Monday, March 9, 2009

16th Canadian Conference on International Health

If anyone is interested in the 16th Canadian Conference on International Health, please check out their website for more information at http://www.csih.org/en/ccih/overview.asp. It seems really interesting as it covers three themes, a theme a day. For those who have attended this conference in the past, please share your thoughts and experience with us. Thanks!

Health Equity: Our Global Responsibility

16th Annual Canadian Conference on International Health

Sunday, October 25th to Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Crowne Plaza Ottawa Hotel

101 Lyon Street N, Ottawa, Ontario, K1R 5T9

Canadians, as global citizens, first declared our commitment to health equity and social justice in 1948 with the signing of the Declaration of Human Rights; Canadians continue the commitment through our participation in the implementation of the Global Call to Action: Closing the Gap in One Generation. In spite of significant progress and improved health status over the last 60 years, as global citizens, we continue to be challenged to live up to our promise.

We have a responsibility to work toward health equity, social justice, and universal attainment of human rights. To be effective, communities - with governments, non-government organizations and the private sector - must work in partnership, with a common vision. Addressing the social determinants of health, such as, - security of food, shelter, safety, education, income, poverty, employment, and access to care - will create the necessary foundations for our solutions.

The 2009 Canadian Conference on International Health (CCIH) will examine inequities of health status, and the impact on the health of marginalized, vulnerable and Indigenous populations of changing environments, whether these changes are due to climate, technology, the economy or threats to human security.

We invite presentations exploring lessons learned and new ways of understanding health equity and social justice locally, nationally and globally. The Call for Abstracts for Papers and Posters will be open on February 25, 2009. Anticipated outcomes of the conference will be:

1. evidence of improvements in social determinants and their impacts on health and social outcomes

2. evidence of the impact of environmental technological and economic change on health equity

3. consideration of the need for a paradigm shift in intersectoral policy and practice, locally, nationally and internationally

4. a summary of the current thought and discourse on Canada’s responsibility, in Canada and globally, for health equity and social justice (addressing our original 1948 commitment), and proposed ways forward.

Addressing these challenges the 2009 Canadian Conference on International Health will consist of daily plenary sessions, several topic-focused symposia, followed by a number of parallel “paper sessions” and a poster session/reception.

THEME AREAS (Note: Global, National and Local experiences will be welcome on each day)

Day 1: Ethics and Responsibility, Economics and Social Determinants

  • Economics: Achieving the MDGs: Hope or Despair
  • Ethics: Partnerships and Capacity
  • Social Determinants of Health: Evidence, Achievements and Challenges
  • Searching for Social Justice: Achievements and Challenges

Day 2: Global Health Diplomacy (GHD)

  • Social reform, responsibility, accountability:
  • Global Health Diplomacy and the G8
  • Diplomacy and Ethical Aid
  • Responsible Health Security: Ethics and Reality
  • Health in all policies: The Role of Global Health Diplomacy
  • Role of academe/ the role of civil society in Global Health Diplomacy: Training and capacity building and action
  • Indigenous participation and perspectives

Day 3: Social Determinants of Health: Think Globally, Act Locally

  • Rolling out the MDGs
  • Implementing the Social Determinants of Health: What’s Working
  • Advocacy and Social Determinants of Health: Does It Work?
  • Sustainable Environments in the Context of Global Change
  • Social Determinants of Health and Vulnerable Populations: Evidence and Action
  • Indigenous World Views and Contribution to Social Determinants of Health

This conference will bring attention to our responsibility as global citizens to take action on progress toward achieving the Millennium Development Goals and ultimately health equity. The conference will address the best evidence and action on the progress of the MDGs, the role of health diplomacy and the evidence and opportunities for action as we integrate a social determinants of health framework into our policies programs and action at the global, national and local level.


Saturday, February 28, 2009

Africa Health Systems Initiative Research Competition

I would like to share this with anyone who may be interested in receiving a grant to conduct a research related to global health. If interested, please see the article below. For additional information, please visit: http://www.idrc.ca/en/ev-114684-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html

Funding Opportunities: Africa Health Systems Initiative Research Competition


The Global Health Research Initiative Launches a New Research Grants Competition!

The Global Health Research Initiative (GHRI) is a partnership formed by five Canadian agencies - the Canadian Institutes of Health Research; the Canadian International Development Agency, Health Canada; the International Development Research Centre; and the Public Health Agency of Canada- to strengthen Canada’s role on the global health research scene.
The research component of the “Africa Health Systems Initiative” (AHSI-RES) is a 5-year research program (2008-2013) that forms one component of the Africa Health System Initiative (AHSI) supported by the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA).
This Call for Proposals invites teams of researchers and decision-makers to submit research proposals focusing on: Human Resources for Health (HRH) and/or Health Information Systems (HIS). Equity is a cross-cutting theme.
  • Registration due: March 13 2009
  • Full application due: April 22 2009
  • Geographic areas of focus: - Francophone West Africa - Mali, Burkina Faso, Benin - Great Lakes and Eastern Africa - Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya - Southern Africa - Malawi, Mozambique, Zambia
  • All enquiries should be addressed to ahsi-res@idrc.ca

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Human right to water.

Some quick details and online resources about water and sanitation, as released by RESULTS-Canada:

Sharing info. about the right to water, and the need for it to be included in the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, as article 31!

About Water
Of the 6 billion people on earth, 1.1 billion do not have access to safe, clean drinking water.
(www.charitywater.org)

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency currently does not regulate 51 known water contaminants. (www.foodandwaterwatch.org)

While the average American uses 150 gallons of water per day, those in developing countries cannot find five.
(www.charitywater.org)

The water and sanitation crisis claims more lives through disease than any war claims through guns.
(www.water.org)

According to the National Resources Defense Council, in a scientific study in which more than 1,000 bottles of 103 brands of water were tested, about one-third of the bottles contained synthetic organic chemicals, bacteria, and arsenic. (www.nrdc.org)
Water is a $400 billion dollar global industry; the third largest behind electricity and oil.

CBS News, FLOW (www.flowthefilm.com)
There are estimates that from five hundred thousand to seven million people get sick per year from drinking tap water.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Our own little pieces of Coltan . . .

What do you do when you're complicit in war . . .

Please read more about how we carry a little piece of the bloodshed and unrest in our pockets in an article about Coltan, the civil war, and the Congo in a piece by Johann Hari

http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/johann-hari/johann-hari-how-we-fuel-africas-bloodiest-war-978461.html

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Prejudice in medicine

Our role in creating health care disparities

Can Fam Physician
Vol. 54, No. 11, November 2008, pp.1511 - 1513
Copyright © 2008 by The College of Family Physicians of Canada

John Guilfoyle, MD FCFP
Family physician in Sioux Lookout, Ont, and an Associate Professor for the Northern Ontario School of Medicine and the University of Manitoba

Len Kelly, MD MClinSc FCFP
Family physician and an Associate Professor of Family Medicine at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine and McMaster University in Sioux Lookout

Natalie St Pierre-Hansen
Research intern at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine in Sioux Lookout

Correspondence: Dr J. Guilfoyle, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Box 489, Sioux Lookout, ON P8T 1A8; e-mailfjguilfoyle@mac.com

How welcome is the patient in our office and waiting room who is different from ourselves? Does the patient who is less educated, poor, or from a different culture feel comfortable? How do these differences affect their care, if in fact they do?

Current emphasis on evidence-based medicine and its application in the arenas of clinical treatment and health policy development have been noteworthy. Its antithesis, prejudice-based medicine, is not as well-studied and is not considered as carefully in current medical practice. Prejudice—making assumptions and decisions based on inaccurate or faulty information and assumptions—is the stuff of history. At various times we have shown ourselves capable, through a variety of psychological maneuvers, of parlaying spurious data about the objects of prejudice into discriminatory practices. This discrimination has run the gamut, from denial of various rights and services to genocide. No one is immune from prejudice; thus, it is hardly surprising that it has an effect on how we practise medicine.

Recent work, particularly by the Institute of Medicine—an American nonprofit organization that provides evidence-based information and advice on matters of medicine and health—has suggested that prejudice and discrimination directly affect the receipt of much needed health care services in certain groups. Commissioned by the US Congress to study racial and ethnic disparities in health care, they found that health care providers’ behaviour, assumptions, and attitudes can have a detrimental influence on the health of those who seek care.1

What is prejudice?

Prejudice is both an attitude and a cognitive process, the identifiable and measurable outcome of which is the practice of discrimination. A standardized definition of discrimination does not exist. Even within the framework of the law definitions vary: some jurisdictions focus on intent and others on effect.1 For the purposes of health care, the Institute of Medicine defines it as "differences in the quality of healthcare that are not due to access-related factors or clinical needs, preferences, and appropriateness of intervention." It identified discriminatory health care practices on 2 levels: the health care structure (systemic discrimination) and discrimination that results from "biases, prejudices, stereotyping, and uncertainty in clinical communication."1

Many American studies have demonstrated that minorities in the United States receive lower quality health services and are less likely to receive medical procedures than white Americans are.25 Disparities in access and quality of care exist even when income and sociodemographic factors are controlled.2 African Americans, for example, are less likely than whites to receive surgery for early stage lung, colon, or breast cancer.3 A study by Laditka et al of delivery outcomes in South Carolina (N = 26 866) revealed substantially higher rates of "potentially avoidable delivery complications" in African Americans and Hispanic Americans compared with whites, even when health care insurance was controlled.4 Similarly, a study by Chung et al of deliveries in Long Beach, Fla, (N = 37 688) found that blacks and Hispanics were 75% and 22% more likely to undergo cesarean deliveries, respectively.5

In Canada

Despite Canada’s universal health care system, health disparities on the basis of race and immigrant status persist. A handful of Canadian studies have found that aboriginal and foreign-born Canadians face barriers to access. There is ample discussion around these barriers, as well as the importance of effective communication strategies, but there are few studies that examine the measurable differences in health care delivery based on race or ethnicity.

In a 2004 study, Tonelli et al (N = 4333) discovered that aboriginal renal dialysis patients were significantly less likely to receive renal transplantations than nonaboriginal patients, even after adjusting for potential confounders (hazard ratio 0.43, 95% confidence interval 0.35 to 0.53).6 A later study by Tonelli and colleagues (N = 835) found that aboriginal patients were half as likely to be activated on the transplant waiting list, owing to difficulties in the process of completing the workup rather than because they were medically unsuitable (P < .01).7

Heaman and colleagues’ 2005 study8 compared survey responses about prenatal care received by aboriginal and nonaboriginal women in Manitoba (N = 652). Aboriginal women were 4 times more likely to receive inadequate prenatal care than nonaboriginal women were (15.7% vs 3.6%). After controlling for relevant confounders a difference still persisted. When socioeconomic status was factored into the analysis, the authors discovered that the most important predictor of inadequate care was poverty.8 In 2007, a province-wide study of prenatal care in Manitoba (N = 149 291) examined disparities among geographic districts: the highest rates of inadequate prenatal care were in the lowest income neighbourhoods.9 These areas also had the highest proportion of recent immigrants and aboriginal populations.10

On the other hand, some Canadian studies found no differences in care based on race or ethnicity. Reime et al, for example, found no significant association between ethnicity and treatment of patients (N = 20 488) in neonatal intensive care units.10 Wenman and colleagues’ comparison of aboriginal women and nonaboriginal women (N = 2047) revealed that aboriginal women were more likely to have low-birth-weight infants; however, after controlling for socioeconomic status, smoking, and poor nutrition, the differences were not statistically significant.9,11

Poverty, culture, and access to care

These studies highlight the interconnectedness of ethnic or racial disparities and socioeconomic status as they relate to quality of health care and health care outcomes. Confounders aside, these disadvantaged groups face barriers to health care. New federal initiatives are beginning to address access-related barriers for aboriginal people in Canada. For example, the federal government is responding to First Nations and Inuit access barriers in remote and isolated areas by establishing patient wait times guarantees.12 In 2006, the diabetes care pilot project was announced, followed by the prenatal care pilot project to increase early interventions.12

Janet Smylie, past chair of the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologist of Canada’s Aboriginal Health Issues Committee, underscores the importance of examining the surrounding sociopolitical factors that affect health, rather than simply attributing explanations to the "aboriginal" variable.13,14 Similar barriers to access were identified for foreign-born Canadians who face language and cultural barriers to accessing care.11,15 One study examined the sociodemographic factors associated with low rates of cervical cancer screening (N = 24 584). The lowest rates of screening were seen in areas with the highest immigrant population.16 The length of time living in Canada was also an important contributing variable: Papanicolaou smear rates for recent immigrants were 36.9% compared with 60.9% for other immigrants.16,17

The disparities in the health of minorities in Canada—particularly with regard to aboriginal health—are well documented.17,18 In 2000, the life expectancy of First Nations men was recorded as 7 years shorter than the overall national life expectancy for men, and in 1997, the prevalence of diabetes among First Nations women 65 years of age and older was documented as being more than 3 times the national figure.19 In fact, the rate of chronic illness overall among aboriginal people is 3 times higher than the national average.20

The complexity of these reduced health outcomes requires the implications of sociopolitical and historical factors be considered. Analysis of the marginalization that emerges from inequities in health care systems examines the interconnectedness of these factors.

Caregiver attitudes

Canadian studies of caregiver attitudes and measurable differences in care based on ethnicity are rare. No Canadian studies were found when using the search term prejudice on major research databases. Some scholars argue that by focusing on attitudinal and behavioural levels of discrimination for explanations, we are overlooking the contribution of systemic discrimination in creating persistent inequities.13 Nevertheless, inquiries isolating the role of prejudice on the part of the care-giver might provide us with valuable insight into ourselves and our institutions.

Scott Plous, author of Understanding Prejudice and Discrimination, suggests that prejudice is amenable to intervention strategies.21 These include education and other efforts to expose those who practise prejudice to information and role play that allow exploration of issues and the development of attitudes to prevent discrimination.21 The developing concept of cultural safety has emerged in continuing health education and institutional practices. The concept, which developed out of the nursing education context in New Zealand, is predicated on the understanding that a caregiver’s own culture, and the assumptions that follow, affect how a clinical encounter plays out, subsequently affecting the patient’s care. This approach acknowledges that all attitudes and behaviour—extending beyond blatant displays of prejudice and measurable discriminatory practices—can have serious implications for minority care and health.

Naming and blaming strategies toward caregivers are not constructive; rather, the development of a climate where prejudice is recognized as possible is a priority so that efforts directed toward understanding and empathy can be emphasized and reinforced. Concomitant measures within health care systems to remove barriers that can create discrimination would also be helpful.

Defining and measuring attitudes and behaviour is difficult. Understanding the complex determinants of minority health is perhaps even more challenging; blatant acts of prejudice or racism are only a small part of the problem. Studies that isolate these aspects of care (such as those seen in the American body of literature) provide measurable outcomes, which serve as valuable reference points in the Canadian context. When confounders such as socioeconomic status and education levels are controlled, we might be left with a stark mirror image of caregiver attitudes. The determination of relevant indicators of discrimination, the measurements of those indicators, and regular reporting of progress will assist efforts to reverse the deleterious effects of discrimination.

Canadian primary health care awakens to health disparities at home

With the re-emphasis on primary health care worldwide, no doubt helped by the WHO's renewal of Alma Ata, the College of Family Physicians Canada (CFPC) is certainly reflecting this trend. Understanding that the practice of medicine in a first world nation is drastically different than providing care in low-income countries, it is nice to see that at the heart of it, the principles of medicine are still universal; that disparities and need do not know boundaries and regional divisions, nor should our approach to care. Here are two articles from recent editions of Canadian Family Physician.

Addressing health inequities

A case for implementing primary health care

Can Fam Physician
Vol. 54, No. 11, November 2008, pp.1515 - 1517
Copyright © 2008 by The College of Family Physicians of Canada


Carmel M. Martin, MB BS MSc PhD MRCGP
Associate Professor of Family Medicine in the Clinical Sciences Division at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine in Ottawa, Ont

Terry Kaufman, LLB
Member of the Board of Directors of Canadian Alliance of Community Health Centre Associations

Correspondence: Dr Carmel Martin, Northern Ontario School of Medicine, Clinical Sciences Division, 238 Bruyère St, Ottawa, ON K1N 5E3; telephone 613 878-7372; fax 613 482-4609; e-mail cmartin@NorMed.ca

The year 2008 is the 30th anniversary of the World Health Organization’s 1978 Declaration of Alma-Ata on primary health care.1 This declaration draws our attention to the global burden of health inequities not only in poor underdeveloped countries but also in rich developed countries; these health inequities constitute a considerable barrier to improving the health status of the overall population. The literature demonstrates that addressing health inequities has the potential to contain escalating health costs as well as to develop a healthy and peaceful civil society.2 Specifically, Marmot, in a consensus statement based on international research findings with the Commission on Social Determinants of Health, asserts the following:

Strengthening health equity—globally and within countries—means going beyond contemporary concentration on the immediate causes of disease .... The time for action is now, not just because better health makes economic sense, but because it is right and just.2

Reduced focus

Primary care is a patient’s first point of entry into the health system. Traditionally, it is organized around family practices and family physicians, but it is being practised increasingly by nurses and other health care providers.3 Family physicians provide first-contact treatment in offices and also deliver services in the home and in long-term care facilities—as well as a substantial amount of secondary and tertiary care, particularly in rural and remote settings.4 Primary health care, a term derived from the 1978 Alma-Ata declaration,1 is the strategy most likely to address the social determinants of health and health inequalities in health systems internationally. The declaration integrated the strategy of primary care as a level of first-contact health care services into a broader strategy for equitable health development for all.

Key policy makers have advocated system redesign for primary health care with a multidisciplinary work force.5,6 Since 2000, federal, provincial, and territorial governments have substantially invested in a Primary Health Care Transition Fund.7 Internationally, ongoing reforms to primary care services have brought improvements, including better management of some common diseases, some shorter wait times, and faster electronic communication.8 However, these reforms in countries such as the United Kingdom have had unintended outcomes (eg, generating little or no effect on widening health disparities) and have been associated with undesired shifts in care for some chronic conditions.9,10 Yet renewed interest and debate about the primary health care transition have focused on expanding the breadth of primary care and increasing health care accountability, with little attention to addressing health inequalities and social determinants of health.11

Canada has been a world leader in research related to the social determinants of health. According to the Canadian Population Health Initiative of the Canadian Institute for Health Information, however, "Canada has fallen behind countries, such as the United Kingdom and Sweden and even some jurisdictions in the United States, in applying the population health knowledge base that has been largely developed in Canada."12 In the United Kingdom, there have long been aspirations to address the determinants of health and health inequities.13 However, emerging evidence reveals that the reform strategies focusing on implementing primary care, such as pay-for-performance based on selected performance indicators, are not necessarily addressing health inequities.14

Reasons to consider

A range of compelling evidence from Canada and other countries indicates that the social and economic circumstances of individuals and groups influence their health status and mortality as much as or more than health care. These circumstances affect the success rate of interventions to change personal health behaviour, such as smoking and diet,12,15,16 or of improved outcomes of chronic disease management.17 Addressing health inequities is strongly associated with the improvement of health care outcomes.17

Social determinants of health have a direct effect on the health of individuals and populations, are the best predictors of individual and population health, structure lifestyle choices, and work interactively to produce health.16 In terms of the health of populations, it is well known that disparities—the size of the gap of inequality in social and economic status between groups within a given population—greatly affect the health status of the whole: the larger the gap, the lower the health status of the overall population.18

Health has been defined as "the extent to which an individual, family or community is able to realize aspirations and satisfy needs to cope with their environment."1 Health inequities or disparities of health are the "systematic differences (potentially remediable) in one or more aspects of health across population groups defined socially, economically, demographically, or geographically."19,20

Social determinants of health include the following: income and social status; social support networks; education and literacy; employment and working conditions; and social and physical environments. Other health determinants include personal health practices and coping skills, healthy child development, biology and genetic endowment, and gender and culture. The presence and quality of health services are also recognized as determinants of health.21

The evidence for the value of primary health care to address the social, economic, and political determinants of poor health has emerged during the 20th century22,23; in more recent times, relevant analyses by many—including Starfield et al and De Maeseneer et al, culminating in a synthesis paper by the Health Knowledge Network of the World Health Organization, repeatedly demonstrated better health outcomes.2426 In 2005, Canada and the other government members of the Pan American Health Organization affirmed their commitment to new orientations for primary health care by signing the Declaration of Montevideo.20

Taking part

We propose a local primary health care approach, derived from the Pan American Health Organization’s declaration,20 that builds on the care currently provided by individual practitioners and community health centres and moves toward addressing health inequities. At the core of the system is an understanding of local population health determinants and inequities of health outcomes, as well as local primary care demands for services. With the developments in information technology, the horizontal interconnecting of local providers is realistic and feasible; such interconnecting is essential to collectively address local needs, rather than, as at present, individuals and groups working in local organizational silos. This networking would build on existing and successful collective enterprises to deliver after-hours care, improve quality and safety of individual disease management, and link with public health initiatives to extend toward implementing strategies that address the factors contributing to the genesis and evolution of disease and health outcomes.25

The following are ways in which family physicians in partnerships within adaptive networks of primary health care providers can take a broader role in other aspects of primary health care:

  • Lead and participate in community partnerships to identify health disparities in local populations, and prioritize and address these disparities.
  • Ensure each primary health care system explicitly addresses local public health problems related to non-medical determinants of health (eg, lifestyle factors) and, where feasible, secondary and tertiary health care disparities.
  • Develop and support interconnected programs to explicitly address social and economic barriers to adherence to common chronic disease treatment and self-management (eg, diabetes, arthritis, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, congestive heart failure, mental illness) outside of the practice, which address the determinants of health.
  • Develop and support programs that explicitly address barriers to access and health care adherence for "hard to reach" populations.
  • Ensure undergraduates, residents, and practising physicians have resources to develop the appropriate skills and competencies to reduce gaps in health disparities in partnership with other agencies.
  • Stimulate and participate in the intersectorial arrangements and programs in each primary health care system to address the needs of each of the disadvantaged groups (eg, homeless, recent immigrants, drug addicts, adolescents with legal and educational problems), according to local context and priorities.
  • Participate in and collaborate on community partnerships, identifying and solving health-related problems with vertical integration in relation to the community’s social environment (eg, violence, lack of day care) and physical environment (eg, personal security, housing, nonmedical social determinants).

The lack of an articulated pan-Canadian framework for primary health care leaves serious potential gaps in any future transition to an effective primary health care system. In order to address the publicly stated goals of improving health, attention needs to be paid to the principles of equity, access, empowerment, community self-determination, and vertical and horizontal integration within the system. The unintended consequences of resources being directed to improving the average quality of primary care ultimately leads to widening health inequities.

By taking up the challenge of the new orientations of primary health care, which have already been agreed upon by the government of Canada through its international commitments, family physicians can take a leading role in addressing health inequities.