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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category global health.
  • Covid-19 and Conflict Zones: Prepare Now or Face Catastrophe

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    Covid-19  //  Guest Contributor  //  April 6, 2020  //  By James Blake
    49711451607_8bfc776305_c

    As we have seen over recent weeks, the impact of Covid-19 has caused unprecedented disruption, deaths, and confusion in developed countries. The public health capacity of countries such as the United States and UK has been overwhelmed. 

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  • Listen to Midwives to Achieve Universal Health Coverage by 2030

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    Dot-Mom  //  Friday Podcasts  //  April 3, 2020  //  By Amanda King

    mhi podcast3What is inherent in the word “universal,” is that it is for all women, said Anneka Knutsson, Chief of the Sexual and Reproductive Health Branch at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), at a recent Wilson Center event on the importance of midwives in achieving universal health coverage.

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  • Midwives Needed to Achieve Universal Health Coverage by 2030

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    Dot-Mom  //  From the Wilson Center  //  March 25, 2020  //  By Deekshita Ramanarayanan

    midwifeWe are in the decade of action, said Anneka Knutsson, Chief of the Sexual and Reproductive Health Branch at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), at a recent Wilson Center event on midwives’ crucial role in achieving universal health coverage by 2030. The World Health Organization (WHO) has designated 2020 as the Year of the Nurse and the Midwife to celebrate the accomplishments and importance of nurses and midwives in providing not just maternal health care, but care across the lifespan. Currently, 22 million nurses and 2 million midwives globally deliver 80 percent of all healthcare services in low-resource settings. However, the world will need 9 million more nurses and midwives by 2030 to meet rising healthcare demands.

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  • Sexuality Education Begins to Take Root in Africa

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    Africa in Transition  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 24, 2020  //  By Robert Engelman
    engelman photo

    In Kenya, primary and secondary school students take courses called Life Skills Education. So do students in Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, and Swaziland. South Sudan adds “peace-building” to the subject title. Lesotho, Madagascar, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, and Zambia are more direct. These countries add the word “sexuality” to the course name.

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  • Healthcare Facilities in Developing Countries a High Risk for Coronavirus Transmission

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    Covid-19  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 23, 2020  //  By Brett Walton
    MALI43_137_WaterAid_-Basile-Ouedraogo-2500

    This article originally appeared on Circle of Blue.

    The front lines in the battle to limit damage from the new coronavirus are expanding.

    Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, emerged in China and then blossomed in comparatively wealthy countries like Italy, South Korea, and the United States.

    Now, the virus is spreading in poorer regions — in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and parts of Latin America — where essential defensive measures against infectious disease are often missing.

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  • Destruction of Habitat and Loss of Biodiversity are Creating the Perfect Conditions for Diseases like COVID-19 to Emerge

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    Covid-19  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 19, 2020  //  By John Vidal
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    This article originally appeared on Ensia.

    Mayibout 2 is not a healthy place. The 150 or so people who live in the village, which sits on the south bank of the Ivindo River, deep in the great Minkebe forest in northern Gabon, are used to occasional bouts of diseases such as malaria, dengue, yellow fever and sleeping sickness. Mostly they shrug them off.

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  • Cardiovascular Disease Can be a Silent Killer During and After Pregnancy

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    CODE BLUE  //  Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 18, 2020  //  By Lisa M. Hollier

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    Stacy Ann Walker could have died.

    During what she thought was going to be a normal exam, Stacy learned that she would need to have a C-section. While recovering in the hospital, she began to have breathing problems and after some testing was told that her heart had been scarred by an earlier bout of rheumatic fever. Shortly after, she also learned that she had heart failure, an enlarged heart, and problems with multiple heart valves.

    She was 29.

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  • Multiple Stressors Shape Mothers’ Mental Health in Nairobi, Kenya

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    CODE BLUE  //  Dot-Mom  //  Guest Contributor  //  March 11, 2020  //  By Sangeetha Madhavan

    14319713178_3da612f64c_oThe mental health of mothers cannot be studied in isolation, as just a psychological snapshot in time. Their complex lives both past and present must be taken into consideration. When I was researching marriage, motherhood, and social support in Korogocho, an informal settlement in Nairobi, stories I heard underscored how a range of life experiences conspire to affect a woman’s mental health. I heard life histories like this:

    When Ann was 17, she met Fredrick, got pregnant and moved in with him when she was 18. Two years later, Fredrick got arrested and was gone for two years. When he came back, she got pregnant with child No. 2 within a month but then left the relationship seven months later because of ongoing conflict. When she was about 23 with a 2-month-old and 5-year-old, Frederick shot her. Two months later, he himself was killed. Four months later, she met the man who would become her second husband. After living together for three years, he took her back to his home to meet his family. She then had her third baby.

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