Sunday, December 6, 2009

For SJM: Infectious Disease

Dear IHO,

We're finally ready to launch ID Rounds starting this week! Please sign up online here:

http://www1.mysignup.com/cgi-bin/view.cgi?datafile=idroundssignup

Passcode: IDrounds

This is your chance to shadow Infectious Disease physicians, see interesting cases, and learn what specializing in Infectious Disease is all about. Each session starts around 1:30pm and lasts about 2 hours.

Please only sign-up for one session since they are limited in number and only 2 students can attend each time. You will received more specific instructions via email as your shadowing date approaches.

You all get first dibs before we send this out to the classes. Feel free to email me if you guys have any questions!

Jennifer Heinen
IHO ID Rounds Coordinator
jah2190@columbia.edu

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Mentors Needed for High School Premed

We are looking for mentors for the Charles Drew High School Pipeline Program.

The Pipeline program pairs a Columbia University pre-medical student with a high school student who is interested in becoming a pre-med student. Mentors build strong relationships with their mentees, offer guidance, ...and provide support as their mentee completest the college admissions process.

If you are interested, please send an e-mail to cu.pipeline@gmail.com and we will send you an application ASAP!

If you already have a mentee, but have lost contact with him or her, please contact either Johanna Miele, Pipeline Co-Chair, at jcm2179@columbia.edu or Brittany Martin, Pipeline Co-Chair, at bam2155@columbia.edu.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

CU Alternative Spring Break Trip to Costa Rica with the not-for-profit organization VIDA!

Are you a pre-medical, pre-veterinary, pre-dental, pre-nursing, medical, dental or nursing student at Columbia University? Do you want to spend 9 days in Costa Rica over Spring break learning more about the profession you are interested in and getting lots of hands-on experience while helping communities in need and exploring Costa Rica? If your answer is yes, then look no further. This is the program for you!

Welcome to VIDA, an exciting not-for-profit humanitarian volunteer program that offers hands–on, eye-opening and mind-enriching international volunteer experiences to students of medicine, dentistry and veterinary medicine. We offer unparalleled volunteer experiences for those who want to learn about medicine, discover new cultures and share with those less fortunate while providing free health services to improve the quality of life of impoverished people and of animals in Central America.

Join us for an alternative spring break trip you will never forget! We will be visiting Cartago and Turrialba, where we will set up clinics in various establishments such as schools and churches. The trip will take place from March 13th to March 21st, 2010. The cost of the trip, excluding airfare and the application fee of $100, is $1,395. This price includes ground transportation, airport pick up/drop off, lodging, bilingual health professionals, guides, interpreters, supplies/materials for clinics, most meals and tours.

This trip is also open to students who are still undecided but are leaning toward a certain medical profession or to anyone who just wants to help make a difference. You are not expected to have had any medical experience or to have taken any science classes prior to the trip. NOTE: Students on the veterinary team who wish to participate in surgery at the spay/neuter clinics will need to have observed 25 hours of small-animal surgery at a local animal clinic prior to the trip.

IMPORTANT DEADLINE: The deadline to submit an application for this trip is December 14, 2009. Please go to https://secure.puertoviejosatellite.com/vida/application.php
and select "CR031310: Columbia University Mar 13/10 - Mar 21/10". The application fee of $100.00 is due along with your application. Please go to http://vidavolunteertravel.org/payment.php#paynow
to submit the payment online.

Questions or concerns? Please do not hesitate to contact Rachelle at rdm2110@columbia.edu or rachelle@vidavolunteertravel.org.

For more information:

Please look at the Facebook event page

for this trip to learn more. If you log into your facebook account and view the page you will be to see pictures from a previous VIDA trip to Costa Rica and Nicaragua.
Please also visit VIDA's website
and VIDA's YouTube Channel which has videos about the VIDA trip to Costa Rica
, the dental clinic
, the medical clinic
and a sloth sanctuary
that we will most likely visit.

Monday, November 2, 2009

HIV and Global Health: A Reception to Celebrate an ICAP-Supported JAIDS Supplement

Monday, November 16
2-3:30pm
Hess Commons
Mailman School of Public Health,
Ground Floor


Join ICAP at a reception to celebrate the publication of the November supplement of the Journal of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (JAIDS). Entitled "HIV Scale-Up and Global Health Systems," the supplement was guest-edited by ICAP Director Wafaa El-Sadr and features articles by 18 ICAP and Mailman School of Public Health faculty authors.

The event will include an informal panel discussion with Wafaa El-Sadr, Richard Parker, Miriam Rabkin, David Hoos, Marita Murrman and Jessica Justman.

Reception to follow
Open to all faculty, students, and staff

Sunday, November 1, 2009

FORUM EVENT: DOCUMENTARY SCREENING AND DINNER!!!

The Forum for Global Health and Human Rights is hosting a documentary screening this Thursday, November 5th at 6:00PM in Hammer 401, followed by a non-pizza dinner. The documentary concerns the work of the Foundation for Post Conflict Development in East Timor. Information about internships and other opportunities will be provided at the event. Please RSVP to pl2148@columbia.edu so we know how much food to order. See below for more information:

The Foundation for Post Conflict Development
is an NYC-based NGO that conducts field work in countries emerging from conflict situations. They take a multi-faceted approach by coordinating health, educational, artistic/cultural, and economic development projects that are complemented by academic/historical research in East Timor, Madagascar, the Caucusus region, Jordan, Morocco, and other countries.

For our kickoff event, come watch a 20-minute documentary on nation-building in East Timor following civil war. Afterwards, Executive Director of FPCD, Ms. Claudia Abate, will speak about the exciting work that FPCD is doing to directly address issues that have arisen in this setting, with a focus on health. Ms. Abate worked at the United Nations for 13 years before coming to FPCD and has extensive experience in foreign policy.

Also come hear about opportunities to be involved in these efforts! More information about FPCD is available at http://www.postconflictdev.org/

Monday, October 26, 2009

Newsletter, October 2009

Please read on to find out some of what's been happening with SJM over the last month!


Physicians for Human Rights & Forum on Global Health and Human Rights News:

Physicians for Human Rights started the year off teaming up with Columbia University Harm Reduction Outreach Network (CUHRON) with a postcard-signing campaign advocating to lift the needle-exchange ban. Then on October 1, Dr. Joanne Csete came to speak to us about her work on HIV/AIDS in Africa and how illicit drug use is an often neglected mode of transmission that needs to be further addressed in public health. This was the first event in a monthly series known as the Forum on Global Health and Human Rights (FGHHR). Following our introductory meeting, FGHHR has set its schedule for the year which includes topics such as overpopulation and post-conflict development. In addition, PHR is in the process of setting up events on lethal injection with Dr. Mark Heath, an informal discussion with Dr. Robert Deckelbaum on his work in areas of conflict, and finally a conference on reproductive rights with Mailman's Sexual Health Advocacy Group (SHAG). If you are interested in getting involved with any of these upcoming activities, please let Sara (srv2109) or Floria (fwc2109) know.



HIV Rotation News:

The Center for Comprehensive Care at St. Luke's Hospital welcomed three new postbaccs this month, who are gearing up to begin work on two research projects as well as begin shadowing physicians in the clinic. For more information about the clinic, please visit the website: http://www.centerforcare.org/


Doc to Dock News:

Thanks to Erin, Rachel, and Will for volunteering their help over the last several weeks at the Doc to Dock warehouse! Earlier in the month, Doc to Dock founder Dr. Bruce Charash was interviewed for the nationally-syndicated show WorldFocus. The segment aired on October 15 on national television. Additionally, Doc to Dock has just recently begun a collection relationship with the Comprehensive Cancer Center at Columbia Presbyterian.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Saving Mothers

Hey everyone,

If you were at the kick off meeting for SJM about a month ago, you'll remember me mentioning Saving Mothers, an initiative that was organized by Nichole Young-Lin, a postbac who just graduated last year. Nichole left an undergraduate body at Columbia to work with Saving Mothers when she finished the postbac, however the postbacs she left in charge unfortunately fell through due to other commitments.

Keely, a first year postbac, has recently been coordinating with Nichole to resume participation by postbac students at Columbia. If this is a project that sounds interesting to you that you'd like to participate in, please email Keely at kcb2126@columbia.edu.

You can read about Saving Mothers at their website here or at the link at right:
http://savingmothers.org/mission.html

Monday, October 19, 2009

Maternal Health Outcomes in Tibet

Improving Maternal Health Outcomes in Tibet with Dr. Kunchok Gyaltsen

Dr. Gyaltsen is a Tibetan medical doctor, Buddhist monk, and leader
in Tibetan rural development. He will present his work on maternal
health and education in Tibet. Dr. Gyaltsen has worked on public
health initiatives within Tibet through NGOs and the Chinese
government. Dr. Gyaltsen is currently a PhD candidate at the UCLA
School of Public Health.

Monday, October 26 10:30 am - noon Refreshments provided

Hess Commons

Rosenfield Building, 722 W 168th St

Sponsored by Department of Epidemiology & CUPID

Monday, September 28, 2009

Volunteering with Doc to Dock

For those of you who couldn't make the first SJM meeting, here is a short video on Doc to Dock, a non-profit under the Clinton Global Initiative aimed at redirecting medical supplies that would otherwise be wasted to clinics in Africa.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WOoxU4oQPxI

If this sounds like something you'd be interested in getting involved in, I've set up several tentative dates to visit and volunteer at the warehouse at the following link (which incidentally can also always be found in the side bar on the right). If you'd like to sign up for a trip, just click the link, find a day you'd like to go and enter your name and email. As the date approaches, you'll get a reminder email that will also address the logistics on getting there.

http://spreadsheets.google.com/ccc?key=p5gqwk2rQnAapQt8XD1jfcA&hl=en

The dates and times that we go are always flexible, but there are only Friday dates from 2-5pm for now because of my personal schedule. If you'd be interested in arranging a separate trip, just let me know.

On that note, I'm looking for someone to share the responsibility of regularly organizing trips to Doc to Dock with me. If this sounds like something you'd be interested in, please write me!

Thanks,
Kevin

Forum on Global Health and Human Rights (FGHHR) Introductory Meeting next Tuesday

FGHHR is a student-run program that seeks to bring various fields together to discuss topics on global health and human rights.

Please come if you are interested in being involved in planning this year's forum. We also need your input so start thinking of ideas for possible forum topics and events you'd like to see! For example, past topics have included the ethics of global health education, water as a human right vs. a commodity, maternal mortality in developing countries, hunger and the global food crisis, environmental health and justice, and the dynamics of donor funding.

Tuesday, October 6 from 7:00pm - 8:00pm
RSVP to fwc2109@columbia.edu with "FGHHR Meeting" in the subject line by this Friday. We will inform you of the location thereafter.

Thanks!
Floria, Peter & Sara

Physicians for Human Rights & the Forum on Global Health & Human Rights present: Illicit Drug Use in Africa as a Neglected Public Health Problem

Thursday, October 1, 2009 from 12:30pm – 1:30pm in Hammer 305

Speaker: Joanne Csete, Ph.D., M.P.H.
Dinner will be provided.
Please RSVP to
fwc2109@columbia.edu with "PHR: Joanne Csete" in the subject line by Tuesday, so that we have enough food.


Thanks!
Floria, Peter & Sara

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

SJM Kick-off Meeting

Come enjoy free pizza and drinks at Social Justice Medicine's kick-off meeting next week:

Friday, September 25th, 4pm (two Fridays from now)
Lewisohn 602


We'll be talking about the variety of volunteer opportunities and projects currently running and in the works, as well as how to get involved. Have an idea for a project you'd like to start? Then this meeting is the right place for you.

Hope to see you all there!

Thursday, April 23, 2009

Village Health Works Event April 28th

Deogratias, who spoke at Columbia on behalf of SJM this past Febuary, is having an event to raise awareness about the medical realities of Burundi. Read on for more details.

Begin Message from Jim Augustine

As many of you know, I recently became involved with an exciting new organization called Village Health Works (VHW), a global health project bringing quality care - and with it, hope - to the people of Burundi. VHW's founder, Deogratias, had been in medical school when ethnic civil wars broke out in Burundi and Rwanda. Separated from his family then forced into hiding, Deo became a refugee in the United States, living homeless in NYC's Central Park while holding fast to his dreams of becoming a doctor and returning to Burundi. With the help of strangers who have grown into close friends, Deo made it to Columbia University, then Harvard, and finally into medical school. In 2006, he returned to Burundi, announcing to the people of the mountaintop village of Kigutu that, with their help, he intended to build a clinic there to combat the rampant spread of HIV, Tuberculosis, malnutrition, and other treatable maladies in the region. To date, VHW has treated over 20,000 patients - many of whom walk for days to reach the clinic. And now Deo's story has inspired a new book by Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award Winner Tracy Kidder, Strength in What Remains, to be released in August 2009.

I have been blessed to work with Deo over the past several months, building a media strategy that will help audiences of the soon-to-be-bestseller about his life become aware of and involved in the important work taking place at Village Health Works. In March, I traveled to Burundi to film the clinic in action, capturing truly heroic moments of the doctors, villagers, patients, and volunteers who struggle everyday against the misery that has so devastated the country. The trip changed my life. And now, I could not be more thrilled to share part of that experience with you.

NEXT TUESDAY, April 28th @7pm, the Tank Theater in midtown Manhattan will be hosting a FREE event to welcome Deo back to the United States. The event is not a fund-raiser, but rather a FRIEND-raiser intended to build in strength of numbers VHW's community of concern here in NYC. Come hear Deo speak about the birth of the clinic at Kigutu and the ongoing miracles that are happening there. As an extra bonus, you'll be the first to see a small portion of the footage I captured while on my trip!

Again, the tickets are FREE, but because of strict space limitations, you must have one to enter the event! So REGISTER NOW - and bring a friend! I promise, it will be the best zero dollars you've ever spent!

Village Health Works

Speaking Engagement

April 28th @7pm

The Tank Theater

354 West 45th Street

Between 8th and 9th Avenues

New York, NY 10036

For more information about this event or Village Health Works, please feel free to email or call me (917-749-9233) or visit their website: www.villagehealthworks.org.

I look forward to seeing you all soon!

Jim

Register for Village Health Works event – April 28, 2009




--
Social Justice Medicine
School of General Studies
Columbia University
http://www.columbiasjm.blogspot.com/

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Another Great Water Politics Event at P&S

The Forum on Global Health & Human Rights* presents its next event for the topic of Water as a Human Right vs. Water as a Commodity.

Join us to for the talk "Poison in the Well: Exposure, Effects, and Remediation of Arsenic in Bangladesh" by Dr. Joseph Granziano , Professor of Environmental Health Sciences and Pharmacology at the Mailman School of Public Health. 

When: Thursday, April 9
Where: Hammer 404
Time: 6:30 pm

Dinner will be provided!!


*The Forum on Global Health & Human Rights is coordinated by the International Health Organization and Physicians for Human Rights, with support by the Clinical Practice Program, AMSA, Lambda Alliance, and the Family Medicine Interest Group.




Monday, April 6, 2009

A Great Event on the P & S campus

The Forum on Global Health & Human Rights has a new module: Water as a Human Right vs. Water as a Commodity.

Join us for a viewing of "Flow," Irena Salina's award-winning documentary investigation into the world water crisis about, touching on the growing privatization of the world's  dwindling fresh water supply with an unflinching focus on politics,  pollution, human rights, and the emergence of a domineering world  water cartel.

When: Tuesday, April 7
Where: Hammer 312
When: 7 pm

A light dinner will be provided!

For more information on the Food and Water Watch visit http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/water


Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Film Screening and Interview with Film Maker

The Forum on Global Health and Human Rights (http://forumonglobalhealthandhumanrights.blogspot.com) is a Columbia University medical student initiative that hosts international health and policy events throughout the year that are open to the public.

This Wednesday, March 18th, the Forum is hosting an exciting event with Emmy Award winning filmmaker and journalist Barbara Rick and a screening of her newest film, 'Road to Ingwavuma.' This 36-minute film chronicles the mission of Artists for a New South Africa as they travel to see the extreme poverty and progress in South Africa in the face of the HIV/AIDS epidemic. The event will also have Sharon Gelman, the executive director of Artists for a New South Africa speaking about her organization, which includes figures like Samuel L. Jackson and Carlos Santana.

Details of the event:
Wednesday, March 18th at 7 PM
Room 301 of Hammer Health Sciences Building (corner of 168th and Fort Washington)

For more information on the film:  www.southafricamovie.com

For more information on Artists for a New South Africa:  www.ansafrica.org

Please feel free to forward this email to anyone who you feel might be interested.

Although not required, if you could RSVP to Bryan McColgan at bjm2123@columbia.edu, that would be much appreciated.




Sunday, March 8, 2009

Maternal Mortality: Dr. Grace Kodindo

The Forum on Global Health and Human Rights presents:

Maternal Mortality: Dr. Grace Kodindo
Thursday, March 12, 6:00 - 7:00 PM
Hammer Rm. 306
Dinner will be served

Join us for a talk by Dr. Grace Kodindo, the subject of the 2005 BBC documentary, "Dead Mums Don't Cry."  Dr. Kodindo will discuss maternal mortality in Chad and elsewhere and her transition from a practicing Obstetrician/Gynecologist to public health work.  Currently an Assistant Professor of Population and Family Health at Mailman, Dr. Kodindo has both extensive clinical and academic experience in the field of averting maternal mortality and disability.

Please RSVP to rsk2133@columbia.edu

http://forumonglobalhealthandhumanrights.blogspot.com




Thursday, February 26, 2009

HIV Rotation Meeting

To all those interested in the HIV Rotation,
 
We are looking for coordinators for the Columbia Post-bac HIV Rotation Program at St. Luke's to help expand the program.  There will be an informational meeting on Monday, March 2nd at 1 PM located at Room 302 in the Teachers College Library to discuss specifics of the program and next steps for participation and expansion.  We apologize for the short notice.
 
To remind you: the purpose of this internship rotation is to examine HIV care in low income communities from a comprehensive public health perspective with an eye towards being future physicians.  We are looking for two first-year postbaccs to help with a pilot program and become future coordinators of this program.

The clinic is an amazing place with a client population of 3,300 HIV positive New Yorkers.  They provide a wealth of health care, mental health, case management services as well as conduct research.  The staff at the Saint Luke's clinic have been receptive to postbacc student participation and have helped design a rotation that will be piloted on a relatively small scale for the remainder of this semester.  The purpose of the pilot is to fine tune the structure for the program and create some tools for reflection on the experience.  If all goes well the program will be continued and expanded for future semesters.

Some logistics of the program:
•       The four components include 1) shadowing doctors and assisting in a clinical setting 2) assisting public health research 3) providing assistance in constructing patient education workshops 4)
administering satisfaction surveys.
•       The weekly commitment is substantial and requires 6 hours per week. While the hours are flexible to fit your schedule, once they are set it requires a consistent commitment, regardless of your exam schedule.  We are extremely excited about the educational opportunities the CCC offers.  This program is gonna be amazing!

Again, the informational meeting will be on Monday, March 2nd at 1 PM located at Room 302 in the Teachers College Library to discuss specifics of the program and next steps for participation.
 
The advantage of getting involved now is that you can have ownership of helping to create this program and take leadership in the future.

If you are interested in participating in the program this semester, please RSVP to this email AND please make every effort to attend this meeting.  Even if you've sent us your resume, please still try to attend this meeting.

--
Social Justice Medicine
School of General Studies
Columbia University
http://www.columbiasjm.blogspot.com/
 

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Fwd: "Owning knowledge" Public Health event from the Committee on Global Thought

The Committee on Global Thought presents,

Owning Knowledge: Science, Health and Law in an Integrated World

February 25, 2009
Wednesday, 6:30 pm
Discussion
Schapiro Center, Davis Auditorium

The panel will feature Sherry Glied, Joseph Stiglitz, John Sulston,
Harold Varmus, and Arti Rai.

This symposium will consider the implications of the private ownership
of scientific knowledge, particularly for such critical issues as
global public health. Scientific, economic and legal perspectives will
be employed to address the ways in which global knowledge commons can
be managed to make scientific advances once again benefit those who
most need them. Panelists will discuss how intellectual property
affects public health, and whether there are alternative ways that
public health research might be structured to make it more useful to
vulenrable populations and the developing world.

Sherry Glied is Chair and Professor of the Health Policy and
Management Department at Columbia University's Mailman School of
Public Health. Her principle areas of research are in health policy
reform and mental healthcare policy.

Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor of Economics at Columbia
University. He was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics in 2001 for
his analysis of markets with asymmetric information.

Sir John Sulston is Chair of the Institute for Science, Ethics and
Innovation at the University of Manchester. He was awarded the Nobel
Prize in Medicine 2002 for his work in sequencing the human genome.
Sulston is leading campaigner against the patenting of human genetic
information.

Harold Varmus is President and Chief Executive Officer of Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. He was awarded the 1989 Nobel Prize in
Physiology or Medicine. As Director of the National Institutes of
Health, he advocated for an open access system for scientific
research, arguing the scientific knowledge should be available to all.

Arti Rai is Elvin R. Latty Professor of Law at Duke University. Her
current research, funded by the NIH, focuses on intellectual property
issues raised by collaborative R&D in areas ranging from synthetic
biology to drug development.



Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Hell and Hope in a Wounded Land:
A Personal Account


Friday, February 20th 7:30pm
rm555, 5th floor, Alfred Lerner Hall

Deogratias ('01 GS) will discuss the healthcare and reconciliation challenges he faced establishing a clinic in post-genocide Burundi. In 2006, with support from Dr. Paul Farmer's organization, Partners in Health, Deo worked with community members to build and begin operating a model health center in the rural village of Kigutu.

Tracy Kidder, who'll introduce Deo, is a Pulitzer Prize-winning author who recently completed a new book about Deo's life and work, Strength in What Remains.

This event is free and open to the public. Please RSVP. Non-CUID holders must RSVP to gain entry to the building. Seating will be on a first come, first served basis.

RSVP Here

Deogratias Biography:

An émigré from Burundi, an East African nation which has the unfortunate distinction of being ranked consistently as one of the world's poorest countries, Deo came to the United States during the civil wars in both Rwanda and Burundi in 1994. He brought with him to this country an interest in medicine and public health, and public service, which propelled him through his undergraduate studies at Columbia University and to the School of Public Health at Harvard University. After graduating from Harvard, Deo worked closely with Dr. Paul Farmer and his organization, Partners in Health, in Boston, Haiti, and Rwanda.

Deo, now a US citizen, is the Founder and Chairperson, Village Health Works, a 501 (c) (3) not-for-profit organization based in the US and operating in Burundi. Village Health Works has modeled itself on Partners in Health, which has served as its incubator and sponsor. Village Health Works acts together with the local community and government to initiate and strengthen health care facilities and services, access to clean water and safe food, and basic education and economic opportunity.

www.villagehealthworks.org

Journal Club's First Meeting of the Semester

First Year Postbacc Danny Ash will present "Project VIVA: A Multilevel Community-Based Intervention to Increase Influenza Vaccination Rates Among Hard-to-Reach Populations in New York City" at 12 PM today, January 29, as part of PMA Social Justice's Journal Club.

Format is informal presentation and discussion.

Location details below.
Friday, January 29th at 12:00 PM
Room 102 (1st Floor Russell Hall).
Gottesman Libraries at Teachers College, Columbia University.

For more information on this meeting, please contact kop2101@columbia.edu.