Where Are We in Achieving the Goals

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Where Are We in Achieving the Goals Where are we in achieving the goals of the Global Strategy for Women’s and Children’s Health? Taking stock of the progress and developing the strategy for 2013 WHO Geneva, Switzerland 19-20 November 2012, Kofi Annan Room (UNAIDS) Mr Geoff Adlide Dr Luc de Bernis Director Senior Maternal Health Adviser Advocacy and Public Policy UNFPA GAVI New York Geneva United States of America Switzerland Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Ms Margaret Biggs Ms Rebecca Affolder President Global Health Adviser Canadian International Development Agency Office of the UN Secretary-General Gatineau, Quebec New York Canada United States of America Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Ms Doreen Bogdan Mr Nicholas Alipui Chief, Strategic Planning and Membership Director Department, General Secretariat UNICEF Programmes International Telecommunications Union New York Geneva USA Switzerland Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Ms Mariam Ally Dr John Borrazzo Senior Economist Chief, Maternal and Child Health Division Ministry of Health and Social Welfare Bureau for Global Health Dar es Salaam U.S. Agency for International Development Tanzania Washington DC Email: [email protected] United States of America Email: [email protected] Senator Salma Ataullahjan Senate of Canada Ms Heather Cameron Ottawa, Ontario Director Canada Human Development and Gender Equality Email: [email protected] Canadian International Development Agency Gatineau, Quebec Dr Francesco Aureli Email: [email protected] Save the Children New York Mr Martin Chungong United States of America Director Email: [email protected] Division of Programmes Inter-Parliamentary Union Ms Anurita Bains Geneva Adviser Switzerland UNAIDS Email: [email protected] Geneva Switzerland Email: [email protected] *participate via video link Where are we in achieving the goals of the Global Strategy for Women’s and Children’s Health? Taking stock of the progress and developing the strategy for 2013 WHO Geneva, Switzerland 19-20 November 2012, Kofi Annan Room (UNAIDS) Dr Gary Darmstadt Director Family Health Dr Paul Hunt Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation University of Essex Seattle, WA Clochester, Essex United States of America United Kingdom Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Ms Susana Edjang Ms Dragana Korljan Project Manager, Every Woman Every Child Coordinator Strategic Planning Unit Justice, Protection and Social Rights Unit Executive Office of the Secretary-General Special Procedures Branch New York, NY 10174 United Nations Office of the High United States of America Commissioner for Human Rights Email: [email protected] Geneva Switzerland Mr Hani Eskandar Email: [email protected] ICT Applications International Telecommunications Union Ms Marcia V.J. Kran Geneva Director Switzerland Research and Right Development Division Email: [email protected] United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Ms Helen Evans Geneva Deputy Chief Executive Officer Switzerland GAVI Email: [email protected] Geneva Switzerland Dr Frederik Kristensen Email: [email protected] Consultant Norwegian Agency for Development Dr Craig Friderichs Cooperation Director Health Oslo GSMA Mobile for Development Norway Cape Town Email: [email protected] South Africa Email: [email protected] Mr Reuben Kyama President Dr Tore Godal One World Public Relations Special Adviser Nairobi Office of the Prime Minister Kenya Oslo Email: [email protected] Norway Email: [email protected] Ms Nyaradzayi Gumbonzvanda Mr Will Niblett General Secretary Team Leader World YWCA AIDS & Reproductive Health Team Geneva Department for International Development Switzerland London Email: United Kingdom [email protected] Email [email protected] *participate via video link Where are we in achieving the goals of the Global Strategy for Women’s and Children’s Health? Taking stock of the progress and developing the strategy for 2013 WHO Geneva, Switzerland 19-20 November 2012, Kofi Annan Room (UNAIDS) Dr Anders Nordstrom* Dr Neema Rusibamayila Department for Multilateral Development Assistant Director Preventive Services Cooperation Reproductive Child Health Services Ministry of Foreign Affairs Ministry of Health and Social Welfare Stockholm Dar es Salaam Sweden Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Ashish Kumar Saha Ms Janna Oberdorf* Assistant Director Director, Communications and Advocacy Management Information System Women Deliver Directorate General of Health Services New York Dhaka United States of America Bangladesh Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Kelechi Ohiri Dr Bernard Schwartlander Senior Advisor to the Minister of State for Director Health UNAIDS Federal Ministry of Health Geneva Abuja Switzerland Nigeria Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Mr Motoko Seko Dr Robert Orr * Specialist, Gender and Human Rights Assistant Secretary-General for Policy The Global Fund Coordination and Strategic Planning Geneva United Nations Headquarters Switzerland New York Email: [email protected] United States of America Email: [email protected] Ms Anita Sharma UN Foundation Ms Oksana Pidufala Washington DC Policy Officer United States of America The World Bank Email: [email protected] Geneva Switzerland Mr Tim Shorten Email: [email protected] Programme Director IHP+ Results Ms Beatrice Pluchon Norfolk Senior External Affairs Officer, SPM United Kingdom International Telecommunications Union Email: [email protected] Geneva Switzerland Dr Peter Sikana Email: [email protected] Technical Specialist, Reproductive Health United Nations Populations Fund (UNFPA) Freetown Sierra Leone Email: [email protected] *participate via video link Where are we in achieving the goals of the Global Strategy for Women’s and Children’s Health? Taking stock of the progress and developing the strategy for 2013 WHO Geneva, Switzerland 19-20 November 2012, Kofi Annan Room (UNAIDS) Ms Ann Starrs Dr Elizabeth Mason Co-Founder and President Director Family Care International Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent New York Health United States of America Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Ties Boerma Ms Diane Summers Director Senior Specialist Health Statistics and Informatics Advocacy and Communications Email: [email protected] GAVI Geneva Dr David Evans Switzerland Director Email: [email protected] Health Systems Financing Email: [email protected] Mr Jean Touchette Senior Policy Analyst Dr Willem Van Lerberghe OECD Director Paris Health Policy, Development and Services France Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Najeeb Al Shorbaji Ms Veronique Thouvenot Director eHealth Technical Officer, BDT Knowledge Management Sharing International Telecommunications Union Email: [email protected] Geneva Switzerland Dr Marleen Temmerman Email: [email protected] Director Reproductive Health and Research Ms Tessa Wardlaw* Email: [email protected] Chief, Statistics and Monitoring UNICEF Dr Jean-Marie Okwo-Bele New York, NY 10017 Director United States of America Immunizations, Vaccines and Biologicals Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Lale Say Email: [email protected] WHO HQ SECRETARIAT Ms Kathy O’Neill Dr Flavia Bustreo Email: [email protected] Assistant Director-General Family, Women’s and Children’s Health Ms Tessa Edejer Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Bernadette Daelmans Email: [email protected] Dr Matthews Mathai Email : [email protected] *participate via video link Where are we in achieving the goals of the Global Strategy for Women’s and Children’s Health? Taking stock of the progress and developing the strategy for 2013 WHO Geneva, Switzerland 19-20 November 2012, Kofi Annan Room (UNAIDS) Ms Marta Seoane independent Expert Review Group (iERG) Email: [email protected] Dr Carmen Barroso Ms Jessie Schutt-Aine International Planned Parenthood Federation Email: [email protected] New York United States of America Ms Ramesh Shademani Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Dr Zulfiqar Bhutta Mr Geir Lie Division of Women and Health Email: [email protected] The Aga Khan University Karachi Dr Joan Dzenowagis Pakistan Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Ms Kathleen Ferrier Pan American Health Organization Leusden The Netherlands Dr Matilde Pinto Email: [email protected] Senior Advisor, Health Economics and Planning Area of Family and Community Health Dr Richard Horton Pan American Health Organization. Editor PAHO/WHO The Lancet Email: [email protected] London United Kingdom Regional Office for Africa Email: [email protected] Dr Phanuel Habimana Email: [email protected] Professor Tarek Meguid Head of the Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology Regional Office for the South East Asia University of Namibia School of Medicine Windhoek Dr Martin Weber Namibia Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Professor Miriam Were PMCNH Chairman of Kenya’s National AIDS Control Dr Luis Andres De Francisco Serpa Council (NACC) Email: [email protected] Nairobi Kenya Ms Lori Lynn Mcdougall Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] HMN Ms Jane Thomason Email: [email protected] *participate via video link .
Recommended publications
  • Politicized Science Lancet, NEJM Retract Studies on HCQ
    6/8/2020 Politicized Science: Lancet, NEJM retract studies on HCQ - UncoverDC Medical Scandal of the Decade Erupts as Lancet and NEJM Both Retract Studies Finding Hydroxychloriquine Deadly and Ineffective At 3:15 pm on June 4, I got a text from my friend Josh in Los Angeles that stopped me in my tracks. The text read: “The fake Lancet Hydroxychloroquine study has been retracted.” I called Josh. “Are you serious?” He’d already texted me the retraction, but still I could barely believe it. Turns out NEJM had also retracted. This was huge. Dr. James Todaro, who runs a website, MedicineUncensored, which publishes the results of HCQ studies, tweeted yesterday: “This is exploding into one of the most twisted and unbelievable medical scandals of the decade.” Todaro (and social media “sleuths”) were the first to expose the truth, in late May on his site: James Todaro, MD @JamesTodaroMD · Jun 4, 2020 BOOM. Lancet study on hydroxychloroquine retracted. Published study existed for only 13 days. Did Twitter peer-review result in the quickest retraction ever for a study of this magnitude? #LancetGate twitter.com/thelancet/stat… The Lancet @TheLancet Today, three of the authors have retracted "Hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine with or without a macrolide for treatment of COVID- 19: a multinational registry analysis" Read the Retraction notice and statement from The Lancet hubs.ly/H0r7gh50 https://uncoverdc.com/2020/06/06/politicized-science-lancet-nejm-retract/ 1/14 6/8/2020 Politicized Science: Lancet, NEJM retract studies on HCQ - UncoverDC James
    [Show full text]
  • COVID-19: Make It the Last Pandemic
    COVID-19: Make it the Last Pandemic Disclaimer: The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this publication do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city of area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. Report Design: Michelle Hopgood, Toronto, Canada Icon Illustrator: Janet McLeod Wortel Maps: Taylor Blake COVID-19: Make it the Last Pandemic by The Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness & Response 2 of 86 Contents Preface 4 Abbreviations 6 1. Introduction 8 2. The devastating reality of the COVID-19 pandemic 10 3. The Panel’s call for immediate actions to stop the COVID-19 pandemic 12 4. What happened, what we’ve learned and what needs to change 15 4.1 Before the pandemic — the failure to take preparation seriously 15 4.2 A virus moving faster than the surveillance and alert system 21 4.2.1 The first reported cases 22 4.2.2 The declaration of a public health emergency of international concern 24 4.2.3 Two worlds at different speeds 26 4.3 Early responses lacked urgency and effectiveness 28 4.3.1 Successful countries were proactive, unsuccessful ones denied and delayed 31 4.3.2 The crisis in supplies 33 4.3.3 Lessons to be learnt from the early response 36 4.4 The failure to sustain the response in the face of the crisis 38 4.4.1 National health systems under enormous stress 38 4.4.2 Jobs at risk 38 4.4.3 Vaccine nationalism 41 5.
    [Show full text]
  • New Infections High Among Blacks
    01-15 December 2013 World Aids Day 2013: No time for complacency Independent Blogs, UK – 1 December 2013 Sitting in conversation with Professor Sharon Lewin in Bangkok, it is difficult not to be stunned into silence by her encyclopaedic knowledge of HIV. ...the ‘Towards an HIV Cure project’, an initiative of the International AIDS Society (IAS) which advocates a greater investment in HIV cure research. Incarceration is associated with used syringe lending among active injection drug users with detectable plasma HIV-1 RNA: a longitudinal analysis Bio Med Central, UK – 1 December 2013 Dr. Montaner has also received financial support from the International AIDS Society, United Nations AIDS Program, World Health Organization, Myth of an AIDS-free world Trinidad and Tobago's Newsday, Trinidad & Tobago – 1 December 2013 In 1988, the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared December 1 to be the first World AIDS Day, and it is appropriate today, 25 years later, to reflect on where we are with respect to the HIV/AIDS pandemic. ...control. This is also my firm opinion and forecast. At last year’s International AIDS Society Meeting in Washington, DC, Dr. Richard Horton, present... Made-in-Canada HIV strategy embraced internationally — but not here Thestar.com, Canada – 1 December 2013 The Treatment as Prevention strategy, pioneered in B.C., calls for the immediate provision of highly effective antiretroviral therapy to those living with HIV. HIV response ‘at turning point’ Rocket News, USA – 1 December 2013 Nobody Left Behind campaign Access to HIV drugs has improved significantly December 1 is, as it has been every year since 1988, World Aids Day.
    [Show full text]
  • WHO Should Declare Climate Change a Public Health Emergency
    BMJ 2020;368:m797 doi: 10.1136/bmj.m797 (Published 31 March 2020) Page 1 of 3 Analysis BMJ: first published as 10.1136/bmj.m797 on 30 March 2020. Downloaded from ANALYSIS HEALTH IN THE ANTHROPOCENE WHO should declare climate change a public health emergency OPEN ACCESS Rapid and potentially irreversible climate change poses a direct threat to global public health. Andrew Harmer and colleagues argue that WHO should recognise this in the same way as global threats from specific diseases Andrew Harmer senior lecturer in global health 1, Ben Eder medical doctor 2, Sophie Gepp medical student 3, Anja Leetz consultant 4, Remco van de Pas senior research fellow in global health policy 5 1Queen Mary University of London, London, UK; 2People’s Health Movement, London, UK; 3Berlin, Germany; 4German Alliance for Climate Change, Berlin, Germany; 5Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium http://www.bmj.com/ Anthony McMichael first established the link between climate environment,” and the planet is now experiencing total change and human health in the 1990s.1 In a distinguished career environmental change.5 Furthermore, the constitution allows that established him as a leading authority on the health impacts WHO’s executive board “to take emergency measures within of climate change, he repeatedly asked whether we understood the functions and financial resources of the Organisation to deal the profound significance of climate change for global health.2 with events requiring immediate action... and undertake studies Were we to ask that question today, as we should, the answer and research the urgency [of those events]” (article 28, i).6 The on 29 September 2021 by guest.
    [Show full text]
  • WHERE University College London Kennedy Lecture Theatre, 30 Guilford St
    You Are Cordially Invited to the Symposium Launch of Our future: A Lancet Commission on adolescent health and wellbeing HOSTED BY University College London London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine WHEN Tuesday, 10 May 2016 09:00-17:30 BST, Reception to follow WHERE University College London Kennedy Lecture Theatre, 30 Guilford St. London WC1N 1 EH Please register your attendance here. http://bit.ly/lancetadolescent Presenters and speakers include: Carmen Barroso Richard Horton International Planned Parenthood Federation The Lancet Anthony Costello George Patton World Health Organization University of Melbourne Lola Dare Kikelomo Taiwo CHESTRAD Girls Educational & Mentoring Services Robin Gorna Russell Viner PMNCH University College London Adolescence is a critical time of formative growth to achieve human potential—a fascinating period of profound physical, psychological, and emotional change. It is a life stage marked by both vulnerability and opportunity. As adolescents develop, they reach for engagement beyond their families, and a greater sense of place in the world. The decisions they make, and habits they form, can determine their health and wellbeing for a lifetime. Investments in adolescent health and wellbeing are therefore critical. They are also key to sustainable development. Our Future: A Lancet Commission on Adolescent Health and Wellbeing report brings together perspectives from public health, economics, political and social science, behavioural science and neuroscience and provides recommendations for action to protect and promote the health, wellbeing and potential of the largest generation in human history. Copies of the Commission report will be available at the symposium. Please email [email protected] with any questions. .
    [Show full text]
  • Promise to Impact Ending Malnutrition by 2030
    FROM PROMISE TO IMPACT ENDING MALNUTRITION BY 2030 2016 The 2016 Global Nutrition Report is an authoritative source of action-oriented nutrition knowledge that transcends politics and guides the SUN Movement in its quest to make nutrition a priority. This report continues to push the bound- aries beyond previous editions—with an optimistic message that when we work together, our collective impact can achieve the changes needed to sustainably transform lives, communities, and the future. Eradicating malnutrition requires perseverance from all of us, and the report gives us our backbone and resolve. It also ensures that we hold each other accountable and learn from each other’s successes and failures. The Global Nutrition Report emphasizes the challenges posed by the multiple forms of malnutrition. It also signals the enormous importance of investing in the critical 1,000-day window so that every girl and boy can lead a happy, healthy, and productive life. Investing in nutrition is our collective legacy for a sustainable world in 2030. TOM ARNOLD AD INTERIM SUN MOVEMENT COORDINATOR GERDA VERBURG FORTHCOMING SUN MOVEMENT COORDINATOR The Global Nutrition Report confirms the urgency of collective action to combat malnutrition’s cascading impact on peo- ple, communities, and whole societies. The simple truth is we cannot secure sustainable development until we address the persistent food and nutrition challenges undermining opportunities for our planet’s poorest and most vulnerable people. Moving from theory to action requires giving specific attention to those people left furthest behind, enduring persistent crisis and the effects of climate change. This report confirms that committing to SMART action is the primary way to achieve change for the people who need it most.
    [Show full text]
  • Tracking Progress in Maternal, Newborn & Child
    TRACKING PROGRESS IN MATERNAL, NEWBORN & CHILD SURVIVAL The 2008 Report TRACKING PROGRESS IN MATERNAL, NEWBORN & CHILD SURVIVAL THE 2008 REPORT Tracking Progress in Maternal, Newborn & Child Survival The 2008 Report, V2. ISBN: 978-92-806-4284-1 © The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), 2008 Cover photo © UNICEF/HQ07-1153/Shehzad Noorani This is a working document. It has been prepared to facilitate the exchange of knowledge and to stimulate discussion. Participating agencies and institutions accept no responsibility for errors. The designations in this publication do not imply an opinion on legal status of any country or territory, or of its authorities, or the delimitation of frontiers. The views expressed in this document are solely the responsibility of the contributors. The document may be freely reviewed, abstracted, or translated in part or whole, but not for sale nor use in conjunction with commercial purposes. All reasonable precautions have been taken by UNICEF and the Countdown Partners to verify the information contained in this publication. However, the published material is being distributed without warranty of any kind, either expressed or TRACKING PROGRESS IN MATERNAL, implied. The responsibility for the interpretation and use of the material lies with the reader. In no event shall UNICEF be liable for damages arising from its use. NEWBORN & CHILD SURVIVAL For more information contact UNICEF 3 United Nations Plaza The 2008 Report New York, NY 10017 USA www.countdown2015mnch.orgTRACKING PROGRESS IN MATERNAL, NEWBORN
    [Show full text]
  • Viewpoint What Does a National Health Service Mean in the 21St
    Viewpoint What does a National Health Service mean in the 21st century? Richard Horton Mary Wollstonecraft, born in 1759, was the fi rst English innovative health system that delivers personal health Lancet 2008; 371: 2213–18 writer to set out a coherent doctrine of “native unalienable services freely according to need. In Britain, a respect for See Editorial page 2146 1 rights”. “It is necessary emphatically to repeat”, she rights goes a long way back—at least to Magna Carta and See Perspectives page 2163 wrote, “that there are rights which men inherit at their habeas corpus. In 2008, the UK High Court cited a Correspondence to: birth, as rational creatures, who were raised above the serious breach of human rights when ruling that an Richard Horton, The Lancet, brute creation of their improvable faculties”. For two and antiterror law was “absurd” and “unfair”.4 Britain has 32 Jamestown Road, London a half centuries, people have argued about the nature of long cared deeply about the rights of its peoples. NW1 7BY, UK [email protected] these rights. That clash of claims is relevant to the way But politics is not easy. Trade-off s have to be made. we think about the National Health Service (NHS) in Among the many pressing concerns facing a nation-state, Britain today—not only because the NHS is enjoying where should health rank? In Just Health,5 Norman Daniels its 60th anniversary, but also because 2008 is the argues that health has a special moral importance in our 60th anniversary of two additional and equally societies.
    [Show full text]
  • Report on the Iraq War CASUALTIES: NARRATIVE and IMAGES of THE
    Report on the Iraq War CASUALTIES: NARRATIVE AND IMAGES OF THE WAR ON IRAQ Seiji Yamada, Mary C. Smith Fawzi, Gregory G. Maskarinec, and Paul E. Farmer The Iraqi people have endured an excess burden of morbidity and mortality during the past 15 years due to war and sanctions, with the March 2003 Anglo-American assault on and subsequent occupation of Iraq representing the most recent chapter. Children have been disproportionately affected; many have died from infectious disease, malnutrition, and lack of access to health care. There have been significant differences in the availability of narrative accounts and images of this suffering, reflective of the need of those who wage wars and impose sanctions to keep the public uninformed. This article suggests that public health and medical practitioners have a respon- sibility to seek out such accounts and images. The authors explore possible responses to narrative and images of this suffering, and outline the sorts of responses engendered by three perspectives—charity, development, and social justice. The suffering of the people of Iraq should spur a response from the health community to alleviate the situation and prevent unneces- sary suffering. Individual experiences of pain and suffering are made irrevocably public when they are portrayed in the mass media. Arthur and Joan Kleinman call this phenomenon the cultural appropriation of suffering (1). Much of this suffering is inflicted on humans by other humans, war being a prime example. Public health and medical practitioners should approach such suffering from a health per- spective. If public health and medicine are dedicated to the alleviation of pain and suffering then war should be considered a public health problem (2, 3) and practitioners of public health and medicine need to respond accordingly.
    [Show full text]
  • Health Professionals for a New Century: Transforming Education to Strengthen Health Systems in an Interdependent World
    Healt H professionals for a new century HEALTH PROFESSIONALS FOR A NEW Transforming education to strengthen health systems in CENTURY an interdependent world The Commission The The Commission on education of health Professionals for the 21st Century was launched in January 2010 with the aim of landscaping the field, identifying gaps and opportunities, and offering recommendations for reform a century after the landmark Flexner Report of 1910. This independent initiative was led by co‑chairs Julio Frenk and Lincoln Chen working with a diverse group of 20 Commissioners from around the world: Zulfiqar A Bhutta, Jordan Cohen, nigel Crisp, Timothy evans, harvey Fineberg, Patricia Garcia, Richard Horton, Ke Yang, Patrick Kelley, Barry Kistnasamy, Afaf Meleis, David naylor, Ariel Pablos‑mendez, srinath Reddy, susan Scrimshaw, Jaime sepulveda, David serwadda, and huda Zurayk. sponsored by the Bill and melinda Gates Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the China medical Board, the co‑chairs supervised the research and management teams operating out of the China medical Board and the harvard school of Public health. HEALTH PROFESSIONALS FOR A NEW Transforming education to strengthen health systems in CENTURY an interdependent world HEALTH PROFESSIONALS FOR A NEW Transforming education to strengthen health systems in CENTURY an interdependent world This Commission report (Frenk J, Chen L, et al. Health professionals for a new century: transforming education to strengthen health systems in an interdependent world. Published online at www.thelancet.com (DOI:10.1016/S0140- 6736(10)61854-5) on Nov 29, and in The Lancet Dec 4, 2010, vol 376; pp 1923–58) was published initially in The Lancet in November 2010.
    [Show full text]
  • The Lancet Survey Truth Will
    Horton 12/13/05 10:23 PM Page 53 53 The Lancet Our collective failure has been to take our political leaders at their word. The BBC has Survey now reported that the government’s own scientists advised ministers that the Johns Truth will out Hopkins study on Iraq civilian mortality was accurate and reliable, following a freedom of information request by the reporter Owen Bennett-Jones. This paper was published in the Lancet last October. It estimated that 650,000 Richard Horton Iraqi civilians had died since the American and British led invasion in March 2003. Immediately after publication, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said that the Lancet’s study ‘was not one we believe to be anywhere near accurate’. The Foreign Secretary, Margaret Beckett, said that the Lancet figures were ‘extrapolated’ and a ‘leap’. President Bush said: ‘I don’t consider it a credible report’. The Lancet survey of Scientists at the United Kingdom’s mortality in Iraq caused Department for International Development great controversy when it thought differently. They concluded that the was first published in 2004 study’s methods were ‘tried and tested’. Indeed, (see Spokesman 84). The the Johns Hopkins approach would likely lead British Government sought to to an ‘underestimation of mortality’. rubbish its methodology and The Ministry of Defence’s chief scientific its findings that about adviser said the research was ‘robust’, close to 100,000 civilians had died as ‘best practice’, and ‘balanced’. He recommended a result of the invasion of ‘caution in publicly criticising the study’. that country. A further, more When these recommendations went to the extensive study was Prime Minister’s advisers, they were horrified.
    [Show full text]
  • Curriculum Vitae Autobiographical Article: from A
    LAWRENCE O. GOSTIN Curriculum Vitae Phone: +1 202 662-9373 Georgetown University Law Center Email: [email protected] 600 New Jersey Ave., NW Washington, DC 20001 WEBSITES INTERNET RESOURCES Autobiographical Article: From a Civil Libertarian to a Sanitarian, 34 J. LAW & SOCIETY 594-616 (Dec 2007) The Lancet Profile: Lawrence Gostin: Legal Activist in the Cause of Global Health, 386 THE LANCET 2133 (Nov 28, 2015). Faculty Profile O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law: Global Health & Human Rights Database, in partnership with the WHO and Lawyers’ Collective of India. O’Neill Institute, Prof. Gostin’s Health Tips Georgetown Law Faculty Profile Public Health Post Profile SCHOLARLY PRODUCTIVITY AND IMPACT A systematic empirical analysis of legal scholarship, independent researchers ranked Prof. Gostin 1st in the nation in productivity among all law professors, and 11th in impact and influence. In 2017, researchers ranked Professor Gostin 1st in the nation in citations for health law. Prof. Gostin is also ranked first among health law professors on Google Scholar and on West Law (2018). He is in the top 10% worldwide for downloads on SSRN. MAJOR GLOBAL HEALTH CAMPAIGNS THE JOINT ACTION AND LEARNING INITIATIVE: TOWARDS A FRAMEWORK CONVENTION ON GLOBAL HEALTH In 2008, at the founding of the O’Neill Institute, Prof. Gostin proposed a Framework Convention on Global Health founded on the right to health, published in the Georgetown Law Journal. A decade later, in 2018, civil society organizations from every region of the world launched the Framework Convention on Global Health Alliance. The groundwork for the Alliance had been laid by the Joint Action and Learning Initiative on National and Global Responsibilities for Health and the Platform for an FCGH.
    [Show full text]