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Amanda Stueve

Visions of Success: US Doctors For Africa Episode - Google Video - 0 views

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    This video explains one "grassroots" solution to the healthcare crisis in Africa called "U.S. Doctors for Africa. The video comes from a meeting and has a lot of other stuff, but the important part is the explanation of how U. S. Doctors for Africa planned/plans to make a difference.
  •  
    This video explains one "grassroots" solution to the healthcare crisis in Africa called "U.S. Doctors for Africa. The video comes from a meeting and has a lot of other stuff, but the important part is the explanation of how U. S. Doctors for Africa planned/plans to make a difference.
Amanda Stueve

AFRICA HEALTH STRATEGY: 2007-2015: - 0 views

  • as the potential to achieve even more if it can overcome the large burden of disease which continues to be a barrier to faster development.
  • has the potential to achieve even more if it can overcome the large burden of disease which continues to be a barrier to faster development
    • Amanda Stueve
       
      Challenges & plans
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    This is one solution to help solve healthcare issues in Africa. It was developed by Africans, and looks like one of the solutions it would be worth examining in a presentation.
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.
Lynn Dee

The Fonly Institute: Problems with the $100 laptop - 0 views

  • Despite the fact that neither the children, their schools nor their parents will have anything to say in the creation of the design, large orders of multi-million units are planned.
    • Lynn Dee
       
      Have they asked the people who are getting these computers what they want, maybe they would have some new ideas that woudl make the computer keyed more to what they want and need rather than to match them to the upper middles class.
  • It would seem apparent that serious social research must be done to determine family, village and societal attitudes before proceeding with a program like OLPC.
Lynn Dee

XO-1 (laptop) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • OLPC is funded by a number of sponsor organizations, including AMD, Brightstar Corporation, eBay, Google, Marvell, News Corporation, SES Global, Nortel Networks, and Red Hat. Each company has donated two million dollars.[6]
    • Lynn Dee
       
      If more companies were generous like this, think of what we could accomplish without the restraint of money.
  • The laptops will be sold to governments, to be distributed through the ministries of education willing to adopt the policy of “one laptop per child”
  • ndia has rejected the initiative
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Human power is planned, allowing operation far from commercial sources of power.
  • All of the software on the laptop will be free and open source.[30]
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.
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).
  • ...11 more annotations...
  • ‘‘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.
jcoop11

Division of Communicable Disease Prevention and Control (DDC) - 0 views

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    Real African dieases with real prevention and control plans
Amanda Stueve

US Doctors For Africa - 0 views

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    Describes the solution/plan/methodology of U.S. Doctors for Africa.
Aaron Scott

G8 breaks pledges on poverty, millions dying : Mail & Guardian Online - 0 views

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    Article that gives an example of a "Planner", the Group of Eight, that is failing to meet its Big Plans/Goals.
elligant35

Global Development: Solutions to Poverty - 0 views

    • elligant35
       
      Solution to poverty this article suggest using housing vouchers on government developed property. Among other solutions it proposes is to educate and provide better health care. The education they propose is to enable people to find some kind of trade to support themselves.
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    Again, good analysis of the problems but no actionable plans.
Brandon Fox

OLPC News: Top Ten Issues of One Laptop Per Child - 0 views

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    A look at the Top Ten Issues of One Laptop Per Child
Josh Sparkman

Central African Republic rebels to liberate child soldiers - CNN.com - 0 views

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    Very recent site (last week) regarding Central Africa's plan to start sending child soldiers back home to families, by pressure from the UN
drumnman

lesson plans - 0 views

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    How to teach about deforestation
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

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