Events Calender

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

OIE publication: Veterinary education for global animal and public health Scientific and Technical Review 28 (2), 2009

Product title :

Veterinary education for global animal and public health
Scientific and Technical Review 28 (2), 2009

Author(s) : D.A. Walsh

Summary :

This issue of the Scientific and Technical Review is devoted to the improvement of student education in global animal and public health, and all its numerous facets, in every veterinary faculty in the world. Its content will be of interest to all those involved in veterinary medicine. This set of 49 papers is devoted to defining the animal and public health education that every veterinary student in the world should receive, irrespective of their intended career path and whether or not they will be directly working within the field of veterinary public health. Other papers are devoted to the question of how this education can be achieved within an already packed curriculum.


Friday, January 22, 2010

OC Hubert is open!

hubert photo Fellowship in International Health






“Out of the classroom, out of the country, under the guidance of outstanding mentors, I had the opportunity to apply the theories learned and skills acquired through my M.D. and M.P.H. studies.”

- Sophie Terp, 2006 Hubert Fellow


Fellowship Overview

The CDC-Hubert Global Health Fellowship, endowed by the O.C. Hubert Charitable Trust, is designed to encourage students to think of public health in a global context. Established in 1999, the fellowship provides an opportunity for third- and fourth-year medical and veterinary students to gain public health experience in an international setting. Hubert fellows spend six to twelve weeks in a developing country working on a priority health problem in conjunction with CDC staff. Through these experiences, students establish relationships with, and receive training from, recognized experts from CDC and other national and international health agencies. Examples of students’ past experiences include:

  • Health outcome evaluation of various home drinking water treatment and storage methods in Guatemala
  • Review of antiretroviral therapy in private practice, Kenya
  • Study of the epidemiology of Lassa Fever in rural Guinea, West Africa
  • Development of surveillance systems for surgical site infections, antimicrobial use and antimicrobial resistance in a tertiary surgical center in Hanoi, Vietnam

Each year, a limited number of fellows are selected to participate in the program and receive a stipend to cover travel costs. Fellowship opportunities vary each year.

Application for the 2010-2011 fellowship class will be open from January 18, 2010 - February 19, 2010.

For eligibility and application information, please visit http://www.cdc.gov/HubertFellowship.

For more information, please e-mail hubertfellowship@cdcfoundation.org.

Support Haiti Relief through the American Red Cross

This is from the ARC website:

American Red Cross
Haiti Relief and Development

On January 12, a series of earthquakes measuring 6.5 to 7.3 on the Richter scale devastated Haiti. The American Red Cross is working with its partners in the global Red Cross and Red Crescent network, including the Haitian Red Cross, and other partners to assist those affected by this disaster.

Your gift to the American Red Cross will support emergency relief and recovery efforts to help those people affected by the earthquake in Haiti. Assistance provided by the American Red Cross may include sending relief supplies, mobilizing relief workers and providing financial resources and recovery.

Many ways to donate:
American Red Cross website
iTunes
Or text "Haiti" to 90999 to donate $10 to the Red Cross, charged directly
to your cell phone bill.

14th International Congress Infectious Disease - Miami, Florida, USA - March 9-12, 2010

14th International Congress

on Infectious Diseases (ICID)
MIAMI, FLORIDA • USA • MARCH 9-12, 2010
Organized by the International Society
for Infectious Diseases
With the
4th Regional Conferece of the International Society of Travel Medicine
II Congreso Latinoamericano de Medicina del Viajero
In collaboration with the


Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)
Pan American Association for Infectious Diseases (API)
Latin American Society of Pediatric Infectious Disease (SLIPE)


Please visit the website for more information: http://www.isid.org/14th_icid/

Global Health and Innovation Conference - April 17-18, 2010

GH/Innovate 2010
Global Health & Innovation Conference
Presented by Unite For Sight, 7th Annual Conference
Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Saturday, April 17 - Sunday, April 18, 2010

"A Meeting of Minds"--CNN

Registration & Details (Registration rate increases monthly): http://www.uniteforsight.org/conference

200 speakers, including keynote addresses by Seth Godin, Jacqueline Novogratz, Jeffrey Sachs and Sonia Sachs. Social innovation sessions by CEOs and Directors of Acumen Fund, Partners in Health, Doctors Without Borders, Save The Children, HealthStore Foundation, and many others. The conference schedule is now online.

The Global Health & Innovation Conference convenes more than 2,200 students and professionals from 55 countries who are interested in global health and international development, public health, medicine, social entrepreneurship, nonprofits, philanthropy, microfinance, human rights, anthropology, health policy, advocacy, public service, environmental health, and education.

Call For Social Enterprise Pitches: Do you have an innovative idea or a new program in development? Submit your idea for presentation. Complete details on conference website.

Keynote Speakers

"Using The Power of Stories and Tribes to Spread Your Messages and Change The World," Seth Godin, MBA, Agent of Change; New York Times Bestselling Author of Tribes: We Need You To Lead Us; Founder, Squidoo.com

Jacqueline Novogratz, MBA, Founder and CEO, Acumen Fund

Jeffrey Sachs, PhD, Director of Earth Institute at Columbia University; Quetelet Professor of Sustainable Development, Professor of Health Policy and Management, Columbia University; Special Advisor to Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon

Sonia Ehrlich Sachs, MD, MPH, Health Coordinator, Millennium Village Project

Leaders in Social Entrepreneurship Speakers

Gene Falk, Co-Founder, Executive Director, mothers2mothers

"Franchising Healthcare in Africa," Scott Hillstrom, Chairman of the Board, CEO and Co-Founder, HealthStore Foundation

"At The Intersection of Money and Meaning," Kevin Jones, Co-Founder, Good Capital

"Creating Viable Enterprises For The Base of the Pyramid," Ted London, PhD, Senior Research Fellow; Director, Base of the Pyramid Initiative, William Davidson Institute at the University of Michigan

"From Ideas To Action Workshop: Creating Viable Enterprises For The Base of the Pyramid," Ted London, PhD, Senior Research Fellow; Director, Base of the Pyramid Initiative, William Davidson Institute at the University of Michigan

"Doing More With Less," Nancy Lublin, CEO, Do Something

"Innovation in PIH Implementation Sites," Joia Mukherjee, MD, MPH, Medical Director, Partners in Health; Director, Institute for Health and Social Justice; Assistant Professor, Harvard Medical School; Division of Social Medicine and Health Inequalities, Brigham and Women's Hospital

"Enabling Prosperity by Improving Lives," Julia Novy-Hildesley, Executive Director, The Lemelson Foundation

"Achieving Global Health Through Community Wealth," Billy Shore, Founder and CEO, Share Our Strength

"Investing in Local Social Entrepreneurship in Developing Countries," Jennifer Staple-Clark, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Unite For Sight

"Solutions That Can Go Big: How To Think About Scalability," Kevin Starr, MD, Rainer Arnhold Fellows Program, Mulago Foundation

"WaterCredit: Driving Financial Innovation in Water Supply & Sanitation For The Poor," Gary White, Executive Director, Water.org

"The Investment/Re-Investment Cycle: Essentials to Advancing Social Innovation," Andrew Wolk, CEO, Root Cause

Plus 200 Featured Speakers


Call For Applicants: Social Enterprise Pitch

GH/Innovate 2010 will include special sessions where selected participants will present their new idea or program-in-development in the format of a 5-minute social enterprise pitch. Following the pitch, there is a 5-minute period for questions and answers, as well as feedback from the audience. This will provide participants with an opportunity to formulate and present their idea, collaborate with others interested in their idea, and receive feedback and ideas from other conference participants. Complete details about submitting a social enterprise pitch online at http://www.uniteforsight.org/conference/social-enterprise-pitch

Young Leader of Social Change Speakers

Young Leaders of Social Change Speakers are students and young professionals engaged in global health research and effective program delivery. Approximately 20 student and young professional speakers will be selected.

Conversation Panels

In addition to their individual presentations, select speakers will also participate as discussants on special panels that include six panelists and extensive Q&A with the audience.

  • Advice From The Experts: Careers in Global Health
  • Innovating in Global Health
  • Challenges and Success in Establishing International Partnerships
  • Others to be announced

Animal Health in JAMA?

I thought this was a pretty interesting article highlighting how important animal and environmental health are to human health...

Human, Animal, Ecosystem Health All Key to Curbing Emerging Infectious Diseases

Bridget M. Kuehn

JAMA. 2010;303(2):117-124.

In 2006, bagged fresh spinach contaminated with Escherichia coli O157:H7 caused about 200 cases of confirmed illness across the United States and at least 3 deaths. An investigation tracing the source of the contamination ultimately implicated domesticated animals, wildlife, and environmental factors.


Figure 90137FA

The case was one of many highlighted at a November summit hosted by the Institute of Medicine and the National Research Council, along with the One Health Commission, a nonprofit organization working to improve collaboration between the fields of human, animal, and ecosystem health. Lonnie King, MS, MPA, DVM, dean of the Ohio State University College of Veterinary Medicine in Columbus, explained at the summit that scientists found genetically identical strains of E coli in both cattle raised near the spinach and in wild hogs. But it took the work of ecologists and hydrologists to explain that unusual weather conditions may have allowed animal feces tainted with E coli to contaminate ground water and the irrigation system on the affected farm.

King, former head of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC’s) National Center for Zoonotic, Vector-borne, and Enteric Diseases (NCZVED), said that such interdisciplinary collaborations are becoming essential to identifying and preventing infectious disease. "This investigation only succeeded when integration [of human, animal, and ecosystem health efforts] took place," he said.

Yet despite growing recognition of the need for a "one health" approach to emerging infectious diseases, a lack of infrastructure, fragmented oversight in the United States and worldwide, and a workforce that has not been prepared to work across disciplines remain major obstacles. Speakers at the summit, which included representatives of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the US Food and Drug Administration, the CDC, the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the National Institute on Environmental Health Sciences, as well as experts in wildlife management and veterinary medicine, outlined these challenges and ways to overcome them.

The meeting was especially timely, coming on the heels of the September release of an Institute of Medicine (IOM) report commissioned by the USAID to assess the current global system for monitoring zoonotic diseases. The report found substantial gaps in such monitoring and recommended that the United States help lead an international effort to identify and manage such disease threats more effectively (http://books.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id=12625&page=R1).

INADEQUATE SURVEILLANCE


At least 65% of recent major human infectious disease outbreaks have had animal origins. including HIV/AIDS, SARS, and the currently circulating 2009 influenza A(H1N1), according to the IOM report.

A variety of factors are contributing to emerging infectious diseases. Ali Khan, MD, MPH, acting director of the NCZVED, noted at the summit that climate change is allowing potentially infectious agents to spread beyond their typical ranges. For example, tropical fungi have been found living in the Pacific Northwest and equine encephalitis, a vectorborne illness, has been found in Maine and Vermont for the first time. Another summit presenter, Karen Becker, DVM, MPH, senior veterinary public health advisor in the USAID's African bureau, noted that civil unrest and economic conditions can also contribute. For example, crowding and poor conditions can foster disease spread in refugee camps, and residents of poor communities may turn to bush meat hunting for income or to provide protein for their families.

And such problems are no longer contained within the communities where they begin; international travel can allow infections to spread rapidly to other parts of the world, King said.

"This is the perfect microbial storm," he said.

Yet the surveillance systems in place to identify such emergent infectious diseases are fragmented. Separate systems are used to detect outbreaks among humans and animals and there is little communication between the two, according to the 2009 IOM report. For example, in 1999 a veterinarian at the Bronx Zoo alerted human health authorities to the possible connection between bird die-offs and a human outbreak of febrile illnesses occurring simultaneously. However, human health officials were slow to investigate the potential connection in what turned out to be the emergence of West Nile virus in the United States.

Additionally, although disease surveillance laboratories are heavily concentrated in the United States and Europe, most diseases are emerging in developing countries, where there may be little or no surveillance. As a result, many emerging diseases are not identified until they have spread widely in human populations. King explained that preventing this scenario will require identifying disease outbreaks in animals before they spread to humans and identifying environmental disturbances that contribute to disease emergence in animals and taking preventive measures.

Improving surveillance of emerging zoonotic diseases will take a coordinated global effort. Given the large impact such diseases can have on public health and the US economy, the IOM report recommends that US officials take a leading role in the effort.

Creating such a network would require a large and continued investment, which is estimated at $800 million per year. However, over the past decade alone, zoonotic disease epidemics have caused more than $200 billion in economic losses worldwide, the IOM committee notes.

"A global zoonotic disease surveillance system to reduce the emergence of zoonotic diseases in humans and help detect other livestock diseases early could help to prevent the staggering economic losses associated with zoonotic disease outbreaks," the report states.


BUILDING A GLOBAL NETWORK


The IOM committee laid out 12 recommendations, emphasizing 3 top priorities for developing a global surveillance system. As a first priority, the committee suggests that the US Department of Health and Human Services, the USDA, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of the Interior work together and with the private sector and nongovernmental organizations to create an integrated system for identifying and responding to emerging diseases in human and animal populations. Additionally, these governmental agencies, the Department of State, and the USAID should collaborate with international organizations such as the World Health Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and the Office International des Epizooties (OIE) to build a more effective global surveillance network.

Another top priority identified by the committee is establishing a sustainable means of financing such a surveillance system. It recommends that the USAID work with international finance institutions and others to achieve this goal, perhaps by imposing a tax on meat imports. Additionally, the committee recommended that the USAID work with the United Nations and other organizations to establish a coordinating body to oversee global disease surveillance.

Some nongovernmental organizations and US and international agencies have already begun efforts to promote better surveillance and more cooperation between disciplines.

The One Health Commission was formed in August 2009 with representatives from the American Medical Association, the American Veterinary Medical Association, the American Society for Microbiology, the Association of Academic Health Centers, the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, the American Public Health Association, and representatives of veterinary and medical education associations to develop an integrated public health strategy.

In 2006, the FAO launched the Crisis Management Center in Rome to monitor and respond to emerging animal diseases with more than $5 million in US funding and 5 veterinary staff provided by the United States. One of the center's key priorities has been tracking highly pathogenic H5N1 avian influenza, in part, by monitoring wild bird populations and markets in which wild and domesticated birds are sold, said Doug O’Brien, JD, senior advisor to the Secretary of the USDA. O’Brien noted that the USDA has also signed an agreement to promote better coordination between the USDA and the FAO, and has invested substantial funds in promoting animal health globally.

In 2008, the USDA and the CDC entered into an agreement to launch a pilot program to monitor influenza in pigs. Laboratories of the USDA are now also testing samples from other species for the currently circulating influenza virus. Transmission of diseases from humans to animals is another important component to emerging zoonotic illness, Khan said, noting that there have been confirmed cases of 2009 influenza A(H1N1) transmission from humans to ferrets and domestic cats, and one suspected case of transmission to a monkey. In addition to the impact the infection might have on animal health, such transmission is a concern because of the potential for the virus to undergo genetic reassortment with animal influenza viruses and possibly become more virulent.

The CDC has also begun working to identify disease emergence hot spots to help direct the USAID-funded FAO, World Health Organization, and OIE monitoring and response activities to the areas in which they are likely to be most effective.

"We are trying to get away from an old strategy of looking everywhere or looking haphazardly," Khan said, and instead engage in "systematically thinking about this to form a risk-based strategy."

Additionally, the CDC has launched a program to assign veterinarians with human public health experience to international agencies and hot spots around the world, Khan said. So far, such individuals have been assigned to the OIE's offices in Paris, to the FAO crisis center in Rome, as well as to locations in Bangladesh, Nigeria, and Vietnam. During the next 2 to 3 years, the agency hopes to expand the program and increase the number of individuals and extend their presence further in southeast Asia, Africa, and South America.

"It's more than just recognizing disease emergence at the interface of human, animal, and environmental health," Khan said. "It's really about looking beyond humans for opportunities for prevention. That is where we are going to have the most impact on global health."

GILSON - Global Health Impact Series at the Fluno Center (2/3/10)



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REGISTER ONLINE at http://GilsonSeries.org


Gilson Global Impact Series presents:
From Poverty to Progress in Developing Countries — New Entrepreneurial Models for Social,
Environmental and Financial Sustainability

Creating new models for financial sustainability while benefitting society requires business beyond the norm.
Learn from two organizations whose social entrepreneurialism reaches across borders and continents. Find
out how sourcing products from artisans and farmers in developing countries — while paying wages well
above local rates — profits buyers and sellers alike.

Hear from Theresa Wilson, founder of The Blessing Basket Project®, and learn about her unique financial
model, Prosperity Wage®. Her organization is helping lift thousands of artisans across six developing
countries out of poverty and into sustainable financial independence.

Meet Susan Sheldon, from Madison-based SERRV International, and hear about this organization’s 60 years
of experience promoting fair trade in 36 countries. She also will share the story and some samples of one of
SERRV’s most popular suppliers, Divine Chocolate.

Both will discuss how marrying the social and business side of entrepreneurialism helps solve societal
problems and creates win-win solutions.

Thursday, February 4, 2010
5 pm Presentation & discussion
6 pm Networking reception

Fluno Center for Executive Education
601 University Avenue
Madison, Wisconsin

REGISTER ONLINE at http://GilsonSeries.org
or call (608) 890-1621 by January 28 for complimentary parking.