Die Welt schlittert von einer Krise zur nächsten – und ist zurzeit dabei, sich in noch weitere Krisen zu stürzen. Am diesjährigen Symposium des Netzwerks Medicus Mundi Schweiz haben verschiedene Referent:innen diskutiert, wie die internationale Gemeinschaft wieder Tritt fassen könnte.
Von der Klima- zur Gesundheitskrise hin zu Russlands Angriffskrieg gegen die Ukraine und all der damit verbundenen globalen Folgen: Die Weltgemeinschaft schlittert seit einigen Jahren von einer Krise zur nächsten. Die internationale Politik ist so stark gefordert, wie seit langer Zeit nicht mehr – und gleichzeitig ist die multilaterale Zusammenarbeit zurzeit massiv geschwächt. Mit diesen multiplen Krisen und ihren Folgen für die internationale Zusammenarbeit und die globale Gesundheit hat sich Medicus Mundi Schweiz (MMS), das Netzwerk Schweizer zivilgesellschaftlicher und akademischer Organisationen und Institutionen in Basel auseinandergesetzt.
Die Folgen des Klimawandels auf die Gesundheit der Bevölkerung und das Gesundheitssystem haben Astrid Knoblauch und Gulara Afandiyeva vom Schweizer Tropen- und Public Health-Institut (Swiss TPH) dargelegt: Als Folge des austrocknenden Aral-Sees in Usbekistan konnten sie aufzeigen, wie verschiedene Krankheiten in der Bevölkerung zugenommen haben. Sie plädierten für eine Stärkung der Basisgesundheitsversorgung, um den durch den Klimawandel ausgelösten Herausforderungen gerecht zu werden.
Das Beispiel zeigt, wie wichtig es ist, dass gerade angesichts der globalen Herausforderungen des Klimawandels, das internationale Engagement zur Gesundheitssystemstärkung aufrechterhalten, respektive ausgebaut wird. Doch die durch den Krieg gegen die Ukraine ausgelösten globalen Krisen überlagern die weltweiten Gesundheitskrisen. Gelder fliessen zulasten anderer Programme in die fraglos auch notwendige Ukraine-Hilfe.
Verschiedene Rednerinnen und Redner haben vor diesem Hintergrund darauf hingewiesen, wie wichtig es ist, dass die internationale Politik aus dem Krisenmodus herausfindet und sich auf einen dauerhaften Aufbau ökologisch verantwortbarer, die soziale und wirtschaftliche Entwicklung stärkender, gerechter Strukturen verlegt, die kriegerische Konflikte nachhaltig abbauen. Der Basler Regierungspräsident Beat Jans hat dargelegt, wie der Kanton seiner Verantwortung nachkommt, in dem er das Ziel netto null Treibhausgasemissionen bis 2037 erreichen möchte, ohne auf international ungerechten Emissionshandel zu bauen.
Um nachhaltig den Krisenmodus zu überwinden, braucht es von den finanzstarken Ländern seitens der Schweiz ein verstärktes internationales Engagement – sowohl finanziell wie auch politisch. «Dafür gäbe es eigentlich mit der Agenda 2030 einen international vereinbarten, umfassenden Plan. Doch leider deuten die Zeichen in eine andere Richtung – weg von solidarischem, gemeinschaftlichem Handeln hin zu nationalen Sololäufen. Damit sind die nächsten Konflikte und Krisen bereits vorprogrammiert,» befürchtet Martin Leschhorn Strebel, Geschäftsführer des Netzwerk Medicus Mundi Schweiz.
Martin Leschhorn Strebel
Netzwerk Medicus Mundi Schweiz
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Presentations and Downloads of the MMS Symposium 2022
Factsheet October 2022: A focus on persons with disabilities and provision of emergency health service
"The people of Ukraine are living through an horrendous urban armed conflict. Systematic evidence shows that, worldwide, when explosive weapons are used in populated areas 90% of those affected are civilians (AOAV, 2019). This pattern is very much evident in Ukraine, where 95% of civilian casualties have occurred in populated areas (AOAV, 2022). Bombing and shelling in Ukraine are directly harming the civilian population, who face a high risk of death, war-related injuries and psychological trauma, increasing the need for rehabilitation, mental health and psycho-social support (MHPSS), and other services. The vast majority of internally displaced people (IDPs) are women, girls and boys. 46% of displaced families include at least one person over 60, 36% include a chronically ill person and 25% include a person with disabilities."
"Olga Savchenko ist unsere Verantwortliche für die Aufklärung über die Risiken von Explosivwaffen in der Ukraine. Anlässlich unserer Feier zum 25-jährigen Bestehen von Broken Chair hat sie uns in Genf besucht. Sie berichtet über die Bedeutung ihrer Arbeit für die ukrainische Bevölkerung und die Bedeutung dieses Mahnmals."
"Die Staaten werden am 18. November nach Dublin eingeladen, um das Internationale Abkommen gegen den Einsatz von Explosivwaffen in Wohngebieten zu verabschieden. Viele von ihnen haben sich bereits zu einer Genehmigung verpflichtet. Zahlreiche Staaten werden unterzeichnen. (...) Das Ergebnis von drei Jahren diplomatischer Verhandlungen: Auf der letzten Konferenz im Juni 2022 wurde der Text der politischen Erklärung zur Bekämpfung von Explosivwaffen in bewohnten Gebieten von 50 Staaten finalisiert. Eine überwältigende Mehrheit der Staaten stimmte dem endgültigen Text dieser Erklärung zu."
Medienmitteilung und Webinar mit Barbara Kruspan, Länderkoordinatorin Mosambik
"Ein bereits seit 2017 schwelender Konflikt im Norden von Mosambik ist mehrmals unbeachtet der Öffentlichkeit eskaliert. Mittlerweile haben sich über 800'000 Menschen weiter im Süden niedergelassen. Da in der Region grosse Armut herrscht, ist nicht nur das bereits sehr schwache Gesundheitssystem komplett überlastet, sondern auch der gesamte Druck auf die lokale Bevölkerung hoch. Obwohl die Region grosse Rohstoffschätze aufweist, ist die humanitäre Not gross. Seit 2017 treiben in den nördlichen und zentralen Küstenbezirken Cabo Delgados nicht-staatliche und schwer bewaffnete Gruppierungen ihr Unwesen. Dörfer werden überfallen, Menschen enthauptet. Laut der Konflikt-Beobachtungsstelle ACLED wurden seit 2017 mehr als 4’000 Menschen Opfer dieser Gewaltakte. Die bereits zuvor von Wirbelstürmen, Hunger und schwacher Gesundheitsversorgung stark gebeutelte Bevölkerung leidet."
"Researchers at Swiss TPH have launched a new project focused on rabies control in Chad with the help of artificial intelligence. Read more about how the research project takes a transdisciplinary One Health approach and uses public engagement and multilingual communication to achieve results. Dog mediated rabies, although entirely preventable, kills every year over 25,000 people in Africa. It has been demonstrated that rabies transmission can be interrupted with successful dog mass vaccination in N’Djamena, the capital city of Chad. However, most of the strategies to control and eliminate human rabies still stagnate mainly due to a lack of resources to support such interventions. One way that we can tackle rabies in Africa is by introducing relatively new, low-cost interventions, which is what our research project on Rabies Control in Chad aims to address."
"Swiss TPH researchers tested two different drug combinations against the parasitic worm Trichuris trichiura on Pemba Island, Tanzania. Findings show that a new treatment combination (moxidectin and albendazole) is inferior compared to the current recommended treatment combination (ivermectin and albendazole). However, moxidectin might serve as an alternative in areas in which ivermectin is not readily available or potentially where there are resistances against ivermectin. Results were published on 28 October in the Lancet Infectious Diseases Journal. More than 1.5 billion people worldwide are infected with soil-transmitted helminths. The infections occur mainly in tropical and subtropical areas in sub-Saharan Africa, the Americas, China and East Asia and is closely linked to poverty. Infections can lead to nutrient deficiency, anaemia, and impaired growth, thus children and adolescents are especially vulnerable to these detrimental effects. Soil-transmitted helminth infections are caused by several species of parasitic worms. One of them is the whipworm Trichuris trichiura."
New project by Calcutta Rescue in India
"A city NGO has formed a boys' club to give them a space to open up and share their problems and vulnerabilities. Boys from the age of 10 to 20 meet once a week after school or college to share their doubts, problems of adolecents and are simultaneously sensitised about gender equality. The boys live in slums and most of them are first-generation learners. They pracitcally have no one at home with whom they can discuss their problems."
Workshops by Calcutta Rescue
"Calcutta: Teachers who teach underprivileged children are being given training to not discriminate between students in their classroom or outside. Often teachers end up making some statements which leads to gender discrimination, knowingly or unknowingly, said one of the teaching heads in the NGO that is hosting the series of workshops. (...) We want to train our teachers to be more sensitive, said Ananya Chatterjee, school administrator, Calcutta Rescue."
Annual Report 2021
"With renewed vigor, Covid-19 continued its nefarious run in 2021. Like everyone else, development cooperation organizations had to face new challenges raised by this issue. The complications which effect any society during a pandemic, are amplified all the more for those with disabilities. With great enthusiasm, SwissLimbs rose to the occasion and endeavored to match the increase of requests which came our way. Thus, we began new projects in 4 countries: Sierra Leone, Rwanda, Malawi and Guinea-Bissau."
Documentation of the Series of MMI policy dialogues 2022, 26-31 October 2022
Climate change, pandemic and war: these are huge and partly new challenges for organizations working in the field of international health cooperation. The 2022 series of MMI policy dialogues is related to the Symposium “The world in crisis – climate change, pandemic, and war” hosted by Medicus Mundi Switzerland in Basel, on 2 November. As international network, we usee the opportunity to extend the conversation and invite a broader audience to have a deeper look at how (exactly) to cope with the “world in crisis”.
"Sharm el Sheikh – In a historic first, the issue of ¨loss and damage¨ finance for developing countries suffering from impacts of climate change was added to the formal negotiating agenda, as the 27th UN Climate Conference of Parties (COP27) opened here on Sunday – albeit after a delay of several hours as delegates tussled over the final wording of the agenda item. Meanwhile, the World Health Organization (WHO) issued a grim warning that the climate crisis is increasing illness and deaths at an increasing pace – with hundreds of millions of people already affected and trillions of dollars in direct and indirect economic losses. And the World Metereological Organization said the world is on track this year to record it´s eight warmest years ever, between 2015-2022."
"At the opening of the two-day Climate Implementation Summit at COP27 in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, António Guterres called for a historic pact between developed and developing countries to combine capacities, and pivot the world towards reducing carbon emissions, transforming energy systems and avoiding a climate catastrophe. “Humanity has a choice: cooperate or perish. It is either a Climate Solidarity Pact – or a Collective Suicide Pact,” the UN Secretary-General told over 100 world leaders reunited for the first official plenary of the UN Climate Change Conference. The proposed Pact would see all countries taking extra efforts to reduce emissions, wealthier nations and international financial institutions providing assistance to emerging economies, ending dependence on fossil fuels and the building of coals plants, providing sustainable energy for all, and uniting to combine strategy and capacities for the benefit of humankind."
"Wir arbeiten in einigen der vom Klimawandel am stärksten betroffenen Regionen der Welt und helfen bei vielen der dringendsten Krisen: Konflikten, Naturkatastrophen, Krankheitsausbrüchen und Vertreibung. Die gesundheitlichen Notsituationen, die wir dort antreffen, werden mit zunehmendem Klimawandel umfangreicher und intensiver. Humanitäre Notlagen spitzen sich zu, und bereits vulnerable Bevölkerungen leiden am stärksten unter der Klimakrise."
It needs to face up to the fact
"Three strikes and you’re out is a pretty good rule. And the politicians and negotiators attending the Paris climate summit, “cop21”, in December 2015 were facing their third strike. Their first and second attempts to bind the world into a meaningful pact that would control greenhouse-gas emissions—in Kyoto in 1997 and in Copenhagen in 2009—had failed. If on their third time at bat they could do no better, the world was cooked. There was thus immense pressure on all at the conference to achieve a robust outcome. And a group of politicians and policymakers representing some of the world’s poorest countries had a very specific and controversial requirement for what it should contain. James Fletcher, of St Lucia, recalls that he and his fellow representatives of Caribbean states were “very clear in our minds that 1.5°C was a red-line item. It was one of the things that we said kind of silently: that we would be prepared to walk away from the negotiations if there was a sign we would not be getting a reference to 1.5°C in the Paris agreement.”
"This is really a historic meeting,” said Dr Ilona Kickbusch, co-chair of the European Health Forum at Gastein (EHFG). “Twenty years ago was the very first time there was any talk of a European global health strategy, and it took place right here at Gastein.” “It was in 2003 that global health first became a part of the EU’s health strategy,” Kickbusch recalled. “But then it disappeared, only to come back in 2010 as the first global health strategy, and now we are working on a second one.”
Nicht die Vereinten Nationen sind das Problem, sondern die Eigeninteressen der Mitgliedstaaten. Ein Plädoyer für einen wertebasierten und menschenzentrierten Multilateralismus anlässlich des Weltfriedenstags vom 21. September.
"Die Vereinten Nationen (UNO) wurden 1945 in den Nachwehen des zweiten Weltkriegs geschaffen und sollten als Instrument zur besseren Verständigung und Kooperation der Staatengemeinschaft und zur Bewahrung des internationalen Friedens dienen. Zwei der jüngsten Meilensteine in der Geschichte der UNO sind die Verabschiedung des Pariser Klimaabkommens sowie die Verabschiedung der Agenda 2030, welche mit ihren 17 Nachhaltigkeitszielen den internationalen Kompass für nachhaltige Entwicklung repräsentiert. Mit der Unterzeichnung der Agenda haben sich die Mitgliedstaaten einig gezeigt, dass die Nachhaltigkeitsziele nur umfassend gedacht und international umgesetzt werden können."
"Following the declaration of an Ebola outbreak in Uganda on 20 September 2022, the outbreak has now spread to seven districts (Kasanda, Kyegegwa, Bunyangabu and Kagadi districts beyond the original epicenter in Mubende district, and then to Kampala City and Wakiso). The government-led response has activated the Incident Management System in order to control the outbreak. In support of the Ministry of Health-led efforts, CEPI, Gavi and WHO have outlined a plan to accelerate research during the outbreak, to ensure access to investigational doses, and to facilitate scaling up and access to any subsequent licensed vaccine."
"Natalie Rhodes, PhD candidate at University of Leeds, and People’s Health Movement, along with Remco van de Pas, researcher at the Centre for Planetary Health Policy, and People’s Health Movement discuss in detail about the implications of the newly established World Bank fund for Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response and the Bank’s other policies pertaining to public health."
Flagship report of the Alliance for Health Policy and Systems Research
"This Report defines systems for health as those ready to respond to both the known and unknown, present and future threats. Systems for health anticipate and address social, economic, environmental and commercial drivers of health to secure and enable healthier societies by aligning efforts to ensure health security and create healthy populations, systems for health not only provide, protect, and promote health, but also harness technology working with people and communities to deliver physical, mental and social health for all populations across the life course. This report provides actionable guidance for policy and practice and is a significant contribution to our future health…”
At the Seventh Global Symposium on Health Systems Research many of the UHC2030 Related Initiatives will be showcasing current outcomes and efforts in making health systems more equitable and resilient.
"The Seventh Global Symposium on Health Systems Research (HSR2022) organised by Health Systems Global (HSG), comes at a time when more than ever we need collaboration and collective learning to build strong health systems that will support a healthy, fair and safe world. The theme for HSR2022 is “Health Systems Performance in the Political Agenda: Sharing Lessons for Current and Future Global Challenges”. Focused on the high-level political agenda and on the ground realities, HSR2022 is set to provide a catalytic forum where we can come together to share, raise awareness, advocate for change, and develop partnerships for action."
"Die Stanley Thomas Johnson Stiftung schreibt für die Jahre 2023-2025 in den Bereichen «Medizinische Forschung» und «Opfer von Konflikten und Gewalt» das Förderprogramm «Improving the health of vulnerable people in and from fragile settings» aus. Mehr als 100 Millionen Menschen weltweit sind auf der Flucht, die Hälfte von ihnen in ihrem eigenen Land («internally displaced persons» IDP). Sie kommen aus sogenannt «fragilen Kontexten», das heisst, ihr Zuhause ist von Konflikt, Gewalt oder einer (immer häufiger durch den Klimawandel bedingten) Naturkatastrophe betroffen. Das Förderprogramm möchte einen Beitrag leisten zur Verbesserung der Gesundheit besonders verletzlicher Menschen in fragilen Kontexten, insbesondere von Flüchtlingen und Vertriebenen."
"BERLIN – Donors pledged some $2.6 billion more in funding to the global polio eradication initiative (GPEI) as of the closing day of the World Health Summit – which saw its shares of highs and lows in its finale, much like the rest of the three-day event. On the plus side, the donations, which included a pledge of $1.2 billion by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced at the conference´s opening session Sunday, mean that the GPEI has come more than half way to meeting the funding target of US$4.8 billion set out in its 2022-2026 Strategy. And WHO´s Director General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus also signed a new memorandum of understanding with a global network of parliamentarians, UNITE. The network will collaborate with the global health agency to mobilize elected officials around the world in the campaign for a pandemic accord as well as other milestone global health aims."
"The COVID-19 pandemic has brought into sharp focus the shared frailty of societies in the face of common threats. If the world is to respond successfully to future pandemics and other emerging challenges, it will be essential to develop new public health instruments and a framework that redefines the rules of global governance. In many ways, a quantum lift in global health is needed similar to that achieved at the turn of the 21st century. That was a time when new multilateral initiatives with innovative governance and financial arrangements were established (eg, Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance in 2000, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria in 2002, and adoption of the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in 2003), and development assistance for health expanded at an unprecedented rate. However, the circumstances in 2022 are different and therefore call for original solutions. We outline the lessons that must be learned and the innovations that must be adopted to realise that purpose."
A new evaluation has delivered a devastating verdict of the global mechanism to provide the tools to control the COVID-19 pandemic. Ann Danaiya Usher reports.
"At a time of desperate uncertainty, the Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator (ACT-A) was established in April, 2020, just 3 months after WHO declared COVID-19 as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. Consisting of ten UN agencies and global health organisations, The World Bank, Wellcome, and the Gates Foundation, ACT-A aimed to develop health products for COVID-19 and to ensure their equitable distribution, while helping health systems with delivery. (...) Based on 101 interviews with key informants, it concluded that the design was “top-down” and several aspects were misconceived. ACT-A afforded too much influence to donors and corporate partners, global targets were not met, and low and middle-income countries (LMICs)—the purported beneficiaries of the scheme—were excluded from conceptualisation. It documents particular dissatisfaction with ACT-A in Africa and Latin America."
To guide this work, Transform Health has published a Conceptual Framework to guide investments and action towards health for all in the digital age.
"Closing the digital divide: More and better funding for the digital transformation of health’ frames the thinking on how to guide investments and action for digital health transformation in low and middle income countries. The report lays out six key recommendations for national governments, international donors, and the private sector to increase and improve investments towards building digitally-enabled health systems that improve health outcomes for all. This report has been developed by Transform Health, with the support of its partners PATH and Joep Lange Institute, and with research contributions from regional networks and the Young Experts: Tech 4 Health."
On international youth day (12 August) the GHFutures2030 Youth Network launched the #MyHealthFutures campaign, aimed at creating space for young people under 35 to share their hopes, concerns and ideas for improving health futures.
"The Governing Health Futures 2030 (GHFutures2030) Commission’s report outlines how digital technologies and data are transforming health and healthcare. The Commission observed that health systems in all regions of the world are becoming increasingly digital first. This means that rather than travelling to a health facility for a face-to-face consultation with a health worker, a patient can access a growing range of health services and health information through digital channels. From Rwanda to the United Kingdom, governments are aspiring to make digital first healthcare available to their whole populations. Digital tools and services such as virtual consultations with doctors, digital sensors and wearable technologies to monitor vital signs, and AI-assisted health information tools are becoming increasingly integrated. As they become the norm, it is likely that we will very soon stop talking about ‘digital’ health and ‘digital first’ health systems."
By Stefan German, Fondation Botnar
"Around the world, today’s cities are vibrant, metropolitan hubs, filled with buzzing food scenes, job and education opportunities, night life and so on. It is therefore no surprise that young people flock to these urban centres for new opportunities, connections and excitement. The pull of large urban areas has resulted in more people settling and bringing up children in cities – meaning that now 60% of rapidly growing city populations are projected to be less than 18 years old by 2030. While cities are places of opportunity and growth, from education to healthcare, to employment, our city systems are currently failing young people with increased exclusion and poverty in disadvantaged urban areas, damaging their health and well-being, and leaving them at risk of being left behind."
"In two weeks, the board of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria will be meeting to decide how much total grant funding will be made available to countries in the next three years. But that funding looks unlikely to include additional pledges from big donors such as the United Kingdom. The Global Fund’s target was $18 billion for its replenishment conference in September. But the U.K. surprised many when it didn’t pledge a penny during the event, only saying that it will announce its contribution “in coming weeks,” while Italy said it will provide “incremental updates in the coming weeks as appropriate.”
The results showed that the Thandizo approach successfully increased HIV treatment adherence.
"The Thandizo approach supports young people living with HIV to adhere to treatment. Piloted for two years in two districts of Malawi, evaluation shows that the number of young people with HIV who stopped treatment dropped from 478 to 96. Out of these 96 there were 89 young people managed to get back in care. After these successes our ambition is countrywide scale up! (...) The Thandizo risk assessment tool was co-created and tested with implementers and young people themselves. The app identifies risks for non-adherence, provides referrals, tips and advice based on individual needs. It is used in both group sessions with a peer educator or individual consultations with a community health worker."
"A new UN report shows that women’s and children’s health has suffered globally, as the impacts of conflict, the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change converge with devastating effects on prospects for children, young people and women. Data presented in the report show a critical regression across virtually every major measure of childhood well-being, and many key indicators of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Since the last Every Woman Every Child Progress Report published in 2020, food insecurity, hunger, child marriage, risks from intimate partner violence, and adolescent depression and anxiety have all increased."
"It is time to end all forms of stigma and discrimination against people with mental health conditions, for whom there is double jeopardy: the impact of the primary condition and the severe consequences of stigma. Indeed, many people describe stigma as being worse than the condition itself. This Lancet Commission report is the result of a collaboration of more than 50 people worldwide. It brings together evidence and experience of the impact of stigma and discrimination and successful interventions for stigma reduction. We include material that brings alive the voices of people with lived experience of mental health conditions (PWLE). This is right in principle because we agree with the view of nothing about us without us. It is right in practice because the evidence summarised in this report shows that PWLE are the key change agents for stigma reduction. For these reasons, this report has been co-produced by people who have such lived experience and others who do not."
"25 October 2022 – Today, Fondation Botnar is pleased to announce the launch of BEING, an international mental health initiative, to fund and support research and innovative approaches that improve the mental wellbeing of young people aged 10 to 24 in low- and middle-income countries. The initiative is hosted by Grand Challenges Canada (GCC), in partnership with Fondation Botnar and United for Global Mental Health, whose expertise and worldwide network will support advocacy, stakeholder engagement and other vital functions, and with institutional support from Global Affairs Canada. Globally, 75% of all mental health challenges begin before age 24, and almost 46,000 adolescents die from suicide every year, putting it among the top five causes of death for their age group. In low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), up to 90% of the mental health needs of young people are going unmet due to a lack of resources."
Wir suchen per sofort oder nach Vereinbarung eine*n Mitarbeiter*in People & Culture (80%). Ihre Aufgaben: - Human Resources Management sowie - Disability-inclusive Development (DiD) / Gleichstellung. Über Bewerbungen von Menschen mit Behinderungen freuen wir uns besonders und sind bereit, angemessene Vorkehrungen vorzunehmen, um eine Anstellung zu ermöglichen. Bitte senden Sie uns Ihren Lebenslauf sowie ein Motivationsschreiben oder ein Videostatement von maximal 2 Minuten. Das Video kann in Gebärdensprache eingereicht werden. Ihre aussagekräftige Bewerbung nehmen wir gerne per E-Mail über die Adresse personal@cbmswiss.ch entgegen. Für Fragen steht Ihnen der neue Geschäftsführer, Cris Gautschi, unter 044 275 21 71 zur Verfügung. Weitere Informationen über die CBM finden Sie unter www.cbmswiss.ch
Cinfo Forum cinfo is the Swiss career event for international cooperation, organised on behalf of the Swiss Confederation (Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation SDC). With its career fair and conference, the forum is dedicated to working, career development and opportunities in international cooperation. This unique event inspires, informs, facilitates networking and provides a setting to broaden your horizons. Forum cinfo connects professionals at all stages of their careers with a wide range of internationally active organisations – and is an excellent opportunity to make new contacts and open doors. Registration closes on the event day (11 Nov).
Geneva Global Health Hub (G2H2) "The report “Financial Justice for Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness and Response” will be launched by the Geneva Global Health Hub (G2H2) on 15 November in Geneva. The report highlights the shortcomings of the international community in redirecting finance to support public health, including the robust funding of pandemic prevention preparedness and response. While colossal wealth is potentially available to invest on global public health and managing any future pandemics, it is in the wrong hands. The pandemic emergency, with its associated socioeconomic and environmental crises, has revealed that the world is at a critical moment and that business as usual cannot be the way forward. The crisis has “opened a window for a radical redirection” (WHO Council on the Economics of Health for All) which may not be missed: The report by G2H2 proposes to rethink health through an economic and financial justice lens."
SEXUELLE GESUNDHEIT SCHWEIZ "Am 22. und 24. November 2022 wird am Arab Film Festival im Filmpodium in Zürich der Film «The Art of Sin» gezeigt, der mit Unterstützung unserer norwegischen IPPFSchwesterorganisation SEXogPolikk produziert wurde. Im Anschluss an die Vorstellung am 24. November organisiert SEXUELLE GESUNDHEIT SCHWEIZ ein Podium, an dem auch der Regisseur Ibrahim Mursal und eine Vertretung der norwegischen Botschaft in der Schweiz teilnehmen werden. Gerne laden wir Sie ein, den grossartigen Film zu den Themen sexuelle Rechte, Identität, Migration, LGBTIAQ+ und Kunst anzuschauen und die Gelegenheit zu nutzen, mit Ibrahim Mursal ins Gespräch zu treten."
IAMANEH Schweiz Jede Frau erlebt Gewalt, weil sie eine Frau ist! Denn Ungleichheit geht mit (struktureller) Gewalt einher. Doch wie lässt sich diese in einer von Krisen geschüttelten Welt bekämpfen? Antworten gibt das Filmfestival frauenstark! zwischen dem 25. November und dem 4. Dezember. Feminizid ist das Thema der diesjährigen Internationalen 16-Tage-Kampagne gegen Gewalt an Frauen – also die tödliche Gewalt an Frauen und weiblich gelesenen Personen. Femizide sind aber nur die Spitze des Eisbergs. frauenstark! legt den Fokus auf die Prävention aller Formen von sexistischer Gewalt und auf den Kampf gegen die Ungleichheiten, die der intimen Gewalt zugrunde liegen. Denn: Ohne Gleichstellung keine Gesellschaft ohne Gewalt. Ungleiche Geschlechterverhältnisse manifestieren sich nicht zuletzt im Herzen der Familie, etwa im Film «The Letter», der dokumentiert, wie eine kenianische Urgrossmutter der Hexerei beschuldigt wird und sich dagegen zur Wehr setzt.
Handicap International Schweiz On the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the Ottawa Treaty, we are pleased to invite you to a roundtable on the theme of the protection of civilians, co-organized by HI and foraus: - What is the concrete impact of international treaties given the fact that civilians are always the first victims of armed conflicts? In 1997, the signing of the Ottawa Treaty brought great hope for future generations. 25 years later, it is time to assess the situation. What progress has been made in protecting civilians? This year, a political declaration against the bombing of civilians in populated areas will be signed. How will it change the life of people in the field? What challenges remain to be faced? What role should Switzerland play, based on its humanitarian tradition? - The event will take place in Bern, at the Generationenhaus, between 12:30 and 14:30 on Tuesday, November 29th (a light lunch will be offered). More details in the attached invitation card. As places are limited, please register at: e.sierro@hi.org
Swiss TPH Participants will learn the key concepts, terminology and methodologies used in economic evaluation in health sector settings and have the opportunity to apply these in practical exercises and assignments. The aim is to equip future managers in health care with the tools needed to interpret, commission and guide economic evaluation in their work as one of the essential elements of decision-making.