Beat Disability-By Embracing It

Equity and Inclusivity

World Health Organization- Disability Report 2011.

Recommended by Dr Muazzam Nasrullah ( CDC)
World Health Organization- Disability Report 2011. 

"Key facts

  • Over a billion people, about 15% of the world's population, have some form of disability.
  • Between 110 million and 190 million people have significant difficulties in functioning.
  • Rates of disability are increasing due to population ageing and increases in chronic health conditions, among other causes.
  • People with disabilities have less access to health care services and therefore experience unmet health care needs.

Disability and health

The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) defines disability as an umbrella term for impairments, activity limitations and participation restrictions. Disability is the interaction between individuals with a health condition (e.g. cerebral palsy, Down syndrome and depression) and personal and environmental factors (e.g. negative attitudes, inaccessible transportation and public buildings, and limited social supports).
Over a billion people are estimated to live with some form of disability. This corresponds to about 15% of the world's population. Between 110 million (2.2%) and 190 million (3.8%) people have significant difficulties in functioning. Furthermore, the rates of disability are increasing in part due to ageing populations and an increase in chronic health conditions.
Disability is extremely diverse. While some health conditions associated with disability result in poor health and extensive health care needs, others do not. However all people with disabilities have the same general health care needs as everyone else, and therefore need access to mainstream health care services. Article 25 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) reinforces the right of persons with disabilities to attain the highest standard of health care, without discrimination. "

Forthcoming disability-related events at UN Headquarters in New York

Forthcoming disability-related events at UN Headquarters in New York
Interactive Panel Discussion on the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of Children with Disabilities, 17 June, 1.15 to 2.30 p.m., Conference Room 7, UN Headquarters, New York
http://www.un.org/disabilities/default.asp?id=1573
Sports for Inclusive Development: Sports, Disability and Development: Key to empowerment of persons with disabilities and their communities, 27 June, 1.15 to 2.30 p.m., Conference Room 6, UN Headquarters, New York
http://www.un.org/disabilities/default.asp?id=1574
DESA Briefing Series: Disability and Economics: The nexus between disability, education and employment, 1 July, 1.15 to 2.30 p.m., Conference Room 7, UN Headquarters, New York
http://www.un.org/disabilities/default.asp?id=1575
Fourth Conference of States Parties
7 to 9 September 2011
http://www.un.org/disabilities/default.asp?id=1571
International Day of Persons with Disabilities, 3 December 2011
http://www.un.org/disabilities/default.asp?id=1561
Find out more at www.un.org/disabilities

Last call for Newsletter Submissions!

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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Haitian Studies Association <hsa@umb.edu>
Date: Tue, May 3, 2011 at 2:25 PM
Subject: Last call for Newsletter Submissions!
To: lamahassoun@gmail.com


We have received some great submissions thus far for the HSA newsletter.  This is the last call for any articles, photos, or other pieces that you would like to submit to keep this tradition rolling.  This year we are also celebrating milestones of HSA members, broadly defined.  Thus, if you were accepted to a program, were hired, received a scholarship, were featured in a publication, etc, please let us know so we can highlight these moments too.  

Submissions can be in Haitian Creole, English, or French, 500 words maximum. Submission must be sent to Manoucheka at manouchekac@gmail.com to be included in the May 2011 issue. Do not miss out on this opportunity to be featured in our Spring issue! Get connected and stay connected with the HSA community.


--

Lama Hassoun
S.M. Candidate 2011
Global Health and Population
Harvard School of Public Health
P: +1 (508) 287 5105


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Event

Event:

The Massachusetts Health Policy Forum invites you to a forum entitled, “Accountable Health Care Delivery: Models and Policy Actions for Massachusetts”. As Massachusetts seeks to control costs and improve the efficiency of the health care delivery system, this forum highlights four organizations as models for progress:  Norton Healthcare in Louisville, Kentucky, Tucson Medical Center in Arizona, Mount Auburn Cambridge Independent Practice Association and Hampden County Physician Associates in Springfield. In different ways these organizations are integrating a range of care, changing payment and incentive structures and working on quality improvement.

Speakers will include Stuart Altman, Sol C. Chaikin Professor of Health Policy at Brandeis University, Andrew Dreyfus, President and CEO of Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts, Palmer Evans, Senior Vice President and Chief Medical Officer of Tucson Medical Center, Philip Gaziano, Medical Director of Hampden County Physician Associates, Gary Gottlieb, President and CEO of Partners Healthcare, Steven Hester, Senior Vice President and Chief Medical Officer of Norton Healthcare, Meredith Rosenthal, Associate Professor of Health Economics and Policy at Harvard School of Public Health, and Barbara Spivak, President of Mount Auburn Cambridge Independent Practice Association.
Date:                 Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Time:                8:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.

Location:          Omni Parker House Hotel – Rooftop Ballroom
                         60 School Street, Boston, MA                        

An informal breakfast will be served between 8:30 – 9:00 a.m.

We hope that you will be able to join us.  Seating is limited, so please register as soon as possible.  Click here to register.

If you have any questions, please contact Sarah Ferguson at ferguson@brandeis.edu or (781) 736-3940.

Sustaining the cities

Article is by Corydon Ireland

More than half of the world’s 6 billion people now live in cities, those complex hives of activity that require intensive energy and complex governance. By 2050, that proportion is expected to rise to two-thirds of the world’s population. So it makes increasing sense to strive toward a sustainable model of urban life.

The Working Group on Sustainable Cities at Harvard University, a nascent cluster of experts from the University’s design, business, health, and government communities, is working toward that end, and is ready to welcome voices from every discipline. Attending the group’s eighth private meeting last month (Sept. 14) were an authority on climate change, a public health scholar, a city planner, an architect, a political scientist, and even a professor of divinity.

The group is meant to “focus our brain trust so we can immediately help,” said its originator, architect Martha Schwartz, adding that Europe is already 30 to 40 years ahead of the United States in its thinking about sustainable cities. Cities are the fulcrum of the economy and the heart of culture, she said. “In order for the United States to go forward, we have to rethink our cities.”

Schwartz is a professor in practice in the Department of Landscape Architecture at Harvard’s Graduate School of Design and a self-described student of “the public realm.” She is co-teaching a “Generative Ecologies” studio course this semester, the second in a row to use Edessa, Greece, as a model for sustainable development.

But she is eager to take the issue beyond the classroom too. Schwartz envisions a final working group of both scholars and practitioners — a synergy of expertise.
Last month, she and a dozen core members of the still-growing group vetted the idea of starting with a series of private working sessions with U.S. mayors, followed perhaps by a public conference.
“The idea is to be of most use,” said Schwartz. “The mayors are a good focus group (and) are resource hungry.” She compared the planned mayoral sessions to charrettes, intense sessions of collaborative work that are common among designers.

The group’s first event was a working luncheon with two Boston-area mayors, hosted on Sept. 30 by the Institute of Politics (IOP) at the Harvard Kennedy School. In attendance was the former mayor of Detroit, Dennis Archer, who is an IOP Fellow this semester.

He also stopped by the working group’s Sept. 14 meeting, and liked the idea of Harvard convening small groups of mayors to discuss sustainability. The need for problem solving has intensified in the depressed economic climate, said Archer. “What you’re creating here is something exceedingly invaluable.”

Climate scientist Dan Schrag has offered the working group a temporary home at the Harvard University Center for the Environment, where he is director. But he was skeptical of meeting with mayors and preferred to use the University’s immense “convening power” to look at urban sustainability from another angle: healthy cities, for instance.

“Jack could go to town,” said Schrag, gesturing across the table at John D. “Jack” Spengler, the Akira Yamaguchi Professor of Environmental Health and Human Habitation at the Harvard School of Public Health.

One way or another, said Spengler, investigating the intersection of sustainability and cities makes sense, as long as those investigations add up to “new systems of thinking” about the urban environment.
There is urgency to the issue because of climate change, which will hit cities hardest, he said. “Buildings are getting wet that never got wet before, and people die indoors from heat waves.”
The ultimate focus of the working group remains under discussion, said Schwartz, but this year will be devoted to “researching issues that mayors have. … We’re on a fact-finding mission.”

To keep those facts in order, the working group is using a Surdna Foundation grant to design a web-based “knowledge platform,” and will also be getting information technology help from the Harvard Office for Sustainability. “It’s clear to the mayors this could be a resource,” said Schwartz. “We’re trying to energize mayors, and to learn from them.”

Schrag was also skeptical of the website. “That’s not how interdisciplinary research happens,” he said.
The eighth meeting revealed a nascent entity in search of permanent leadership, funding, an institutional home, and an organizational model.

Perhaps an executive education model is best, said working group member David Luberoff, executive director of the Rappaport Institute for Greater Boston, or perhaps an “executive session” model in which participants keep coming back to talk.

Harvey G. Cox Jr., Harvard’s Hollis Research Professor of Divinity Emeritus, suggested an active collaboration on sustainability with a small city near Harvard.

Spengler agreed, and said of cities: “We need them as our laboratories, and they need us for our resources.”
Schwartz was grateful for the lively meeting because it showed how much had to be done. “This is a start-up,” she said of the group. “This is an idea.”
Yes, Cox agreed, but it’s an idea that needs to go somewhere, and Harvard can help. “We live in a country where cities are pretty desperate,” he said. “What I keep thinking about is: To whom much is given, much is expected.”

New blog


Check out a new blog about public health practices and health care in Pakistan- part of the developing world. Challenges are many in this land.

Event : A movie screening of "Haiti: Killing the Dream"

THIS TUESDAY, October 5th from 6:00-8:00 pm

What: A movie screening of "Haiti: Killing the Dream"

Where: MIT Building 1-135

More info:

A 90-minute documentary focusing on the events in Haiti following the coup of September 30, 1991, and how the world's first black republic became the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. The program includes interviews with exiled President Jean Bertrand Aristide, his cabinet, dissident clergy, underground resistance leaders, U.S. State Department officials, and a cross-section of Haitian people.

Documentary followed by Q&A. For more info, see http://www.perryfilms.com/projects/haiti.html or contact hemisphere-manboard@mit.edu. Sponsored by the Western Hemisphere Project.

L'Shana Tovah and Eid Mubarak!


The two fundamental commandments common to Judaism, Christianity and Islam: to love the Lord our creator with all of our hearts, minds, souls and strength; and to love our neighbors as we love ourselves.