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Archive for the ‘Health Care’ Category

Reversing the African Diaspora?

Monday, August 31st, 2009

One of the Integral Life Foundation’s major concerns is the “brain drain,” which has been a byproduct of the growth in education for people in developing countries, especially in Africa. The risk we always face is the people we train are tempted to leave if opportunities are better elsewhere. It makes sustainability a challenge for a philanthropic model such as ours, where we focus on partnering with, training and enabling the local populace to help themselves.

An unforeseen benefit of the global economic downturn is that the African “brain drain” seems to be turning into mini “brain gain” as job opportunities have dried up in the world’s financial capitals and many professionals are returning to their homelands.

David Okoror, director-general of the African Diaspora Initiative, which works with the Nigerian government to encourage returns, estimates that 7,500 Nigerians have come back to work in the financial, telecoms and information technology industries in the past seven years. Some put the figure much higher. Ade Odutola, founder of WazobiaJobs.com, a recruitment portal for West Africa, estimates that 10,000 skilled Nigerians have returned in the past year.

The trend is mirrored elsewhere in Africa. Elite International Careers, a London-based recruitment agency, reports that five years ago the number of highly educated Angolans returning home numbered about 100. Today, the company has more than 1,000 listed.

The moves reflect a wider trend of increasing mobility in migrant communities worldwide. In common with Mexicans heading to the U.S., and North Africans relocating to Europe, returning Africans are keeping doors open in their home countries and the west, Okoror reported.

Whether these example represent a sustainable trend remains to be seen; on average 30,000 African professionals leave the continent each year, so the challenges are still very daunting. Nevertheless, Integral Life Foundation remains committed to our central precept that economic development will only be sustained through education and training of local people so they can work to improve their own communities.

Learning that people are making the decision to return home or stay home is encouraging, and makes the desire to invest in local businesses and individuals even stronger.

A Holistic Approach to Global Health Care

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Much progress has been made in addressing the HIV/AIDS pandemic in Africa and malaria throughout the tropical regions of the globe. Obviously, much more effort is needed, but it’s going to take a lot more than simply treating a disease, individual by individual throughout the developing world. While it is important that we measure the incidence of AIDS and malaria, a broader, more aggressive approach to global health is required:

Former U.S. Sen. Bill Frist, a physician, said it well in a recent newspaper column:

“We need to expand our thinking to encompass holistic solutions that go into improving the health of the world’s poor. We need to think profoundly about our practices and the significance of sound policies to sound health. Global health must deliver more than a pill to the poor to relieve their immediate pain; it must deliver a system-wide program of rehabilitation to increase the productivity and prosperity of their communities.

Frist notes that other, less obvious but treatable diseases also make deep depredations in developing societies – blindness, for example. A child goes blind every minute, up to 700,000 annually, and 70 percent die within the first year of going blind. And most of these cases can be fairly easily prevented.

Meeting such basic needs as passable roads for people to reach clinics and markets, and clean drinking water to avoid other diseases can go a long way to improve the quality of their lives. Just as in the U.S. clinical care is not the long-term key to improving a population’s overall health standard.

The Integral Life Foundation was created to promote this holistic approach to health in developing societies. Our goal is to provide local residents with the knowledge and access to the education they need so they can take control of their own lives.

And in partnership with Nueterra Capital Management and the C3 Missions International, Integral Life Foundation is committed to making a difference in developing nations through the C3/NCM Global Growth Fund.
By our definition, good health is the cornerstone of economic development. We support investment in countries that have already shown a commitment to taking steps to do their part in improving the health of its citizens. A systemic approach to global health, grounded in good policies, provides the best medicine for delivering tangible and sustainable results that will improve the quality of life for the world’s poor.

Planting the Seeds of Fulfilling Lives

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Consistent with Integral Life Foundation’s mission to provide assistance to many of the poorest and most vulnerable people in the world, we have come to a few conclusions following on-site observations in Haiti and Africa. Specifically, no matter where you go in the world, people just want to have the resources available so they can help themselves and their own communities.

The growth of sustainable orphan care in Haiti and in several African countries is a case in point. We are focusing our efforts in existing orphanages through education and health care delivered through Nueterra Healthcare resources and personnel. By offering these very basic components of a full life, we are helping to build communities of young people eager to take control.

It’s amazing to observe the incredible desire of these young men and women not only to better themselves, but to help their communities and their countries as well. They already know in their hearts that they have the solution to building sustainable economies and eliminating extreme poverty.

Because of the horrendous AIDS pandemic that has decimated the parents of these young people, they have lost the entrepreneurial mindset that gets passed from one generation to another. As they learn more and more of their own potential and talents, it’s obvious that they will be able to take advantage of micro-lending opportunities as they mature, individually and collectively.  We have established the NCM/C3 Global Growth Fund in order to provide these types of loans for local business ventures designed to address specific community needs such as agriculture, food distribution and consumer goods among others.

Wherever we go on our monthly fact-finding missions – Haiti, Uganda and Kenya – it’s obvious that the young people we are working with are smart, eager to learn, are hard workers and assertive about their goals. They are not looking for handouts; they are looking for knowledge and skills.

It is so fulfilling to see their faces, hear their voices, to understand their hunger for success and strong ambitions to help their communities. We’ve helped them plant the seeds of their own success. The harvest will be impressive.

Day Two from the International AIDS Society Conference

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

Today was a good day in that I met up with several of my colleagues and friends from Hopkins SPH. One is working with PMTCT and early infant detection in Malawi on a national level and we plan to discuss ILF’s future endeavors with maternal and pediatric HIV in Salima. Her insight will be valuable.

Sessions I attended today primarily focused on pediatric ART and EID in resource-limited areas, and the extreme challenges clinics and health care providers face. On a global level, only 8 percent of HIV exposed infants are tested and identified before 1-2 months of age. The goal is to test all exposed infants between 4-6 weeks of age to be able to early-initiate ART, which has shown to decrease mortality associated with HIV by 76 percent. Clearly, the challenges facing these EID programs are universal.

ILF Associate Attends International AIDS Society Conference

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

ILF associate Brad Gautney is attending the International AIDS Society conference in South Africa this week and will be reporting on his learnings.

The opening day of the conference was interesting as the first session I attended discussed infant feeding and HIV. The data are overwhelming that even in the face of possible further HIV infection, exclusively breastfeeding for a minimum of the first six months of an HIV exposed infant’s life is essential to reduce mortality and increase survival. The assessment that two of my colleagues performed with ILF in Haiti in January underscores the need for further education in the majority of HIV programs there.

We will soon be making this data available to many of the organizations working in Haiti as we continue to work to improve the care they provide for mothers and infants affected by HIV. The opening ceremony here was moving because it highlighted the magnitude of lives touched by HIV/AIDS around the world. Despite a global economic recession, child mortality, maternal mortality and HIV/AIDS are not in a recession. This only solidifies the work that ILF and its partners are taking on together in Haiti and Malawi!

Follow the conference at www.ias2009.org or on blogspot here.