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Amanda Stueve

HEALTH-AFRICA: Beef up Budget Allocations to Achieve MDGs - 0 views

  • the Africa Health Strategy 2007-2015.
  • 15 percent of national budgets to health care,
  • It also urged governments to engage civil society and line ministries in mobilising resources for tuberculosis (TB).
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  • ‘‘Eight million Africans are dying from HIV/AIDS, TB and malaria every year. We want to stop this,'' Regis Mtutu of the Treatment Action Campaign
  • Regarding the commitment to put aside 15 percent of national budgets for health services, ‘‘only Botswana and The Gambia have met this promise'', Mtutu said.
  • included a plan to set up pharmaceutical plants for producing life-prolonging anti-retroviral drugs (ARVs). Mtutu pointed out that ‘‘the ministers for finance and industry were not part of the discussion. To succeed, the health ministers need mandates from their finance and industry counterparts.
  • policy officer at Oxfam Kenya office, told IPS that ‘‘‘MDGs' is just a label. It is a brand. ‘‘HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria and other diseases are really the issue. It is about systems to deliver health care. This should be the starting point to meeting the MDGs,'' said Edete.
  • lthough governments have committed themselves to the MDGs and the Abuja target, some prefer to move at their own pace. Kenya's government, for example, says it will commit 12 percent of its national budget to health by 2008
  • ‘‘It should be a step-by-step approach. Each country has its own strategy. If you set a time frame it might not work. For example, you cannot expect (strife-torn) countries like Somalia, Zimbabwe and the Democratic Republic of Congo to reach the 15 percent target. It is not practical,'' she told IPS.
  • the political and economic crisis in Zimbabwe deserves special mention as it is also a health crisis for Africa. People living with HIV/AIDS in Zimbabwe cannot obtain the care they need and the climate of violence is perpetuating the epidemics of HIV and TB. ‘‘The shockwaves from the crisis in Zimbabwe are reverberating throughout the continent as refugees seek health care and other services in neighbouring countries. Our health ministers must speak out on Zimbabwe on health and humanitarian grounds,'' the coalition argued.
  • a new report, ‘‘Paying for People'', published this month (April), Oxfam estimates that 13.7 billion US dollars must be invested every year to appoint an additional 1 million teachers and 2.1 million health care workers urgently needed to break the cycle of poverty in Africa.
  • ‘‘Today in too many of the world's poorest countries health and education services are dependent on a handful of workers struggling heroically to do their jobs on pitiful wages and in appalling conditions. Becoming a doctor, nurse or teacher is like signing a contract with poverty,'' Oxfam's Elizabeth Stuart wrote in the report.
  • Africa has 13 percent of the global population and 25 percent of the global burden of disease but only 1.3 percent of the global workforce.''
    • Amanda Stueve
       
      good stat
  • The report cites Tanzania as an example. This southern African country produces 640 doctors, nurses and midwives each year. But to reach the World Health Organisation's recommended staffing levels within 10 years it would need to produce 3,500 such health workers each year. Another example is Malawi where only nine percent of health facilities have adequate staff to provide basic health care. The country loses around 100 nurses each year ‘‘who emigrate in search of a better wage'', according to the Oxfam report. Charo told IPS that Kenyan health workers are not only moving overseas but are also seeking opportunities in the private sector for better pay. ‘‘If you work for government, you get 12,000 Kenya shillings (about 172 US dollars) but in the NGO or private sector you earn 40,000 shillings (nearly 572 US dollars) a month. People are tempted to move on.'' (END/2007)
    • Amanda Stueve
       
      good stats
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    Has some good statistics. Lists lots of problems in African heatlhcare. Has some info on Africa Health Strategy, and proposes more money will solve more problems.
Ryan Felber

afrol News - Lack of healthcare workers a drain on new HIV/AIDS plan - 0 views

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    Lack of doctors and healthcare professionals keeps AIDs treatments from those who need it.
Ryan Felber

Lack of doctors said hurts AIDS patients - Yahoo! News - 0 views

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    Another article about how we are lacking doctors and how it effects AIDs patients
jcoop11

THE FIGHT AGAINST AIDS AND MALARIA Dealing a Blow to Third World Diseases | IN FOCUS, 4.3 - 0 views

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    The impact of AIDS and Malaria, plus a possible solution.
Amanda Stueve

WORLD SOCIAL FORUM-CAMEROON: NGOs Long on Vision, Short on Detail? - 0 views

  • condemn globalisation, and demand an increase in development aid and local implementation of international labour standards.
    • Amanda Stueve
       
      paradoxical? maybe!
  • Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) overseen by the World Bank and IMF.
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    Presents differing ideas on globalization and financial aid to Africa.
Amanda Stueve

DEVELOPMENT: A Little Aid, A Big Favour - 0 views

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    This article gives insight into the reasons that throwing money at issues does not work. It shows where the money goes instead of going to actually buy the things that might solve the problem.
kgarland

AIDS Orphans - 0 views

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    Has great stats, about young children dealing with poverty and aids
kgarland

World Simulation Ideas - 95 views

I think it would be great to add more natural disasters, along with trying to bring out the slave trade, I think we could make the slave trade more part of the game. Also I think it would be great ...

worldsim

Amanda Stueve

Partners In Health: Haiti / Zanmi Lasante - 0 views

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    This is the organization I (will have) talked about in my presentation. Specifically, this is the first project for Partners In Health, Zanmi Lasante, which treats all kinds of illnesses for the people of Haiti, but sees a lot of TB and HIV/AIDS.
jcoop11

WHO | Tuberculosis - 0 views

shared by jcoop11 on 15 May 07 - Cached
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    This is where I got most of my stats about TB for my presentation. The most interesting part for me is the connection that TB has with HIV/AIDS.
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    This is where many of the TB stats will come from. Outlines a plan for MGD's.
tfritz

YouTube - Aids HIV Bayer - 0 views

shared by tfritz on 15 May 07 - Cached
Ryan Felber

PlusNews Global | Great Lakes | DRC | DRC: Sexual violence, lack of healthcare spreads ... - 0 views

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    An article about how the lack of healthcare has effected the pygmies in the Congo.
Ryan Felber

People 'simply die for lack of health care' - 0 views

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    Lack of healthcare in america. Places like Kentucky and the south mostly
wirth7

Doubling Aid Will Not Help World's Poor: Newsroom: The Independent Institute - 0 views

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    relates to the article we read in class about planners and searchers.  shows that throwing money at the problem wont fix it.
Ryan Felber

Drug Access | Lack of Doctors, Health Workers in Developing Countries Hinders Fight Aga... - 0 views

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    Tells of how we are seriously lacking doctors and what that is doing to countries in Asia and other places.
Amanda Stueve

CHALLENGES 2006-2007: Malawi On Track to Meet Child Mortality MDG - 0 views

  • more than a million babies in the region die each year before they are a month old because of a lack of essential health care.
  • Malawi, together with Burkina Faso, Eritrea, Madagascar, Tanzania and Uganda, is regarded as having made significant progress in reducing infant deaths over the last 10 years, thanks to increased government spending on basic health care.
  • Currently infant mortality stands at 94 deaths per 1,000 live births in Malawi. A decade ago, the infant mortality rate was pegged at 146 per 1,000 live births.
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  • The Malawian government has intensified the promotion of low-technology and cost-effective measures such as vaccines against child illnesses, antibiotics to treat respiratory infections, and oral rehydration therapy against diarrhoea.
  • measures include the provision of free insecticide-treated bed nets against malaria, and education in improved family care and breast-feeding practices.
  • Illnesses such as polio and neonatal tetanus have been virtually eradicated.
  • Japanese figures show fewer than two deaths per 1,000 live births.
  • Tokyo has provided financial aid for the procurement of drugs and preventive materials.
  • Annually, about 73,000 children in Malawi die from preventable diseases. One in every five children dies before she or he is a month old, and one in every eight dies before her or his fifth birthday.
  • Malnutrition is associated with 54 percent of all children's deaths in Malawi, says the country's former advisor for health, Wesley Sangala. According to him, seven in 10 deaths of under-five children are attributable to diarrhoea, acute respiratory infections, measles, malaria and nutritional deficiencies.
  • She points out that malnutrition rates among Malawian children have not improved significantly since 1992.
  • Almost half of all children under the age of five (48 percent) are stunted, 22 percent are underweight, 59 percent suffer from vitamin A deficiency, and 80 percent are anaemic.
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    Describes Malawi's progress towards achieving the MDG of child mortality. Has a lot of really, really good statistics. Particularly important are the things that have worked to make a difference in child mortality rates, and the specific diseases that most commonly cause death in children in Malawi.
Amanda Stueve

HEALTH-SOUTHERN AFRICA: One Million People Need AIDS Treatment - 0 views

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    Has some good statistics. Highlights the lack of treatment available to people in Africa.
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