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COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health
Environmental Health & Climate ChangeGlobal Health NewsPublic Health News

WHO’s 10 calls for climate action to assure sustained recovery from COVID-19

by Public Health Update October 12, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Global health workforce urges action to avert health catastrophe

11 October 2021 News release (WHO)

Countries must set ambitious national climate commitments if they are to sustain a healthy and green recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The WHO COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health, launched today, in the lead-up to the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, spells out the global health community’s prescription for climate action based on a growing body of research that establishes the many and inseparable links between climate and health.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has shone a light on the intimate and delicate links between humans, animals and our environment,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “The same unsustainable choices that are killing our planet are killing people. WHO calls on all countries to commit to decisive action at COP26 to limit global warming to 1.5°C – not just because it’s the right thing to do, but because it’s in our own interests. WHO’s new report highlights 10 priorities for safeguarding the health of people and the planet that sustains us.”

The WHO report is launched at the same time as an open letter, signed by over two thirds of the global health workforce – 300 organizations representing at least 45 million doctors and health professionals worldwide, calling for national leaders and COP26 country delegations to step up climate action.

“Wherever we deliver care, in our hospitals, clinics and communities around the world, we are already responding to the health harms caused by climate change,” the letter from health professionals reads. “We call on the leaders of every country and their representatives at COP26 to avert the impending health catastrophe by limiting global warming to 1.5°C, and to make human health and equity central to all climate change mitigation and adaptation actions.”

The report and open letter come as unprecedented extreme weather events and other climate impacts are taking a rising toll on people’s lives and health. Increasingly frequent extreme weather events, such as heatwaves, storms and floods, kill thousands and disrupt millions of lives, while threatening healthcare systems and facilities when they are needed most. Changes in weather and climate are threatening food security and driving up food-, water- and vector-borne diseases, such as malaria, while climate impacts are also negatively affecting mental health. 

The WHO report states: “The burning of fossil fuels is killing us. Climate change is the single biggest health threat facing humanity. While no one is safe from the health impacts of climate change, they are disproportionately felt by the most vulnerable and disadvantaged.”

Meanwhile, air pollution, primarily the result of burning fossil fuels, which also drives climate change, causes 13 deaths per minute worldwide.

The report concludes that protecting people’s health requires transformational action in every sector, including on energy, transport, nature, food systems and finance. And it states clearly that the public health benefits from implementing ambitious climate actions far outweigh the costs.

“It has never been clearer that the climate crisis is one of the most urgent health emergencies we all face,” said Dr Maria Neira, WHO Director of Environment, Climate Change and Health. “Bringing down air pollution to WHO guideline levels, for example, would reduce the total number of global deaths from air pollution by 80% while dramatically reducing the greenhouse gas emissions that fuel climate change. A shift to more nutritious, plant-based diets in line with WHO recommendations, as another example, could reduce global emissions significantly, ensure more resilient food systems, and avoid up to 5.1 million diet-related deaths a year by 2050.”

Achieving the goals of the Paris Agreement would save millions of lives every year due to improvements in air quality, diet, and physical activity, among other benefits. However, most climate decision-making processes currently do not account for these health co-benefits and their economic valuation.   

Details;

WHO’s COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health, The Health Argument for Climate Action, provides 10 recommendations for governments on how to maximize the health benefits of tackling climate change in a variety of sectors, and avoid the worst health impacts of the climate crisis.

The recommendations are the result of extensive consultations with health professionals, organizations and stakeholders worldwide, and represent a broad consensus statement from the global health community on the priority actions governments need to take to tackle the climate crisis, restore biodiversity, and protect health.

Climate and Health Recommendations

The COP26 report includes ten recommendations that highlight the urgent need and numerous opportunities for governments to prioritize health and equity in the international climate regime and sustainable development agenda.

  1. Commit to a healthy recovery. Commit to a healthy, green and just recovery from COVID-19.
  2. Our health is not negotiable. Place health and social justice at the heart of the UN climate talks.
  3. Harness the health benefits of climate action. Prioritize those climate interventions with the largest health-, social- and economic gains.
  4. Build health resilience to climate risks. Build climate resilient and environmentally sustainable health systems and facilities, and support health adaptation and resilience across sectors.
  5. Create energy systems that protect and improve climate and health. Guide a just and inclusive transition to renewable energy to save lives from air pollution, particularly from coal combustion. End energy poverty in households and health care facilities.
  6. Reimagine urban environments, transport and mobility. Promote sustainable, healthy urban design and transport systems, with improved land-use, access to green and blue public space, and priority for walking, cycling and public transport.
  7. Protect and restore nature as the foundation of our health. Protect and restore natural systems, the foundations for healthy lives, sustainable food systems and livelihoods.
  8. Promote healthy, sustainable and resilient food systems. Promote sustainable and resilient food production and more affordable, nutritious diets that deliver on both climate and health outcomes.
  9. Finance a healthier, fairer and greener future to save lives. Transition towards a wellbeing economy.
  10. Listen to the health community and prescribe urgent climate action. Mobilize and support the health community on climate action.

Open Letter – Healthy Climate Prescription

The health community around the world (300 organizations representing at least 45 million doctors and health professionals) signed an open letter to national leaders and COP26 country delegations, calling for real action to address the climate crisis.

The letter states the following demands:

  • “We call on all nations to update their national climate commitments under the Paris Agreement to commit to their fair share of limiting warming to 1.5°C; and we call on them to build health into those plans;
  • We call on all nations to deliver a rapid and just transition away from fossil fuels, starting with immediately cutting all related permits, subsidies and financing for fossil fuels, and to completely shift current financing into development of clean energy;
  • We call on high income countries to make larger cuts to greenhouse gas emissions, in line with a 1.5°C temperature goal;
  • We call on high income countries to also provide the promised transfer of funds to low-income countries to help achieve the necessary mitigation and adaptation measures;
  • We call on governments to build climate resilient, low-carbon, sustainable health systems; and
  • We call on governments to also ensure that pandemic recovery investments support climate action and reduce social and health inequities.”

COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health



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COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health
Environmental Health & Climate ChangeGlobal Health NewsInternational Plan, Policy & GuidelinesReports

COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health

by Public Health Update October 12, 2021
written by Public Health Update

The Health Argument for Climate Action

The 10 recommendations in the COP26 Special Report on Climate Change and Health propose a set of priority actions from the global health community to governments and policy makers, calling on them to act with urgency on the current climate and health crises.

WHO’s 10 calls for climate action to assure sustained recovery from COVID-19

The recommendations were developed in consultation with over 150 organizations and 400 experts and health professionals. They are intended to inform governments and other stakeholders ahead of the 26th Conference of the Parties (COP26) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and to highlight various opportunities for governments to prioritize health and equity in the international climate movement and sustainable development agenda. Each recommendation comes with a selection of resources and case studies to help inspire and guide policymakers and practitioners in implementing the suggested solutions.

DOWNLOAD REPORT (PDF)


Related

  • Infectious Disease and Climate Change Forum 2021
  • National Climate Change Policy, 2076 (2019)
  • WHO South-East Asia Region commits to building health systems resilience to climate change
  • Health Ministers from WHO South-East Asia meeting next week; climate change, access to medicines high on agenda
  • WHO Guidance for Climate Resilient and Environmentally Sustainable Health Care Facilities
  • WHO Global Air Quality Guidelines: Particulate matter (‎PM2.5 and PM10)‎, ozone, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide

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World Sight Day 2021: Love Your Eyes!
Public HealthActivitiesPH Important DayPublic Health EventsPublic Health Update

World Sight Day 2021: Love Your Eyes!

by Public Health Update October 10, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The World Sight Day (WSD) is an international day of awareness, held annually on the second Thursday of October to focus attention on the global issue of eye health. This year World Sight Day falls on 14 October 2021. WSD is coordinated by the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB). WSD became an official IAPB event in the year 2000 and has been marked in many different ways in countries around the world each year.

WSD is the focal advocacy and PR event for IAPB and its members and partners each year, highlighting the fact that at least 1 billion people have a vision impairment that could have been prevented or has yet to be addressed.

Objective

  • Raise public awareness of blindness and vision impairment as major international public health issues.
  • Influence Governments/Ministers of Health to participate in and designate funds for national blindness prevention
    programmes.
  • Educate target audiences about blindness prevention.

World Sight Day 2021

  • This year’s WSD theme is: Love Your Eyes
  • Our Call to Action is: EVERYONE COUNTS

#LOVEYOUREYES

Nearly everyone on the planet will experience an eye health issue in their lifetime and more than a billion people worldwide do not have access to eye care services. Before, we can look at the bigger picture at the country or global level, we need to make sure that we are aware of our own eye health, and so our theme for 2021 is all about #LoveYourEyes.

LoveYourEyes is all about being aware of your own eye health and if you are able, to get a sight test.

EVERYONE COUNTS
For World Sight Day 2021 EVERYONE COUNTS and so in the month leading up to World Sight Day we are calling on everyone who can to book a sight test / exam / screening.

KEY MESSAGES

  • 1.1 billion people experience vision loss primarily because they do not have access to eye care services.
    – Over 90% of those with vision loss live in low- and middle income countries.
    – 73% of people with vision loss are over 50 years old.
    – 55% of people with vision loss are women.
  • The number of people with vision loss will rise from 1.1 billion to 1.7 billion people by 2050, mainly due to population growth and population ageing.
  • Unaddressed poor vision results in a global economic productivity loss of $411 billion per annum.
  • Over 90% of vision loss could have been prevented.
  • The leading causes of vision loss include:
    – Uncorrected refractive error
    – Unoperated cataracts
    – Age-related macular degeneration (AMD), glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy
  • Poor eye health leads to an increased risk (up to 2.6 times) of mortality.
  • Children with a vision impairment are up to 5 times less likely to be in formal education and often achieve poorer outcomes.
  • Vast inequities exist in the distribution of vision impairment; the prevalence in many low- and middle-income regions is estimated to be four times higher than in high-income regions
  • The burden tends to be greater in rural areas and for older people, women, people with disabilities, ethnic minorities and indigenous populations.

Source of info: The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB)


Recommended readings

  • World Sight Day is: Eyecare Everywhere! 
  • Trachoma is a disease of the eye caused by Chlamydia trachomatis
  • Eyes on Diabetes – World Diabetes Day 2016
  • B.Optometry Colleges and Available Seats in Nepal


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Maternal, Newborn and Child HealthReportsResearch & Publication

Assess impact of COVID-19 pandemic in selected health services with estimation of ‘excess maternal deaths’

by Public Health Update October 10, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The Department of Health Services (DoHS) has conducted a mixed method study to understand the understand the initial impacts of COVID-19 on routine reporting systems, availability and utilisation of services on selected key indicators and excess maternal deaths. The final report of this study was published by DoHS.

Executive Summary

The Government of Nepal (GoN) adopted a complete lockdown strategy to contain and curb the spread of the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic from 24 March 2020 to 21 July 2020, which led to closures of Outpatient Departments(OPDs) and widespread fear of COVID-19 transmission in institutional settings. This has threatened the progress made by Nepal in health care in the last three decades, with early evidence suggesting reduced coverage of institutional births, low utilisation of Reproductive Health (RH) services and increased institutional stillbirth and neonatal mortality rates.

This study aimed to understand the initial impacts of COVID-19 on routine reporting systems, availability and utilisation of services on selected key indicators and excess maternal deaths so as to help the GoN to plan actions that can strengthen its response strategy and evaluate its response for the future.

A mixed-method approach was used with secondary analysis of routine health information system (Health Management Information System (HMIS), Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response (MPDSR) and One-stop Crisis Management Centres (OCMCs), monitoring data of health facilities and qualitative interviews with key stakeholders. The study analysed trends of service utilisation from Falgun 2075 to Bhadra 2077, with Falgun 2076 taken as the cut-off point to distinguish the pre-COVID-19 and COVID-19 periods. Descriptive statistics were used to examine the change, i.e., difference from the same month of the previous year and monthly rate of change. A local polynomial regression with smoothing curve was used to examine the trend. The Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) model was used to estimate the excess maternal deaths by forecasting the maternal deaths after Falgun 2076 in the absence of pandemic. Key results are summarised below by themes.

Availability of services

Antenatal Care (ANC) and Family Planning (FP) services were unavailable in a higher proportion of referral facilities(25–80%) and for several days compared to fewer days in peripheral facilities (14–50%). In peripheral facilities, delivery services were unavailable (36–80%), drugs were stocked out (20–100%) and ambulance services were unavailable (17–80%) for several days. Fifty percent or more of Birthing Centres (BCs) and Basic Emergency Obstetric and Neonatal Care (BEONC) facilities were closed for delivery services, while all referral hospitals remained open for institutional delivery, except for a couple of days in the early lockdown period.

Service utilisation

The monthly rate of change for all service utilisation indicators from Falgun 2076 to Chaitra 2076 was negative at national level. The magnitude of decline varied from 56 per cent to 7 percent and by province and type of health facility, with a greater decline in peripheral health facilities. However, there was strong rebound over the following couple of months (Baisakh 2077 to Asar 2077) as the average returned to pre-COVID-19 levels or higher for several indicators. Institutional delivery services declined by 18 per cent between Falgun 2076 and Chaitra 2076 but increased by 19 per cent from Jestha 2077 to Asar 2077. The gain was even higher for postnatal services, with the average returning above preCOVID-19 levels. The FP method with the biggest decline was permanent sterilisation, with a 56 per cent decline in the number of procedures. New users of long-acting reversible contraceptives declined in
Chaitra 2076, with the average returning to higher than pre-COVID-19 levels in the following few months.

There was a sharp decline (36% decline in the first month) in abortion procedures performed, with the national average well below pre-COVID-19 level in subsequent months. The number of children immunised with three doses of the combined diphtheria, tetanus toxoid and pertussis vaccine (DPT3) declined by 55 per cent in the first COVID-19 month but there was a strong rebound, with an increase in the next three months.

Excess maternal deaths

A total of 153 maternal deaths were reported in the COVID-19 months (Chaitra 2076 to Bhadra 2077). The equivalent period of last year (Chaitra 2075 to Bhadra 2076) recorded 104 deaths. The preliminary estimates from modelling suggest that there were 47 excess maternal deaths in COVID-19 months.

Functioning of routine reporting system: No noticeable impact was observed in the timeliness of HMIS reporting in COVID-19 months, with an improvement seen in the long term (Falgun 2075 to Bhadra 2077). A small increase in the percentage of non-reporting facilities was observed (4.5 percentage points from Shrawan 2077 to Asar 2077). Qualitative findings suggested that despite initial difficulties alternative approaches (virtual communication) were used for normal functioning of HMIS. Overall, improvements in timeliness of reporting as well as the percentage of facilities reporting to HMIS were attributed to regular monitoring and mentoring support from the Integrated Health Management Information System (IHIMS) to the provincial, local and hospital focal persons. There has been a gradual increase in the number of OCMC reporting sites over the years. However, disaggregated data on how many sites were listed by Fiscal Year (FY) was unavailable for all FYs, limiting the ability to gain a full picture on the reporting situation. The functionality of MPDSR systems in peripheral hospitals was more adversely affected by COVID-19 (e.g., no separate discussion of maternal deaths, inability of verbal autopsy due to feasibility issues) than in federal-level hospitals. Inadequate institutionalisation of systems, poor access to internet facilities, and inadequate human resources and monitoring systems were identified as the major factors influencing the poor functionality of the MPDSR during the pandemic period.

Health Sector Response

The Ministry of Health and Population (MoHP) has developed more than 50 plans, guidelines, standards and protocols for effective response to COVID-19 and continuity of regular services. These have been made public through the MoHP website. Some of the key documents include the Health Sector Emergency Response Plan for COVID-19 Pandemic, Rapid Action Plans and Interim Guidelines for continuity of specific health services, such as Reproductive, Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (RMNCH), leprosy, geriatric health care services, rehabilitation and physiotherapy of persons with COVID-19 in acute care settings, services for people with disabilities, dental services, ambulance services and Ayurveda and alternative medicine services. In addition to these, the MoHP has circulated several ‘circulars and directives’ for specific purposes, such as human resource management, case management and compliance to the developed guidelines. Qualitative findings suggest that the development of guidelines, setting up of COVID-19 dedicated hospitals and follow-up of maternal deaths were some of the key initiatives undertaken by the clusters and sub-clusters as support to the MoHP in continuing health service delivery during the pandemic. However, study results also showed that there was a lack of clear communication of service provision, not only to consumers but also within the health care system, contributing to service utilisation decline.

In conclusion, this mixed-method study showed that there were interruptions to public health care service availability and utilisation in Nepal immediately after the introduction of lockdown. This is not surprising as literature suggests that previous pandemics or outbreaks have resulted in service utilisation decline in resource-constrained settings like Nepal.

The health care system has shown signs of resilience, as some of the indicators have returned to pre-COVID-19 levels. However, preliminary estimates of maternal deaths suggest that the pandemic may have taken away some of the progress made in the last three decades. Further analysis to estimate the net effect of missed childhood vaccinations, unplanned pregnancies and lost primary care visits may show a clearer picture. The magnitude of impact varied by province and type of health facility. Further research is needed to fully understand the reasons and the extent of disruptions to public health care delivery and the population groups they have affected the most.


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(Assess impact of COVID-19 pandemic in selected health services with estimation of ‘excess maternal deaths’)



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International Plan, Policy & GuidelinesNon- Communicable Diseases (NCDs)Public Health UpdateResearch & Publication

The Mental Health Atlas 2020

by Public Health Update October 9, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The Mental Health Atlas, released every three years, is a compilation of data provided by countries around the world on mental health policies, legislation, financing, human resources, availability and utilization of services and data collection systems. It serves as a guide for countries for the development and planning of mental health services.

The Mental Health Atlas 2020 includes information and data on the progress made towards achieving mental health targets for 2020 set by the global health community and included in WHO’s Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan. It includes data on newly-added indicators on service coverage, mental health integration into primary health care, preparedness for the provision of mental health and psychosocial support in emergencies and research on mental health. It also includes new targets for 2030.

Key findings

171 of WHO’s 194 Member States (88%) at least partially completed the Mental Health Atlas 2020 questionnaire;
the submission rate exceeded 73% in all WHO regions.

INFORMATION SYSTEMS AND RESEARCH FOR MENTAL HEALTH

  • 31% of WHO Member States regularly compile mental health-specific data covering at least the public sector in their country. In addition, 40% of Member States reported the compilation of mental health data as part of general health statistics only.
  • The percentage of countries reporting no mental health data compiled in the last two years has declined from 19% of responding countries in 2014 to 15% of responding countries in 2020.
  • 76% of Member States were able to report on a set of five selected indicators that covered mental health policy, mental health law, promotion and prevention programmes, service availability and the mental health workforce. This is an increase from 60% of Member States in 2014.
  • 64 646 articles on mental health were published in 2019. The global percentage of research output on mental health relative to total research output was 4.6% in 2019.

MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM GOVERNANCE

  • 75% of Member States have a stand-alone policy or plan for mental health, which is an increase from 68% in 2014.
  • 57% of Member States have a stand-alone mental health law, which is an increase from 51% in 2014.
  • 46% of WHO Member States have updated their mental health policy or plan and 27% have updated their mental health law since 2017.
  • 99 countries, equivalent to 67% of responding countries, or 51% of WHO Member States, reported full alignment of their policy or plan for mental health with international and regional human rights instruments.
  • 74 countries, equivalent to 64% of responding countries, or 39% of WHO Member States, reported full alignment of their law for mental health with international and regional human rights instruments.
  • Human and financial resources allocated for the implementation of policies/plans are limited. In addition, only 19% of WHO Member States reported that indicators were available and used to monitor implementation of a majority of the components of their policies/plans.
  • 45% of WHO Member States reported that a dedicated authority or independent body undertakes inspections of mental health services and responds to complaints about human rights violations.
  • 21% of WHO Member States have a mental health policy or plan that is in the process of implementation and is fully compliant with human rights instruments.
  • 28% of WHO Member States have a mental health law that is in the process of implementation and fully compliant with human rights instruments.
  • 76% of responding countries have ongoing formal collaboration with at least one stakeholder group. Levels of collaboration with service users and family/caregiver advocacy groups are low (35% of responding countries).

FINANCIAL AND HUMAN RESOURCES

  • Levels of public expenditure on mental health are low (a global median of 2.1% of government health expenditure) and particularly meagre in low- and middle-income countries.
  • 80% of responding countries reported that care and treatment of persons with severe mental health conditions are included in national health insurance or reimbursement schemes and in insurance coverage for inpatient/outpatient mental health services.
  • Globally, the median number of mental health workers is 13 per 100 000 population. There continues to be extreme variation between World Bank income groups (from below two workers per 100 000 population in low-income countries to over 60 in high-income countries).

SERVICE AVAILABILITY AND UPTAKE

  • Only 49 countries, equivalent to 31% of responding countries, or 25% of WHO Member States, reported the integration of mental health into primary health care. This was estimated based on the adoption of guidelines forintegration into primary care, the provision of pharmacological interventions, psychosocial interventions and training for mental health conditions at primary care level, and the involvement of mental health specialists in training and supervision of primary care professionals.
  • The median number of mental hospital beds per 100 000 population ranges from below two in low-income countries to over 25 in high-income countries. Globally, the median number of mental hospital beds reported per 100 000 population increased from 6.5 beds in 2014 to 11 beds in 2020, while the median admission rate per 100 000 population increased from 36 admissions in 2014 to 72 admissions in 2020.
  • Outpatient visits per 100 000 population ranged from 100 visits in low-income countries to over 5000 visits in high income countries. Globally, the median rate of reported visits increased from 2014 to 2020, along with the median number of outpatient facilities.
  • Globally, the median number of child and adolescent inpatient facilities is less than 0.5 per 100 000 population and less than two outpatient facilities per 100 000 population.
  • 112 countries reported that, on average, 0.64 community-based mental health facilities exist per 100 000 population. There is extreme variation between income groups, with 0.11 facilities per 100 000 population in low-income countries and 5.1 facilities per 100 000 population in high-income countries.
  • The service utilization rate for persons with psychosis per 100 000 population was 212.4, with considerable variation between high- and low-income countries.
  • Service coverage for psychosis was estimated at 29% using 12-month service utilization data data collected for the Mental Health Atlas 2020. Service coverage for depression was estimated at 40% using the World Mental Health Surveys.

MENTAL HEALTH PROMOTION AND PREVENTION

  • 101 countries, equivalent to 68% of those countries that responded, or 52% of WHO Member States, have at least two functioning national, multisectoral mental health promotion and prevention programmes. This is an increase from 41% of Member States in 2014.
  • Of 420 reported functioning programmes, 18% were aimed at improving mental health awareness or combating stigma, 17% were school-based mental health prevention and promotion programmes and 15% were aimed at suicide prevention.
  • 54 countries, corresponding to 39% of responding countries, or 28% of WHO Member States, reported programmes for mental health and psychosocial support integrated as a component of disaster preparedness and/or disaster risk reduction. The global age-standardized suicide rate in 2019 was estimated to be 9.0 per 100 000 population. This represents a 10% reduction in the rate of suicide since the 2013 baseline of 10 per 100 000 population.

READ MORE DOWNLOAD PDF FILE(WHO)


Recommended readings

  • World Mental Health Day 2021: Mental health care for all: let’s make it a reality!
  • Mental Health Policy, Nepal
  • Standard Treatment Protocol for mental health services into the Primary Health Care System
  • The WHO and Angry Birds Friends team up for World Mental Health Day
  • Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan 2013 – 2030
  • National Mental Health Strategy & Action Plan 2077
  • Mental Health for All! Greater Investment–Greater Access.
  • National Mental Health Survey, Nepal-2020 Fact Sheet
  • Mental health status among health workers in Nepal during COVID-19 pandemic (Policy brief)
  • COVID19 & Mental Health: Effects and tips to keep our mind healthy!
  • Mental Health and Coronavirus disease (COVID19)
  • Policy Brief: COVID-19 and the Need for Action on Mental Health
  • Mental Health for All! Greater Investment–Greater Access.
  • National Mental Health Survey, Nepal-2020 Fact Sheet
  • Mental health status among health workers in Nepal during COVID-19 pandemic (Policy brief)
  • Mental Health and Coronavirus disease (COVID19)
  • Policy Brief: COVID-19 and the Need for Action on Mental Health
  • Mental health and psychosocial considerations during the COVID-19 outbreak
  • Recommendation of International Mental Health Conference Nepal (IMHCN) 2018
  • Informing the World: How to Change Public Attitudes to Mental Health
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Lung Science Conference 2022
ConferencePublic Health EventsPublic Health OpportunitiesPublic Health Opportunity

Lung Science Conference 2022

by Public Health Update October 8, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The ERS Lung Science Conference (LSC) is at the forefront of basic and translational respiratory science and it is an essential event for budding respiratory researchers looking to boost their career. It offers a unique opportunity to network with peers from across the globe and will present cutting-edge abstracts on novel experimental lung research.

Conference date & venue

20th Lung Science Conference | 10–13 March, 2022 | Estoril, Portugal

Abstract submission for the Lung Science Conference 2022 is now open. The deadline to submit abstracts is 12 November at 23:59 CET.

The following features are organised every year:

Awards

Three prizes will be awarded during the conference:

  • William MacNee Award – Young Investigator Session – recognising your presenters (40 years of age or less at the time of the conference) who submitted and outstanding abstract
  • Geoffrey Laurent Award – Best oral presentation
  • Distinguished Poster Awards

Mentorship programme

Each abstract author receiving a bursary is selected to the mentorship programme. Together with an appointed mentor, they will have the opportunity to discuss both scientific and career questions during a dedicated mentorship lunch on the second day of the conference.

Early career session

A special session for early career delegates is organised each year, taking place on Saturday afternoon during the conference.

Abstract submission

Abstract submission for the Lung Science Conference 2022 is now open. The deadline to submit abstracts is 12 November at 23:59 CET. Submit an abstract.



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Fulbright Visiting Scholar Program 2022-2023
Public Health OpportunitiesInternational Jobs & OpportunitiesPublic Health Opportunity

Fulbright Visiting Scholar Program 2022-2023

by Public Health Update October 8, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The U.S. Education Foundation in Nepal (USEF-Nepal or the Fulbright Commission) announces application open for 2022-2023 Fulbright Visiting Scholar Program. The Fulbright Visiting Scholars Program has provided thousands of scholars with the opportunity to develop collaborative research and/or artistic relationships with US scholars or artists; and to enhance scholarly publications and other contributions with research and/or artistic practice conducted in the US and to establish professional contacts in their field and make long-lasting friendships with colleagues in the US.

Depending on the availability of funding, the Nepal Fulbright Commission will provide a grant to one Nepali scholar or artist to conduct post-doctoral research at a US university or to undertake an artistic project at a US university, museum or cultural institution. The Fulbright-National Archives Heritage Science Fellow will work in the Heritage Science Research and Testing Laboratory of the National Archives and Record Administration, a state of the art facility focused on scientific research to assist in the conservation, preservation, and ongoing public accessibility of cultural and historic artifacts, records, and documents.

Eligibility Requirements

  • Citizenship or permanent resident status qualifying you to hold a valid passport issued in Nepal
  • Doctoral degree (for researchers) or equivalent professional training or experience at the time of application (for artists)- For professionals and artists outside academe, recognized professional standing and substantial professional accomplishment is expected. For post-doctoral researchers, only those scholars who received their doctorate between 2010-2018 are eligible to apply. A minimum of three years’ post-doctoral professional experience in Nepal for post-doctoral researchers; a minimum of five years of experience in the area is required for artists.
  • A detailed statement of proposed activity for research and/or an artistic project at a US institution- The proposed project should contribute to the development of knowledge in your field and must be feasible within a maximum period of nine months in the US. For post-doctoral researchers, the subject of the proposed research must relate directly to Nepal. Research proposals using the given form will be accepted in any field. For artists, the proposed project must have relevance to Nepal
  • Proficiency in English appropriate to the proposed project- You may be required to take an English proficiency test
  • Sound physical and mental health- Those selected for a Fulbright grant are required to submit a Medical History and Examination Report before their grants can be finalized

Fulbright Scholars enter the US on an Exchange Visitor (J-1) visa under a U.S. Department of State program and are subject to the two-year home-country residency requirement associated with the J-1 visa. Scholars/Artists are expected to reside in Nepal for two years after completion of their Fulbright grant period in the US before they may apply for non-immigrant visas (H and L) as temporary workers, for permanent residence in the US, or as immigrants. Scholars/Artists and their dependents who have held J visas with sponsorship of more than six months are not eligible to re-enter as J-1 researchers or artists for 12 months following the program sponsorship end date.

READ MORE AND APPLY

Deadline: 11:59 PM, November 21, 2021



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Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity Programme 2022
Fellowships, Studentship & ScholarshipsPublic Health OpportunitiesPublic Health Opportunity

Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity Programme 2022

by Public Health Update October 8, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity is a funded fellowship for mid-career change-makers from around the world. We bring policymakers, activists, researchers and movement-builders to the London School of Economics and Political Science, where they will work across disciplines and borders to understand and address the root causes of inequality. Fellowship program is looking for Fellows who are bold and ready to challenge power; who see the bigger picture of how inequalities are playing out; who are imaginative and daring in the way they envision solutions; who bring care and collaboration into their practice; who recognise the significance of lived experience of inequality and whose own lived experience informs their practice; who focus not on advancing their careers, but on their commitment to changing the world through collective and collaborative approaches. Fellowship begins with an intensive, rigorous learning period at the International Inequalities Institute at the London School of Economics, followed by a lifelong, practice-based commitment to social change through collective leadership.

Fellowship programme offers two tracks: Residential and Non-Residential. Participants in both tracks participate in rigorous academic coursework, leadership and skills development, and practical approaches to fostering social change. On completion of their active fellowship year, our Fellows join a thriving community of lifelong Fellows from all seven Atlantic Fellows programmes.

Policymakers, researchers, activists, journalists, and movement-builders from around the world are invited to apply to the 2022-23 Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity programme at the London School of Economics and Political Science. Applications are open until 10 January 2022 for the innovative, inequalities-focused fellowship, which is housed at LSE’s International Inequalities Institute.

Currently recruiting for its sixth cohort, this fully-funded programme is aimed at mid-career social-change leaders with 7 to 10 years of experience, from across the globe, who are working to challenge inequality and are interested in spending one year of their careers with like-minded Fellows studying and reflecting on how they can take their fight against inequality to the next level. Applicants to the programme work in fields such as economic and social rights; sustainability and environmental activism; tax justice and economic alternatives; women’s, minority and disability rights; rights to education, health equity, housing, labour and community organising; and peacebuilding and transitional justice.

Tracks

The Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity programme has two different tracks: Residential and Non-Residential. Members of the Residential track also study the MSc in Inequalities and Social Science at LSE during their active fellowship year. Members of both tracks participate in rigorous academic coursework, as well as sessions on leadership and skills development, and practical approaches to fostering social change. 

Deadline

Applications are now open for LSE’s Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity programme for social-change leaders who are working to tackle inequality. Applications to Atlantic Fellows for Social and Economic Equity’s 2022-23 programme will close at 12:00 pm GMT (noon) on 10 January 2022. http://afsee.atlanticfellows.org/apply



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InternshipsInternational Jobs & OpportunitiesPublic Health OpportunitiesPublic Health Opportunity

The Bank Internship Program (BIP)

by Public Health Update October 8, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

The Bank Internship Program (BIP) offers highly motivated individuals an opportunity to be exposed to the mission and work of the World Bank. The internship allows individuals to bring new perspectives, innovative ideas and research experience into the Bank’s work, while improving skills in a diverse environment. In addition, it is a great way to enhance CVs with practical work experience. Internships are available in both development operations and other business units (such as Human Resources, Communications, Accounting, etc.) however, availability during a given internship term is based on business need. To access the application, please click the apply button, noting that only selected candidates will be contacted.

Eligibility Criteria

To be eligible for an Internship, candidates must have an undergraduate degree and be enrolled in a full-time graduate study program (pursuing a master’s degree or PhD with plans to return to school full-time). There is no age limit.

Fluency in English is required. Knowledge of languages such as: French, Spanish, Russian, Arabic, Portuguese, and Chinese is desirable. Other skills such as computing skills are advantageous.

We value diversity in our workplace, and encourage all qualified individuals, particularly women, with diverse professional and academic backgrounds to apply. Our aim is to attract and recruit the best talent in the world.

Additional Information

The WB Internship Program typically seeks candidates for: Operations (Front Line) in the following fields: economics, finance, human development (public health, education, nutrition, population), social sciences (anthropology, sociology), agriculture, environment, engineering, urban planning, natural resources management, private sector development, and other related fields; or Corporate support (Accounting, Communications, Human Resources Management, Information Technology, Treasury, and other corporate services).


The WB pays an hourly salary to all Interns and, where applicable, provides an allowance toward travel expenses up to USD 3,000 at the discretion of the manager. These travel expenses can only include transport expenses (airfare) to or from the duty station city. Interns are responsible for their own accommodations. Driven by business needs, most Intern positions are based in Washington, DC with a few others in the WB country offices. Usually, internship opportunities are for a minimum of four weeks.

The WB Internship is offered twice a year:
• Summer Internship (May–September): The application period is December 1–January 31 each year.
• Winter Internship (November–March): The application period is October 1-31 each year.
All applications must be submitted online and during the respective application period. (We do not accept applications by email.)

J1 visa holders need to obtain a G4 visa abroad prior to starting employment or unpaid internship at the WB.


Application Process

Application Form: Take time to prepare your application and enter your personal information accurately. You will be asked to upload the following documents:

– Curriculum Vitae (CV)
– Statement of Interest
– Proof of Enrollment in a graduate degree

Application Checklist: the following application checklist is meant to facilitate your application experience.

• Ensure that you use either Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Apple Safari, or Internet Explorer 10 or higher as your browser version.
• Please make sure that you are connected with a reasonable bandwidth of internet connection without any network/firewall restriction.
• You will be asked to register for an account and provide an email address. Ensure that you have correctly spelled out your email address, since this will be our main channel of communication with you regarding your candidacy.
• You must complete your application in a single session and you will only be able to submit it if you have uploaded all the required documents and answered all the questions (all questions marked with an asterisk-*- are required).
• Please complete the application within 90 minutes to avoid a system timeout.
• Remember to enter your complete phone number (country code + city code + number).
• Please do not enter any special characters (â-<>&#â, etc.) in any of the application fields. Try not to copy and paste any characters/text from Microsoft Word.
• Please upload the following documents (mandatory) before submitting your application:

– Curriculum Vitae (CV)
– Statement of Interest
– Proof of Enrollment in a graduate degree

Note: Each file should not exceed 5 MB and should be in one of the following formats: .doc, .docx, or .pdf

• Please make sure that the filenames of the documents that you are attaching do not contain any special characters, such as â-<>&#â, etc. PDF files are the best files to upload.
• Once you submit your application, you will not be able to make any further changes/updates.
• Upon submission of your application you will receive an email confirmation providing you with your application number.

Selection

All applications are stored in a database which is consulted by hiring Managers based on business needs. Please note that candidates will not hear from us unless they are shortlisted by a hiring Manager that is looking to hire an intern. Managers have access to the Internship database from February – July (Summer Internship) and from November – January (Winter Internship). We do not have a pre-identified number of positions for interns per season. For each season, hiring is solely based on business needs.

Applications are now open through October 31st for the Winter Internship Term (November 2021 – March 2022).

APPLY NOW



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October 8, 2021 0 comments
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Yale Young Global Scholars
International Jobs & OpportunitiesInternational Plan, Policy & GuidelinesPublic Health OpportunitiesPublic Health Opportunity

Yale Young Global Scholars (YYGS) 2022

by Public Health Update October 8, 2021
written by Public Health Update

Overview

Yale Young Global Scholars (YYGS) is an academic enrichment program for outstanding high school students from around the world. Each summer, students from over 150 countries (including all 50 U.S. states) participate in one interdisciplinary, two-week session online or at Yale’s historic campus. Immerse yourself in a global learning community at Yale University.

Mission

Yale Young Global Scholars empowers the next generation of leaders by building a global community and designing interdisciplinary programs that foster intellectual curiosity, deepen understanding and inspire creative action across all borders.

Details

Yale Young Global Scholars (YYGS) has opened its application for next year’s program, offering twelve academic sessions ranging from the humanities to the biological sciences. During the two-week program, participants will experience life as a university student by attending lectures and seminars, meeting peers from around the world, and accessing opportunities across Yale- ranging from admissions panels to conversations with Yale professors.

The high school enrichment program will offer residential and online sessions during June and July 2022. YYGS is one of the most globally diverse, accessible pre-college programs in the world. The program serves over 2,000 students from 150+ countries and distributes over $3 million in need-based financial aid equally to domestic and international students.

Whether online or residential, YYGS will offer a range of academic sessions for students to choose from, specializing in cutting-edge topics within the STEM, social science, cross-disciplinary, and humanities disciplines.

Create long-lasting connections, and get exposed to different disciplines and ideas through…+ Lectures+ Breakout Sessions+ Seminars+ Simulations+ Impact Panels+ Speaker Events+ Lab/Library/Museum Resources+ Social Activities+ Interactions with Yale Professors & College Students.

How to Apply

Interested students can apply early to receive a discounted application fee. If the fee poses a financial burden, students can submit a fee waiver to reduce the application fee to $0 USD.

https://globalscholars.yale.edu/how-to-apply.

Early Action Deadline: Nov 3, 2021 at 11:59PM Eastern Time
Regular Decision Deadline: Jan 10, 2022 at 11:59PM Eastern Time



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