policy to Practice

April 20, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, Mobility and migration, PS001 - Migrant Access to Health in Switzerland, Health information, training, and technologies
PS01 - Migrant Access to Health in Switzerland: From Policy to Practice
Photo by John Brownlee, ICVolunteers.org
The four speakers engaged in a discussion involving important issues concerning migrants and the Swiss healthcare system, proposing several improvements. Topics included the migrant health strategy, the Swiss healthcare systems, migrant resources and transcultural competence.
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PS13 - Neglecting Neglected Diseases: More of the Same?

April 20, 2010
Type/Items(s): Health threats and access to health at times of crisis, Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PS013 - Neglecting Neglected Diseases
PS13 - Neglecting Neglected Diseases: More of the Same?
Photo by John Brownlee, ICVolunteers.org
The huge range of tropical diseases, which come under the umbrella of 'Neglected Diseases', are often masked by malaria, TB and HIV/AIDS in developing countries. Human African trypanosomiasis (HAT/sleeping sickness), Viseral Leishmaniasis (VL), primary health care (PHC) in regions of sub-Saharan Africa, particularly Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Kenya, were some of the main issues discussed in this session.
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PS18 - Emergency and Essential Surgery: Where do we Stand?

The challenges, solutions, and positive outlook for surgery in public health

April 20, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PS018 - Emergency and Essential Surgery, Health information, training, and technologies
PS18 - Emergency and Essential Surgery: Where do we Stand?
Dominican Red Cross volunteer in Cite Soleil, Port-au-Prince, attending 10-year old girl, Photo: American Red Cross/Talia Frenkel
In exciting presentations from Haiti, Cameroon and the World Health Organization, the speakers highlighted the challenges of providing surgical care in low-resource settings as well as the measures currently underway to improve surgical access and outcomes worldwide.
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PS23 - Improving Patient-Provider Communication in the Context of Chronic Disease

How healthcare providers can improve communication to enhance patient understanding of diagnosis and treatment

April 20, 2010
Type/Items(s): Healthcare delivery and access to medicines, PS023 - Improving Patient-Provider Communication in the Context of Chronic Disease, Health information, training, and technologies
PS23 - Improving Patient-Provider Communication in the Context of Chronic Disease
Photo by John Brownlee, ICVolunteers.org
The importance of communication between patients and health care providers was the key topic of this session. As well as highlighting how communication can affect patients' adherence to treatment and influence where they are likely to seek medical treatment, the members of the panel spoke about barriers to communication in the developing world and discussed possible interventions to remedy this.
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Quotes For Health
quoteSo I can't show you how, exactly, health care is a basic human right. But what I can argue is that no one should have to die of a disease that is treatable.quote

- Paul Farmer