DiscoverPeople's Health Movement South Africa
People's Health Movement South Africa
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Health for All Now
People's Health Movement South Africa offers community health activists a voice in dialogue with expert analysis. This channel offers conversations on different health related topics from a perspective that challenges inequality, and promotes health for all.
People's Health Movement South Africa offers community health activists a voice in dialogue with expert analysis. This channel offers conversations on different health related topics from a perspective that challenges inequality, and promotes health for all.
25 Episodes
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Health for All Now
People's Health Movement South Africa offers community health activists a voice in dialogue with expert analysis. This channel offers conversations on different health related topics from a perspective that challenges inequality, and promotes health for all. Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Moderator : Maaza Seyoum
Partnerships & Communications Lead African Alliance
Guests:
Dr. Githinji Gitahi
Group CEO of AMREF Health Africa
Dr. Catherine Kyobutungi
Exec Director if the African Population and Health Research Centre (APHRC)
Muhammed Lamin Saidykhan
Management Strategist / Movement Co-ordinator at Africans Rising Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
In this episode, Peter Van Heusden talks about 'What we know and don't know about this new variant" and Lauren Paremoer (PHM SA) addresses 'The politics of the new variant and vaccine apartheid.' Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Moderator:
Kate Stegeman | Advocacy Coordinator Access Campaign MSF (South Africa)
Speakers:
Patrick Tippoo | Executive Director of the African Vaccine Manufacturing Initiative (AVMI) and Head of Science and innovation at Biovac (South Africa)
Sun Kim | Director, Health Policy Centre, People’s Health Institute (South Korea)
Gustavo Matta | Associate researcher in Public Health, FIOCRUZ (Brazil) Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Moderator:
Prof Asha George
Guests:
Perpetual Ofori-Ampofo
Moses Mulumba
Itai Rusike Watch on YouTube · Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
How greed and self-interest have expanded the gulf between the Global North and the Global South and given rise to VACCINE APARTHEID and VACCINE INEQUITY.
Moderator: Maaza Seyoum
Partnerships & Communications
Lead: African Alliance
Guests:
Dr Kamran Abbasi
British Medical Journal - Executive Editor for Content
Dr Fifa Rahman
Civil Society Representative, Access to COVID-19 Tools Accelerator, representing Health Poverty Action
Dr Peter Singer
Special Advisor to the Director General at World Health Organization
Fatima Hassan
Director: Health Justice Initiative Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Moderator:
Prof. Leslie London | UCT & PHM SA
Panelists:
Candice Sehoma - Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF);
Prof Rodrigo Uprimny – National Univ of Columbia. Member of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights;
Prof. Yousuf Abdoola Vawda - Univ of KZN
During the pandemic, we have sharply highlighted the inequitable access to care and prevention for COVID-19, and the terrible impact that has had on the health of the most vulnerable in South Africa.
The inequity in the response to COVID-19 reflects the highly unequal and divided South Africa care system even prior to this.
Moreover, our legislative framework for access to medicines and health care technologies has long been problematic, denying people access to their rights to health care. In the joint Civil Society submission on South Africa’s report to the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) in 2018, obstacles posed by patents were highlighted. The submission noted that “A patent law reform process began in 2009, but nearly a decade later, no new legislation has been enacted. Patent legislation that protects public health could help facilitate generic competition, cut prices and increase access to essential medicines.” Fast forward three years, still no progress.
Access to medicine and health technologies has been clearly demonstrated under COVID-19 as a critical issue, with patents obstructing access to diagnostics for COVID-19. Obstacles posed by Intellectual Property barriers loom large as one of the key contributory reasons behind vaccine inequity.
The webinar seeks to answer some of these questions:
Why is there need for need for domestic patent law reform to achieve right to health
Is flexibilities and compulsory licensing is accessible in Africa
What does the right to health and the right to benefit from Scientific Progress mean in practice when we face barriers in access to health technologies?
What lessons can we draw from International Guidance on this matter? UN Treaty Body Database · Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Our experiences in Community Monitoring on C19
In this episode:
Facilitated by: Dr Lauren Paremoer, member of PHM SA
Speakers:
Bongelane Nene - Community monitor from Gauteng
Caroline Mshengo - Community monitor from Mpumalanga
Noluthando Nontobeko Mhlongo - Community monitor from KwaZulu Natal
Dr Theresa Mwesigwa - DoH
EACT is a civil society coalition working together towards equitable access to C19 technologies. Part of the work was conducting community monitoring activities towards acmes and adherence C19 preventative measures, access to C19 vaccines and community sentiments towards C19 technologies (including masks, physical distancing, vaccines etc)
Through a Q&A the monitors share their findings of the past 6 months. Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Since the pandemic was declared by the WHO, there has been a rush to try to find ways to stop the virus. The production of a vaccine that would help both to get immunity, as well as manage the symptoms of the disease. But the race for vaccine is a complicated one. We live in a world dominated by Big Pharma, and there is a competing interest of the health of the global population, and profit. Vaccines are patented, strict and limited production is imposed, and highest bidder comes first. Vaccine apartheid or nationalism was a term coined due to the inequality in distribution to developing countries, and unequal access as countries prioritise certain groups, nationalities, ethnicities over others.
This episode looks at issues of Vaccines and international property rights, the TRIPS waiver, and the vaccine roll out in Southern Africa.
Speakers:
KM Gopakumar, Third World Network
Baba Aye, PSI Health and Social Sector Officer
Tichaona Fambisa, PSI SRS for Southern Africa Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
In this episode we discuss overcoming barriers to medicines, vaccines, and medical tools for cancer, diabetes, HIV and TB, as well as COVID-19.
This is even more important as the World Trade Organisation's TRIPS council meets to discuss the proposal by South Africa. Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
International Solidarity for the TRIPS Waiver
Moderator: Kate Stegeman | Advocacy coordinator, MSF Access Campaign, South Africa Connect with Kate on LinkedIn · MSF Access Campaign · Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
This seminar was a platform to share the actions of Civil Society in response to an attempt by Solidarity and Afriforum to promote private procurement and distribution of vaccines for COVID-19 in SA.
Solidarity and Afriforum lodged court papers to compel government to allow the private sector, NGOs and provinces to procure and distribute vaccines independent of government. The Health Justice initiative applied to be an Amicus Curiae (friend of the court) and would have brought evidence as to why such as case, were it to be successful, would have disastrous effects for an equitable and effective roll out of vaccines.
The case was withdrawn before it was heard.
However, because we believe the issues are of critical importance, PHM and HJI decided to co-host this webinar to bring these issues to the attention of the wider public.
The speakers included:
Fatima Hassan - Director of the HJI
Dr. Tlaleng Mofokeng - UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health
Prof. Leslie London - Professor of Public Health Medicine at UCT and Steering Committee member for the PHM-SA Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
This webinar was organised and hosted by the International Labour, Research and Information Group (ILRIG) on 25th February 2021.
Moderated by Dr. Dale McKinley from ILRIG, the three panelists were:
Fatima Hassan - Health Justice Initiative
Dr. Lydia Cairncross - People’s Health Movement
Dr. Benjamin Kagina - Vaccines for Africa Initiative
The panelists covered a lot of ground, focusing among other things on:
the global picture of vaccine distribution, financing and inequalities;
the South African specific situation with vaccine procurement and roll out plans; and
the key sources of and responses to, vaccine scepticism and opposition.
There was a lively and extensive set of questions and comments from webinar participants. Overall, this impressive and timely webinar provided a wealth of pertinent information and grounded, activist perspectives as part of the South African and international struggle for equitable, free and accessible Covid-19 vaccines. ILRIG · Connect with Fatima on LinkedIn · Connect with Benjamin on LinkedIn · Connect with Lydia on LinkedIn · Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
Speakers
Dr. James van Duuren | PHMSA)
Prof. Leslie London | PHMSA
Fatima Hassan | Health Justice International Covid-19 Training Powerpoint Slides · Equitable Access - Vaccines and Patents · Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website · PHM-SA 2021 01 Equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines and patents.pdf — PDF (1.5 MB)
What is a vaccine?
What is a Covid-19 vaccine?
How to debunk vaccine myths?
What is a patent?
What is the role of community health workers?
What can we learn from the HIV access to medicines campaign?
All these, and more, are answered in plain normal language in this podcast.
Speakers
> Prof. Leslie London | UCT and People’s Health Movement
> Dr. James Van Duuren | People’s Health Movement Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
This episode presents the situational analysis conducted in October 2020 to gain insight into the current situation with respect to access to quality health technologies (PPE, diagnostic tests, ventilators) for COVID-19 in South Africa, as well as potential barriers and enablers to access to health technologies currently under development (vaccines, treatments).
The situational analysis further sought to understand how regulatory frameworks, health financing, local manufacturing capacity and domestic research activities impact/may impact health technology access in the country.
Facilitator
> Prof Leslie London - People’s Health Movement South Africa
Speakes
> Catherine Tomlinson: Freelance public health consultant and health journalist
> Candice Sehoma - Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
> Umunyana Rugege - Section27 Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
For NGOs, CBOs and cash-strapped governments, it is very easy to be seduced into taking money from anyone who is willing to provide it, especially if it will make a difference to whether or not you are able to carry out your programmes. But should you? Even if you have few viable alternatives? This is a very real dilemma faced by the non-profit sector and, to a lesser extent, government departments in South Africa and globally.
We have assembled an international panel of public health researchers and practitioners to talk about this specifically in relation to alcohol advocacy work. The alcohol industry globally has shown that they are willing to fund civil society and government programmes, directly and indirectly, through direct funding, public private partnerships (PPPs) and other means, and to present themselves as a ‘caring’ industry. But what is their true agenda? Could it be that they are using CSI support as leverage in their fight against the introduction of tougher alcohol legislation which could impact negatively on their sales and profits? Does this not pose a ‘conflict of interest’ for NGOs, CBOs and government departments that are working hard to ensure such legislation is indeed passed and implemented in the interests of public health and saving lives and money? And, if so, what concrete steps can be taken to ensure alternative, untainted funding sources for this important work?
Facilitator
> Prof Leslie London: PHM SA and UCT South Africa
Speakers
> Gianna Gayle Amul : PHD student at University of Geneva’s institute of Global Health
> Dr Samin Saban: Research Psychologist – Singapore
> Dr Melissa Mialon – France Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
The current COVID-19 pandemic has exacerbated challenges for the vulnerable and disadvantaged in accessing healthy and nutritious food.
The People's Health Movement South Africa hosted a webinar to explore more on the challenges and possible solutions.
Speakers
> Roshila Nair
> Phumeza Macwili
> Professor Thandi Puoane Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
A space to hear the voices of people living through the Covid 19 experience in different scenarios and bearing witness to the suffering and to learn from these lived experience as to how we need shape future interventions and strengthen our healthcare system to deal with a medical emergency or pandemic more effectively.
a. Recovered Covid 19 patient Nothemba Rixana shared her story of getting Covid and then also losing her husband due to Covid. This powerful story speaks to the emotional impact of the illness on individual and communities and the role that he stigma plays in the emotional adjustment and coping with the pandemic . steam came through as a powerful force that has been hampering getting to care sooner rather than later.
b. CHW Boniwe from Soweto shared her experience at the frontline as she was helping to contain the pandemic and do screening to ensure effective management of the illness within her community. Themes like poor training, lack of PPE and limited resources were paramount. She also spoke about the impact of this on herself and her family as she feared contaminating of her loved ones. This stress added to the emotional impact that she had to cope with plus the emphasis on her work as a CHW that she feels passionate about.
The podcast was to create awareness about the role and place that palliative care has in a pandemic like Covid 19 Dr. Liz Gwyther head of the School for public health at UCT spoke after which Juanita Arendse gave overview of the Western Cape Government response and planning for palliative care services during Covid 19
Speakers
> Bonisiwe Msibi – CHW from Soweto
> Notemba Rixana – Partner of C19 deceased patient
> Dr Margie Venter. : Palliative Care clinician and Chairperson of PALPRAC
> Dr Liz Gwyther head of the School for public health at UCT
> Juanita Arendse – Western Cape Government Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
This webinar was about struggle tactics used by the Gauteng CHWs who were recently offered permanent contracts by the Gauteng Health Department.
The battle to archive permanent employment was not easy for them. It's been a winding road for our comrades in Gauteng. However, they did not give up. The struggle started when they were still employed by NGOs. They fought to be absorbed by the department; instead, the Department contracted them under Smart Purse. They continued to fight the National and the Provincial Departments tooth and nail in the Courts, on the streets and by occupying the department's offices.
Today the Community Health Workers are celebrating their permanent employment by the Department!
Speakers
> Klaas Nakedi | Vice Chairperson Gauteng Forum
> Mzikazi Nkata | SAFTU EC
> Oupa Lehulere | Khanya College Facebook · Twitter · Donate · Website
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