10/21/2005 UW-MADISON ESTABLISHES CENTER
FOR GLOBAL HEALTH
Madison – The University of Wisconsin-Madison has established a
Center for Global Health. The center is a joint initiative of
the UW schools of medicine, nursing, pharmacy and veterinary
medicine, and the Division of International Studies. It will be
located administratively in the Medical School.
The center’s mission is to develop and support global health
education, research and partnerships by building on UW-Madison’s
extensive expertise in the health sciences and area and
international studies. This is believed to be the first center
of its kind in which four health sciences schools and an
international studies unit on a single American university
campus have come together to advance global health.
According to Cynthia Haq, MD, UW Medical School professor of
family medicine and the center’s director, the initiative comes
at an important time.
“We now have a single world in terms of health,” Haq says,
adding that globalization has brought a host of changes that
impact healthcare education and delivery systems worldwide. As
borders have become more porous and transportation networks more
extensive, people have been able to travel farther and faster.
Diseases now can move quickly around the world.
Haq says that today’s health professionals increasingly need to
have an understanding of global health issues and of the
cultures and peoples of the world. “Global health is good for
Wisconsin.
It’s not just over there, it’s here,” Haq says.
The center will:
-
Establish
global health education programs, including a broad range of
study-abroad options; interdisciplinary global health courses
and programs for undergraduate, graduate and special students;
a certificate in global health, and global health tracks or
concentrations for masters and PhD candidates.
-
Facilitate
and encourage global health research by serving as a catalyst
and clearinghouse for information sharing and networking among
UW-Madison faculty and staff, and by fostering global health
research projects.
-
Enhance
global health service programs, partnerships and exchanges
through long-term global health partnerships with key
institutions.
UW-Madison offers field experiences and study tours for students
in Uganda, Belize and Ecuador, as well as study abroad
opportunities for medical students in several countries. For
example, two UW-Madison health sciences students participated in
internships at the World
Health Organization headquarters in
Geneva, Switzerland, in summer 2005, while one student conducted
HIV/AIDS research in Botswana.
Many UW-Madison faculty and staff are involved in global health
research and partnerships in several countries, including
Uganda, Afghanistan, Ecuador and Mexico.
Examples include:
·
Curtis
Johnson, PharmD, RPh, a professor emeritus in the School of
Pharmacy, has supervised pharmacy students doing independent
study activities in Ecuador, where a summer field school in the
health sciences is entering its fourth year.
·
Christopher
Olsen, DVM, PhD, a professor of public health in the Department
of Pathobiological Sciences of the
School
of
Veterinary Medicine,
studies the transmission of influenza viruses between species of
animals and between animals and people--work that may someday
help us understand how and why pandemic influenza viruses
develop. He also teaches each year in the Ecuador field school
program.
·
Linda
Baumann, PhD, a professor in the School of Nursing who focuses
on health disparities of race, ethnicity and income, has
expanded her research to developing countries, including Vietnam
and Uganda, and is training nurses to care for people with
diabetes.
·
A developing
interdisciplinary partnership with the University of Guadalajara
(UDG) has enabled faculty from medicine, nursing, pharmacy and
veterinary medicine to interact through video-conference and
faculty exchanges. Currently, Mario Salguero, MD, of UDG, is
spending a year in Madison collaborating with David Rakel, MD,
in the area of alternative medicine. Plans for health science
student exchanges to Mexico through the partnership are under
way.
Earlier this year, Haq spent six months as a Fulbright fellow
and visiting professor at Makerere University in Kampala,
Uganda. She worked with faculty and government officials to
develop curricula and promote regional efforts to strengthen
primary healthcare.
Haq’s colleague, Douglas Laube, MD, chair and professor of
obstetrics and gynecology, has been a consultant to a U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services project designed to
improve the health of women and children in Afghanistan. Haq
explains that Laube is leading efforts to strengthen the
education of physicians, nurses and hospital personnel in a
teaching hospital in Kabul. He has initiated programs to save
the lives of hundreds of women in a country that has one of the
highest recorded rates of maternal mortality.
Faculty and staff affiliated with the UW International
Institute--including the African Studies Program, the Latin
American,
Caribbean
and Iberian Studies Program--and the College of Agricultural and
Life Sciences have worked collaboratively with health sciences
faculty.
“The new Center for Global Health is the culmination of years of
effort by many of our
faculty,
staff and students,” says Philip M. Farrell, MD, PhD, dean of UW
Medical School. “The
center will facilitate collaboration among members of the health
sciences schools, the Division of International Studies and
others so that new cross-disciplinary global health programs can
grow and thrive.”
Gilles Bousquet, PhD, dean of International Studies, adds: “The
Center for Global Health symbolizes everything that's right
about international education on the UW-Madison campus. It
marries the health sciences, social sciences and humanities to
ensure that our students, whatever their area of specialization,
will benefit from a broad understanding and experience of the
world around them and be able to respond to global health
challenges at home and abroad.”
Other UW-Madison deans offer unqualified support of the center.
“This initiative will enhance opportunities for students to gain
expertise in global health,” says Katharyn A. May, DNSc, RN,
dean of the School of Nursing. “Nurses
have always practiced on the international stage, starting with
Florence Nightingale, but the new center enhances an already
world class environment for our students. I’m really pleased
that the
School
of Nursing was in a position to contribute some campus
leadership.”
Daryl D. Buss, DVM, dean of the UW-Madison School of Veterinary
Medicine, elaborates: “Veterinarians play a critical role in
animal and human health and well-being around the world. The
heightened risk for inadvertent or deliberate introduction of
devastating diseases affecting animals and humans emphasizes the
need for a global perspective for veterinary medicine as part of
the healthcare team.”
Adds Jeanette C. Roberts, PhD, MPH, dean of the School of
Pharmacy: “All the global health activities are being designed
as interprofessional, collaborative research and learning
experiences, with additional benefit for all involved.
We are pleased to provide expertise in the basic, social and
clinical sciences of pharmacy and to learn from our disciplinary
partners within the goal of improving the health of the global
community.”
The Center for Global Health will be inaugurated on December 7,
2005, at the Second Annual Global Health Symposium from 5 to 8
p.m. in the Health Sciences Learning Center,
750 Highland Ave.
Following the inauguration, the symposium--with a theme of
“Global Health and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)”--will
focus on the global health efforts of UW-Madison faculty,
students and health professionals from the greater Madison area.
It also will raise awareness about the MDGs for human
development as proposed by the United Nations and other
international organizations. The keynote speaker will be Frances
R. Westley, PhD, director of UW-Madison's Gaylord Nelson
Institute for Environmental Studies. Attendance is free and no
registration is required.
The center also sponsors a monthly global health seminar
featuring national health sciences experts, as well as
Madison-area health sciences professionals. The talks are free
and open to the public.
Interested faculty, staff and community health professionals are
encouraged to join the efforts as global health affiliates. For
more information, contact Melissa Coons,
mcoons@wisc.edu or visit the center Web site at http://www.pophealth.wisc.edu/gh.