1 / 19

We, the People of Faith and the Diseases of Poverty: Understanding our Role

We, the People of Faith and the Diseases of Poverty: Understanding our Role . Devotions at Medical Teams International – 28 Aug 2007 Milton B. Amayun, MD, MPH (iaimilton@aol.com). Greetings and Introductions. Greetings and thank you!

winda
Télécharger la présentation

We, the People of Faith and the Diseases of Poverty: Understanding our Role

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. We, the People of Faithand the Diseases of Poverty: Understanding our Role Devotions at Medical Teams International – 28 Aug 2007 Milton B. Amayun, MD, MPH (iaimilton@aol.com)

  2. Greetings and Introductions • Greetings and thank you! • It is with great pleasure to be here in the name of Christian Connections for International Health (or CCIH)… • I would like to briefly introduce the members of our Board and staff who are here. • Laura (our new Vice-President), Vicky, Bob, Jacqui, Douglas, David • Ray (our Executive Director) and Sharon (our Program Associate)

  3. CCIH is… • A network of 100 organizations and affiliates committed to the promotion of health and wholeness from a Christian perspective. • We are focused on global health issues. • We are a forumfor sharing and discussion. • We connect organizations, people, communities. • Please visit www.ccih.org.

  4. Seven Principal Causes of the Global Disease Burden • In 2001, nearly two-thirds of all diseases in children and young adults (0-44 years) were caused by a few diseases, mostly infectious. • Close to 60% were due to AIDS, Maternal and Perinatal Conditions, Acute Respiratory Infections, Diarrheas, Malaria, Measles, TB. • The combined death toll for AIDS, TB and Malaria alone was six million! • Most of these deaths were in the developing world. India contributes significantly to morbidity/mortality due to the seven diseases each year .

  5. Major Causes of Death and Disease, 0-44 years, in 2003

  6. Death is only Part of the Story • For every death, there are many more cases. • Disability can be disfiguring for life – e.g., leprosy, polio, lymphatic filariasis. • Stigma is associated with AIDS, TB. • Millions of carriers do not know their status. • Orphans – innocent victims by the millions. • Costs of treatment and/or burial worsen levels of poverty. • Large-scale missed opportunities towards meaningful and productive lives.

  7. Implications to Society • Loss of human capital: Millions dying due to AIDS • Unmotivated work force: Lower productivity due to illness. • Increased costs of production: Budget for health increases. • Loss of markets: Less buying power of an impoverished population. • Heightens role of prevention • Result: MANY POOR PEOPLE REMAIN POOR BECAUSE OF POOR HEALTH

  8. Implications to Christians • Millions missing the abundant life due to illness. • Major opportunities for Christian witness with Jesus as our model. • Complementary role of healing ministries to the mandate to preach the Word. • Need to train Christian health professionals in public health issues and programs. • Re-emphasis of prevention strategies. • Resources needed for reduction of global disease burden.

  9. Challenges and Opportunities • Christians have been slow in embracing HIV/AIDS as a responsibility. • Funding for health ministries has been on the decline; many Christian health institutions have been unsustainable. Some have had to close. • Although the situation is changing, many medical missionaries are still focused on clinical medicine. • In creative access countries, health is a good entry point. • Few resources invested in M&E and documentation; fewer still in policy debates.

  10. Focus on AIDS, TB, Malaria

  11. TB: Basic Facts • Infects many organs; pulmonary form common. • 2 billion carriers worldwide; India (especially N India) has very high concentration of TB cases. • Globally, 8.8 million cases become active TB each year. • 1.9 million deaths each year, mostly young adults in productive stages of life. • Between 2000 and 2020, 35 million deaths projected – nearly 20x current population of Greater Portland. • Increasing rates of co-infection with HIV/AIDS. • 10 million TB-HIV co-infections today.

  12. Malaria: Basic Facts • Transmitted by mosquitoes. • Falciparum malaria is most virulent strain. • One million deaths per year, mostly in young children 0-5 years. • That is 3000 child deaths per day! • Pregnant mothers can become anemic, or have stillborn and stunted babies, in addition to abortions. • Surviving babies may have impaired growth and development.

  13. What is lacking? • We know the treatment and we have the technology to fight the diseases of poverty. • TB and Malaria medicines can cure. • We have ARVs to prolong and improve the quality of lives of PLWHAs – up to 20 years! • We will soon have the resources equal to the magnitude of the problem. • We lack the political will to implement the task. • Goal: 100% coverage of the need. • Civil society (includes the Church) and private sector must share leadership with government!

  14. Costs of Interventions

  15. Goals for the New Millennium • Deadline for the following goals is 2010. • HIV/AIDS: to reduce the number of newly infected young people (15-24 years) by 25%. • TB: to reduce by 50% current level of TB deaths and prevalence. • Malaria: to reduce the malaria disease burden by 50%.  

  16. Global Program Initiatives • Stop TB Initiative • Roll Back Malaria • PEPFAR: President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief • Global Fund to fight AIDS, TB and Malaria • Massive Effort Campaign • Global TB Drug Facility and the Global Alliance for TB Drug Development • International AIDS Vaccine Initiative

  17. GFATM: Example of a New Paradigm • Involves all sectors of society, including communities affected by the diseases, government, donor community and the private sector. • High levels of transparency required. • Performance on first two years determine funding for remaining three years • Checks and balances in place. • Private sector participation needs to increase at all levels.

  18. Challenges to the Church • Investing in health is a good missions strategy! • Church is uniquely positioned to respond to the diseases of poverty. • Scaling-up traditional programs needing new paradigms. • Stigma and discrimination can be reduced through the Church. • Collaboration with government, private sector and civil society is the way of the future.

  19. Conclusions Jesus: “I have come that they might have life…more abundantly.” (John 10:10-11) “Poor people will only be able to emerge from poverty if they enjoy better health. Health should be at the heart of our struggle for sustainable development.” Gro-Harlem Brundtland, Director-General, WHO, 1998-2003 The story of Lazarus’ resurrection.

More Related