Friday, December 5, 2008
Environmental Justice Talk Tonight is CANCELED
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Environmental Justice

Friday, December 5
6-7:30 pm
Hammer 404
Refreshments will be served -- See you there!
*Co-sponsored by the International Health Organization, Physicians for Human Rights, AMSA, and the Clinical Practice course*
Monday, December 1, 2008
December 1st is World AIDS Day

WORLD AIDS DAY
DECEMBER 1, 2008
Hear about the personal, public health, and advocacy aspects of
AIDS in Washington Heights.
6:00 - 7:30 PM
Alumni Auditorium
Columbia University Medical Center
650 W. 168th Street
TO BENEFIT THE WASHINGTON HEIGHTS CORNER PROJECT
MALECON DINNER RECEPTION TO FOLLOW
AIDS IN THE HEIGHTS
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Zimbabwe Health Emergency
Zimbabwe is in the midst of a devastating health emergency, and PHR needs your help to urge the US and the international community to take action.
Public health workers in Harare report that due to lack of medicine, equipment, services, and staff, public hospitals and clinics are essentially closed, resulting in preventable deaths and the destruction of families and communities. A cholera epidemic is spreading throughout the country and daily death tolls are on the rise. Fresh water is no longer pumped into urban areas, which will only exacerbate the spread of this infectious disease caused by contaminated water. A doctor at Harare hospital described the situation as a "disaster of unimaginable proportions".
Your colleagues—doctors, nurses, public health leaders, medical students, and human rights activists in Zimbabwe—are fighting for their patients. Hundreds held a protest this week to call for more medicine and supplies for their patients, but were violently dispersed by riot police. Also this week, the government closed the medical school in Harare indefinitely, leaving hundreds of students on the street—and millions of Zimbabweans without the next generation of health leadership.
Saturday, November 15, 2008
The Epidemiological Transition from Infectious Disease to Chronic Disease -- Part 2
Epidemiological Transition from Infectious Disease to Chronic Disease.
The second event of the module will be on WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19 from 12-1 PM in HAMMER 304. We will examine the evidence in current literature and try to highlight some of the potential issues with the delivery of actual mental health services in the developing world.
See attached article, which will be discussed during the session.
Light refreshments will be served.
We hope to see you there!
Forum on Global Health and Human Rights
THE EPIDEMIOLOGICAL TRANSITION : DEMENTIA IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD
November 19th 2008
12pm- 1pm
Hammer Health Sciences Building HSC 304
701 W 168th St
New York, NY 10032
Monday, November 10, 2008
Obesity, Diabetes and Dementia: Implications for the Developing World
"Obesity,Diabetes and Dementia: Implications for the Developing World."
Jose A. Luchsinger MD
Associate Professor of Medicine &Associate Professor of Epidemiology
Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center and the Taub Institute
New York Presbyterian, Columbia University Medical Center
November 14th 2008
12pm- 1pm
Hammer Health Sciences Building HSC 308
701 W 168th St
New York, NY 10032
Food will be served.
Dementia Underestimated in Developing Countries
ICAP Symposium on HIV at CUMC
For those interested in how HIV funding may be used to better healthcare systems as a whole, this is very relevant to the HIV topic we discussed last year:
Country directors for the International Center for AIDS Care and Treatment Program (ICAP) of the Mailman School of Public Health will be meeting on the CUMC campus next week. In conjunction with their visit, ICAP is hosting a symposium,"Expansion of HIV Care in Africa: A Path for Better Health Services for All?" The goal of the symposium is to examine how the scale-up of HIV services has the potential to spur a transformation of healthcare systems with benefits for all patients, not only those who are HIV positive.
Linda Fried, MD, MPH, dean of the Mailman School, will make opening remarks.
The program will include presentations by Wafaa El-Sadr, MD, MPH, ICAP director, and the following country directors:
- Raphael Ntumy, ICAP-Lesotho country director
"Moving from MTCT-Plus toHealth Systems Strengthening in Lesotho"
- Amy Cunningham, ICAP-Tanzania country director
- Zenebe Melaku, ICAP-Ethiopia country director
"HIV/AIDS: A Catalyst for Establishing New Cadres of Health Workers in Ethiopia"
A panel discussion will be moderated by ICAP's David Hoos and Pamela
Collins, assistant professor of clinical epidemiology and clinical psychiatry at the Mailman School.
When: Tuesday, November 11
3 to 5 p.m.
Where: Alumni Auditorium
630 W. 168th St.
All faculty, staff, and students are invited.
Reception will follow.