2011 GlobeMed Summit Program

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2011 GLOBEMED GLOBAL HEALTH SUMMIT EVANSTON, IL A CALL TO ACTION: LEVERAGING HISTORY TO BUILD A MOVEMENT

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Program for the 2011 Summit!

Transcript of 2011 GlobeMed Summit Program

Page 1: 2011 GlobeMed Summit Program

2011 GLOBEMED

GLOBAL HEALTH

SUMMITEVANSTON, IL

A CALL TO ACTION:LEVERAGING HISTORY TO BUILD A MOVEMENT

Page 2: 2011 GlobeMed Summit Program

GLOBEMED AT AMHERST COLLEGE is aiming to raise $4,400 to train 57 Community Health Workers in Cuscatalán, El Salvador. COLUMBIA aims to raise $16,000, which will fund HIV/AIDS education, prevention, and testing services for over 1,000 people in Gulu, Uganda. BOSTON COLLEGE is aiming to raise $3,000 in order to fund several income generation projects in Ayacucho, Peru. BUCKNELL UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $6,000 to fund pediatric nutrition programs in Kabale, Uganda. CORNELL UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $3,500 for an awareness campaign, Community Health Education Program, and income-generation project in Guayaquil, Ecuador. CU!BOULDER is aiming to raise $20,000, which will fund the building of latrines, women’s income generation initiatives and support for nutrition programs in Tipling, Nepal. DEPAUL is aiming to raise $1,468 to fund two water tanks and a latrine in rural Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. DUKE is aiming to raise $1,500 to fund a community garden being implemented by Salud Sin Límites in Las Quebradas, Nicaragua. FLORIDA STATE is aiming to raise $6,000 to improve sanitation, women’s health and education initiatives in Orissa, India.

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GLOBEMED AT GWU is aiming to raise $18,000, which will fund both the construction of a waiting room and expansion of an income generation program in Huye, Rwanda with RVCP. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $3,500 which will fund the health training and promotion center, Casa Minga in Iquitos, Peru. INDIANA UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $1,500 to strengthen education and transportation used by health workers in Cajabamba, Ecuador. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $5,000 to fund school supplies and uniforms for 120 indigenous children to attend school in Licto, Ecuador. LOYOLA UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise over $10,000 to support several community health initiatives including the building of a medicinal plant garden in La Primavera, Guatemala.MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE is aiming to raise $5,000 to improve access to and utilization of Village Information Centers (VICs) in Tororo, Uganda. NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $3,000 to improve hygiene and sanitation conditions of 500 Self Help Group members in the Masaka District of Uganda by the year 2011.

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GLOBEMED AT NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $10,000, which will fund the Child Nutrition Program and Adolescent Sexual Health Program for patients at the H.O.P.E. Centre in Ho, Ghana. PENN STATE UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $10,000 to fund the education and training of community health promoters in 4 regions in Chiapas, Mexico. PRINCETON is aiming to raise $1500, which will fund the operation of 2 satellite health centers in Otavalo, Ecudaor. RHODES COLLEGE is working to raise $10,000 to fund theinstallation of 600 water filters. STANFORD is working to raise $1,000 to improve the health of people living in Bajo Lempa, El Salvador. TRUMAN STATE UNIVERSITY is aiming to raise $3,000 to fund the production of educational materials to be used by midwifery sta! at Maison de Naissance, a birthing clinic in Torbeck, Haiti. UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN is aiming to raise $10,000 to support Tiyatien Health’s 40 community health workers in Zwedru, Liberia. UCLA is aiming to raise $3,000 to fund goats and training to 30 young mothers at the Amuru Youth Center in Anaka, Uganda.

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GLOBEMED AT UMKC is aiming to raise $6,000 to establish a goat micro-lending program for communities in Bushenyi, Uganda. UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO is aiming to raise at least $3,000 to support tuberculosis patients in Callao, Peru. UNC is aiming to raise $10,000 to fund peer education and support outreach programs for HIV/AIDS infected and a!ected youth in Gulu, Uganda. USC is aiming to raise $2,000 to purchase two computers in HoHoe, Ghana. UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER is aiming to raise $3,400 to strengthen the organizational activities and operation of the Kallpa Iquitos youth center. UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN is aiming to raise $7,750 which will fund the construction and restoration of 47 latrines in Guarjila, El Salvador. VANDERBILT is aiming to raise $10,000 to fund the building of a waiting room, as part of the construction of a new clinic in Las Antillas, Peru. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS is aiming to raising $12,000 to support community based health projects in Naigobya and Iganga, Uganda.

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2011 GLOBEMED

SUMMITAPRIL 7 - 10 | EVANSTON, IL

GLOBAL HEALTH

A CALL TO ACTIONLEVERAGING HISTORY TOBUILD A MOVEMENT

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SEIZE OPPORTUNITY TRANSFORM IDEAS INTO ACTION

MAKE A TANGIBLE IMPACTADVOCATE FOR OTHERS COMBAT POVERTY

CELEBRATE COLLABORATIONADVANCE GLOBAL HEALTH EQUITY

PROMOTE SOCIAL JUSTICETHINK CRITICALLY SPEAK WITH PASSION

BELIEVE IN HUMANITYFIGHT INJUSTICECHALLENGE YOUR WORLD VIEW

WORK IN SOLIDARITYBUILD A COMMUNITYBUILD PARTNERSHIPSBUILD A NETWORKBUILD A MOVEMENT

INSIDEWELCOME 8

EXPERIENCE THE SUMMIT 9

OUR NETWORK 10!11

SCHEDULE 12!19

OPENING KEYNOTE 20

PLENARY KEYNOTE 21

HONORARY KEYNOTE 22

SPEAKER BIOS 23!31

DELEGATES 32!33

THANK YOU 34

MAPS 35

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Dear friends,WELCOME to the 2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit! This year marks five years since the very first GlobeMed Summit in 2007. Since then, GlobeMed has grown to 32 chapters across the country, with partners from Mexico to Nepal, and an expanding alumni network. Over the course of the next three days, more than 300 students, speakers, alumni, and supporters will gather in Evanston, IL to advance the movement for global health equity.

Past Summits have allowed us to successfully delve into the underlying values grounding our work in global health. These ideas gave us a framework to shape our work with grassroots health partners around the world. Now, with 32 chapters (soon to be 46!), GlobeMed is poised to be a powerful force, building a broad-based social movement for global health equity. This year’s Summit theme, A Call to Action: Leveraging History to Build a Movement, draws from a rich history of past social movements to critically assess what role students, grassroots health leaders, and our surrounding communities should play in building a more just and equitable world.

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The Summit will open with a keynote by Andre Banks, Director of Strategy at Purpose. Mr. Banks brings a diverse set of experiences in 21st century movements and student organizing to help us understand how our network can mobilize around global health.

On Friday, we will explore movement-building in further detail, with lessons from past social movements, current models of community-based health delivery around the world, and advocacy and policy e!orts in global health. We will also hear from Dr. Joseph Amon, Director of Health and Human Rights at Human Rights Watch, about the organization’s approach to advocacy in human rights. Finally, we are excited to welcome back Dr. Joia Mukherjee, Chief Medical O"cer at Partners In Health, for the honorary keynote on Friday evening. Dr. Mukherjee will reflect upon the progress towards global health equity since she gave the honorary keynote at our very first Summit in 2007.

On Saturday, we will begin by critically and creatively brainstorming about the future of GlobeMed’s programs through a series of Organizational Think Tanks. We will examine the role of business leadership in global health through a panel with leaders in corporate philanthropy. Finally, panels on Saturday afternoon will explore challenges in making life-long

commitments to global health as well as discussing lessons in successful leadership on campus. Throughout the Summit, small groups will engage in reflective dialogue, discussing the internal dimensions of engaging in health and social justice work.

This year’s Summit promises to be an extraordinary gathering of individuals from across the world who are working to build a broad-based movement for global health equity. We feel very privileged to have been able to organize this year’s Summit, and we see it as a significant opportunity for our network. We hope that you will make the most of this experience and leverage this time to build your own ideas and to form deep relationships with those around you.

At the GlobeMed National O"ce, we continue to be inspired by your work throughout the year on campuses all over the country. We’re really glad you’re here, and happy movement-building!

2011 GlobeMed Summit Team

Neal Emery, Jang Kim, Sue Kulkarni, Jill Shah, and Sid Singh

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HOW TO

EXPERIENCETHE SUMMIT

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“SPEAK WITH THE POSSIBILITY OF BEING HEARD, AND LISTEN WITH THE POSSIBILITY OF BEING CHANGED.” WILLIAM AYERS

WRITE, DISCUSS, AND REFLECT.

BE OPEN TO CHALLENGE.

THINK BIG!

HUG SOMEONE.

Over the next three days, you will be presented with an enormous array of in-formation and perspectives from fellow delegates and leading experts in global

health. Take notes, share your ideas and questions, and reserve time to reflect on the things that have challenged or inspired you most. Review your notes during

the Summit as well as afterward to ensure that you process everything.

When you encounter an idea or perspective that is new, di!cult, or uncomfortable, run towards it, not away from it. Ask questions, and don’t be shy about sharing or receiving an opposing view. Challenge yourself, challenge others.

You are part of a movement of over 1,000 young activists and 33 partner communi-ties that spans the globe. You are students at incredible universities, citizens with a

powerful voice, and endowed with all of the vigor and passion of youth. In short, your potential to make change is matched only by your responsibility to fulfill that poten-

tial. Bring your boldest vision to the table.

Our community is one of GlobeMed’s greatest assets. The Summit is the perfect time to get to know student global health leaders from across the country. The relationships formed at the Summit will be invaluable as you return to your campus to advance your chapter’s e"orts. So give a hug, meet your fellow GlobeMedders, and keep in touch.

The success of the Summit rests on our willingness to be challenged, inspired, and trans-formed by each other. To do this, we must recognize the wisdom of others and be open to sharing the unique perspective that we each have to o"er. Immerse yourself.

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OUR NETWORK

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OUR CHAPTERS

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SCHEDULETHURSDAY | APRIL 7th

11:30 am - 6:00 pm | Registration Best Western

6:00 pm - 7:00 pm | Opening Dinner Woman’s Club of Evanston

4:30 pm - 5:30 pm | Introduction to Global Health

555 Clark, Rm. B01

TIMELINE OF

SOCIALACTION

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SUMMIT

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7:15 pm - 8:15 pm | Opening Keynote

Woman’s Club of Evanston

8:45 pm - 10:00 pm | Small Groups : A Focus on the Self

Woman’s Club of Evanston

2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit

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THURSDAY | APRIL 7th

Andre Banks, Purpose

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SCHEDULE

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FRIDAY | APRIL 8th

7:00 am | Continental Breakfast (optional) Best Western: Breakfast is served from 7:00 am until 9:00 am

9:15 am - 10:30 am | Global Health at the Grassroots 2nd & 9th Floors, Hilton Orrington

Mark Arnoldy & Ryan Schwarz “Nyaya Five Years On: Finding Our Role in the Movement”

Jessica Beckerman“A Community-led, Integrated Approach to Break the Cycle of Poverty and Disease”

Prashanth Bhat“The Montgomery Experience: Looking for Community-based Solutions to Global Health Issues”

Sarah Broom “Village Health Works’ E!orts to Build Commu-nity-based Care in Burundi”

Emma Clippinger“Mission Drift or Mission Impact? Learning and Growing Beyond the Initial Model”

Dave Law, PhD“Health Equity for the Under-Served: The Ne-cessity for Grass-Roots Interventions”

Evan Lyon, MD“Acute and Chronic Disastors: Community, Capacity, and Context”

Joanna Michel, PhD “Ethnobotany and Youth Action Research: From the Rainforests in Guatemala to the Urban Streets of Chicago”

Léa Tiénou“On The Path: The Refugee Journey and Healthcare”

Joseph F. West, SM, ScD “North Lawndale Diabetes Community Action Project”

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2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit

August 1972 !"##"$%&'$(')$*+%',-./"0",-/1+2'"%'-'%-/"$%1)"2+'34$*+%5&'6/."7+'($.'89:-#"/;<'/$'2+*-%2'(:##'&$0"-#=',$#"/"0-#='-%2'+0$1%$*"0'+9:-#"/;>

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1972 - 1973

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FRIDAY | APRIL 8th

10:35 am - 11:45 am | Small Groups: Community Orientation

2nd & 9th Floors, Hilton Orrington

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm | Nom Nom Nom Levere Memorial Temple

1:15 pm - 2:30 pm | Plenary Keynote

Leverone Auditorium

Joseph Amon, Human Rights Watch

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FRIDAY | APRIL 8th

CONCURRENT SESSIONS

2:45 pm – 4:00 pm | Historical Lessons Advocating for Justice

HISTORICAL LESSONS

Peter Brown, “The Presence of the Past in Global Health: Using History to Improve Current Interventions”

Virginia Bouvier, PhD, “Learning From the Past to Promote Social Change”

Bechara Choucair, MD, “From Clinical Care to Population Approach: A Historical Perspective”

Stanley Foster, MD, MPH, “Smallpox Eradication in Bangladesh 1972-1976: Lessons Learned, and Implications for Strengthening Community, District and Government Capacity to move toward health and well being.”

Roger Thurow, “Raise the Clamor: Why Not Hunger?”

4:15 pm – 5:30 pm | Historical Lessons Advocating for Justice 2nd & 9th Floors, Hilton Orrington

ADVOCATING FOR JUSTICE

Prabhjot Singh, PhD, “1 Million Community Health Worker Campaign”

Doug Schenkelberg, “Making Sausage for Change: How to Use the Legislative Process to Advance Human Rights”

David Stuckler, PhD, “Global Health and Human Rights: Can We Do One Without the Other?”

Donna Barry, NP, MPH, “Advocating For Resources and a Stronger Global Health Policy”

Fran Quigley, JD, “Rummaging Through the Toolbox: Eight Powerful Instruments for Seeking Social Justice”

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2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit

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FRIDAY | APRIL 8th

8:45 pm - 9:45 pm | Student Reception Parkes 122

5:30 pm - 6:45 pm | Dinner on your own Various Evanston restaurants

7:15 pm - 8:30 pm | Keynote Address

Alice Millar Chapel (Please arrive by 6:45 pm)

Dr. Joia Mukherjee, Partners In Health

10:00 pm - 12:00 am | Social Shenanigans The Keg of Evanston

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SCHEDULET

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1:15 pm - 2:45 pm | Roundtable Lunch Various Northwestern locations

3:00 pm - 4:15 pm | Upperclassmen Panel: Discerning a Lifelong Commitment to Global Health

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SATURDAY | APRIL 9th

10:15 am - 11:30 am | Organizational Think Tanks2nd & 9th Floors, Hilton Orrington

11:45 am - 1:00 pm | Panel: Leaders in Business & Global Health

Harris 107

7:00 am | Continental Breakfast (optional) Best Western: Breakfast is served until 9:00 am

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SATURDAY | APRIL 9th

2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit

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4:30 pm - 5:30 pm | Small groups: Applying Self and Community to a Movement

Various Northwestern locations

5:45 pm - 6:45 pm | Break

7:00 pm - 9:00 pm | Closing DinnerAllison Hall

3:00 pm - 4:15 pm | Underclassmen Panel: Developing Leadership on Campus

Hinman Auditorium, 9th Floor, Hilton Orrington

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ANDRE HAS SPENT the last 10 years building social movements that have shaped politics in the U.S. and abroad. Most recently, he worked as the Deputy Director of ColorOf-Change.org using online organiz-ing to build a multi-racial move-ment in the U.S. around issues of racial justice. Andre managed the 700,000-member organization and led political and issue campaigns through the 2008 primaries and general election. Andre got his start building a na-tional network of student organizers concerned with economic justice at the AFL-CIO. An expanded focus on connecting national movements to global issues led him to Africa Action where he built a national constituency pushing for action on AIDS in the U.S. and in Africa. He moved on to build the media and public a!airs department at the Applied Research Center, placing stories on hot button issues of racial equality in outlets as varied as the Chicago Sun-Times, San Francisco Chronicle, LA Weekly, National Pub-lic Radio and Agence-France Press. While there, he also led the strategy and managed the development of the online newsmagazine Color-O

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lines.com, serving as its founding editor. Andre has also led hundreds of trainings and workshops on cam-paign strategy, media outreach and the use of technology to (smartly) build social movements. An Ohio native turned Brooklynite, Andre spends a lot of time riding the A train with 1,000,000 of his neigh-bors every morning. He also has the second-best singing voice at Pur-pose, after Emmy Suzuki Harris.

Purpose creates 21st century movements. We look for ways that movements can help solve major global problems. To do this, we work with some of the most exciting players in the new green and social economy to help them get to scale faster and some of the world’s big-gest brands to mobilize their consumers around progressive causes.

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JOSEPH AMON IS the director of the Health and Human Rights division at Human Rights Watch. He joined the organization in 2005 as head of its HIV/AIDS program, having previously worked for more than 15 years conducting research, designing programs, and evaluating interventions related to HIV, malaria, hepatitis, and Guinea Worm disease for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and for projects funded by the US Agency for International Development. He has also served at the Carter Center and Walter Reed Army Institute of Research.Since coming to Human Rights Watch, Amon has worked on a wide range of issues related

Human Rights Watch is one of the world’s leading independent organizations dedicated to defending and protecting human rights. By focusing international attention where human rights are violated, we give voice to the oppressed and hold oppressors accountable for their crimes. Our rigorous, objective investigations and strategic, targeted advocacy build intense pressure for action and raise the cost of human rights abuse.P

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to health and human rights, including: access to medicines (antiretroviral, drug dependency, and pain relief treatment), HIV testing, and the rights of prisoners and migrants to access health care. He has also worked on unproven AIDS ‘cures,’ and human rights abuses associated with infectious disease outbreaks and multi-drug resistant tuberculosis. Amon is the author or coauthor of a number of book chapters, reports, and more than two dozen articles in medical and public health journals. He is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of the International AIDS Society, the UNAIDS reference group on HIV and Human Rights, and the Stop TB Programme’s Task Force on TB and Human Rights. In addition, he is an associate professor in the Department of Epidemiology at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University and a lecturer in public and international a!airs at Princeton University. Amon has a master’s degree in tropical medicine and a PhD in epidemiology.

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DR. MUKHERJEE IS the Associate Professor with Harvard Medical School in the Division of Global Health Equity at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Since 2000, she has served as the Chief Medical O!cer of Partners In Health, an international medical non-profit with clinical programs in Haiti, Rwanda, Burundi, Malawi, Lesotho, Peru, Mexico, Russia, Kazakhstan, and inner-city Boston. She trained in Infectious Disease, Internal Medicine, and Pediatrics at the Massachusetts General Hospital and has an MPH from the Harvard School of Public Health. Dr. Mukherjee has been

Partners In Health (PIH) is a Boston, Massachusetts-based non-profit health care organization dedicated to providing a “preferential option for the poor.” At its root, our mis-sion is both medical and moral. It is based on solidarity, rather than char-ity alone. When a person in Peru, or Siberia, or rural Haiti falls ill, PIH uses all of the means at our disposal to make them well—from pressur-ing drug manufacturers, to lobbying policy makers, to providing medical care and social services. Whatever it takes.

involved in health care access and human rights issues since 1989 in the United States, Africa, Latin America, the Caribbean, and the countries of the former Soviet Union. Dr. Mukherjee consults for the World Health Organization on the treatment of HIV and MDR-TB in developing countries. Her scholarly work focuses on the human rights aspect of HIV treatment and on the implementation of complex health interventions in resource-poor settings.

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SPEAKER

BIOGRAPHIESMARK ARNOLDYFounder, NEPAL NUTRITION

DONNA BARRYAdvocacy and Policy Director, PARTNERS IN HEALTH JESSICA

BECKERMANCo-Executive Director, PROJECT MUSO LADAMUNEN

PRASHANTH BHATSta! Physician, MONTGOMERY AIDS OUTREACH

Mark is experienced in global health, social entrepreneurship, and nutrition. As an undergraduate, he launched NepalNUTrition to produce and distribute a life-saving fortified peanut butter for malnourished children in Nepal. During his senior year, Mark co-founded the GlobeMed at CU-Boulder chapter, raising over $20,000 for their partner, Himalayan Healthcare. After completing the Global Health E!ectiveness Program at Harvard, Mark has returned to Nepal as a Fulbright Scholar in nutrition until July, when he will begin working as Nyaya Health’s Executive Director. Mark has also been involved in the founding of two businesses, Nut-rients and 5 Pound Apparel, which each use innovative business models to provide treatment for malnourished children.

Donna Barry, NP MPH, has held her current position with Partners In Health (PIH) since 2001. Previously, she led the PIH project to treat multi-drug resistant tuberculosis in Russia and was Co-Director of PIH’s women’s health programs in Haiti. She is guiding PIH’s advocacy and policy e!orts related to health, hunger, and socio-economic development in Haiti, increasing the pool of funding for global health and health system strengthening. She has participated in briefings and hearings on Capitol Hill regarding reproductive health, debt relief in Haiti, childhood malnutrition, tuberculosis, and funding for global health. A Nurse Practitioner with certifications in women’s and adult health, Donna also supports PIH’s nursing activities and provides clinical and program advice to PIH’s women’s health programs.

Jessica Beckerman (Co-Executive Director, founder) coordinates Project Muso’s team to develop, revise, and plan programs and evaluate the impact of their work, and provides technical support to their operational team. She studied international development and public health at Brown University and has worked in Mali since 2004, where she was a Fulbright Scholar. Jessica has worked in West Africa with several organizations including the groundbreaking NGO Tostan, and in the United States as a Project Manager at Partners In Health’s PACT Project, designing new community-based health care delivery systems for marginalized patients. She is currently a medical student at the University of California, San Francisco.

Prashanth Bhat, M.D. is a primary care physician in Montgomery, AL, specializing in Primary Care and Clinical Epidemiology. He has been involved in providing health care to HIV positive populations of central and south Alabama. He passionately provides a comprehensive patient centered personal healthcare model to the community without judgment or reservations. He focuses on chronic disease management, preventive medicine, minimizing disparities in healthcare, and researching community-based solutions to global health issues.

CURRENTLY READING:

CURRENTLY LISTENING:

"We need more light about each other. LIGHT!creates UNDERSTANDING"!understanding creates LOVE, love creates patience, and patience creates unity." EL"HAJJ MALIK EL"SHABAZZ

(Malcolm X)

INSPIRING QUOTE:

THE FIRST 90 DAYSMICHAEL WATKINS

SIGH NO MOREMUMFORD AND SONS

THE GULAG ARCHIPELAGOALEKSANDR SOLZHENITSYN

CURRENTLY READING:

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SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES24

VIRGINIA BOUVIERSenior Program O!cer for Latin America,USIP

INSPIRING QUOTE:

SARAH BROOMExecutive Director, VILLAGE HEALTH WORKS

PETER BROWNProfessor of Global Health atEMORY UNIVERSITY

Paurvi Bhatt leads the company’s Global Employee HIV/AIDS Program. She has more than 15 years of experience in both the public and private sector. Specifically, she has worked on designing, managing and advising initiatives on HIV/AIDS, corporate social responsibility, and international health. She has led strategic public-private partnerships and HIV/AIDS planning initiatives, and has implemented successful start-up HIV/AIDS programs around the world for organizations including USAID, US GAO, CARE, and Abbott Laboratories. She serves as a technical advisor on several international health and HIV/AIDS working groups and committees, and serves on the Global Health Benefits Institute Board.

Virginia M. Bouvier, Ph.D., works with the U.S. Institute of Peace, a Congressionally-funded organization mandated to contribute to the prevention, management and resolution of international conflicts, where she has worked since January 2003. She has been an Assistant Professor of Latin American literature and culture at the University of Maryland and a Senior Associate at the Washington O!ce on Latin America. She is the editor of Colombia: Building Peace in a Time of War, The Globalization of U.S.-Latin American Relations: Democracy, Intervention, and Human Rights, and Whose America? The War of 1898 and the Battles to Define the Nation; and author of Women and the Conquest of California, 1542-1840: Codes of Silence, as well as journal articles and book reviews on aspects of U.S.-Latin American relations, human rights, gender, and political humor.

Sarah has always been concerned with global health and inequalities beginning with those in her hometown. She previously worked at The Praxis Project, a D.C.-based nonprofit that works with grassroots organizations to shift policy related to health justice in poor communities. Prior to Praxis, she worked as the Senior Writer for Mayor Ray Nagin in New Orleans. Sarah lived more than a year in Burundi where she worked with an all-Burundian sta" at one of the country’s most popular independent radio stations. There, she helped develop innovative, new programming that focused on human rights. Sarah began her career as a newspaper and magazine reporter working in Rhode Island and Hong Kong, among other cities. Her essays have appeared in The Oxford American, The New York Times Magazine, and O, The Oprah Magazine, where she worked for several years.

Peter Brown is a professor in Anthropology in Emory College of Arts and Sciences and a professor in Global Health at the Rollins School of Public Health, both at Emory University. He is editor of three textbooks in Anthropology, including the commonly used reader in Medical Anthropology (Understanding and Applying Medical Anthropology). He has a long-standing research interest in culture and disease ecology, with particular interest in malaria; he co-edited The Anthropology of Infectious Diseases: International Health Perspectives and Emerging Illnesses and Society: Negotiating the Public Health Agenda. His research primarily deals with sociocultural aspects of malaria and its control, and he serves on a malaria-related Scientific Advisory Committee for the World Health Organization. For a decade, he served as Editor-in-Chief of the journal Medical Anthropology; he was also president of the General Division of the American Anthropological Association. Winner of several teaching awards, he is a director of the undergraduate minor program “Global Health, Culture and Society” at Emory College.

PAURVI BHATT

Senior Director, STRATEGIC HEALTH INITIATIVES AT LEVI STRAUSS AND COMPANY

“As you work in international health and CARE for the world, DON’T FORGET to take care of each other.” Rekha Bhatt, my MOTHER

CURRENTLY READING:NEW YORK: A NOVELEDWARD RUTHERFORD

“An individual has not started LIVING until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the BROADER concerns of all humanity.” Martin Luther King, Jr.

INSPIRING QUOTE:

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2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit 25

ED CARDOZAExecutive Director, STILL HARBOR

BECHARA CHOUCAIRCommissioner, CHICAGO DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH

ANN CLARKPrinciple Architect,NICHOLAS CLARK ARCHITECTS LLC EMMA

CLIPPINGERExecutive Director,GARDENS FOR HEALTH INTERNATIONAL

Ed Cardoza, MA.Min. founded Still Harbor, a social justice organization deeply concerned with developing human capacity through discernment, reflection, and meaningful exchange. He completed a practicum in spiritual direction at the Center for Religious Devel-opment through the Weston Jesuit School of Theology in Cambridge, MA. Ed also serves as a consultant and member of the Develop-ment Committee at Part-ners In Health, where he was the Vice President for Development for six years. He previously worked as a development researcher at Harvard Medical School and director of development research at the Appalachian Mountain Club. Cardoza has also served in the O!ce of AIDS Ministry and the chap-laincy o!ce at Massachu-setts General Hospital.

Bechara Choucair directs the Chicago Depart-ment of pubic health. He is actively re-shaping the department to work with community partners to meet the new public health challenges of the 21st century. Dr. Chou-cair previously served as Medical Director of Cru-sader Community Health in Rockford, Illinois and he was Executive Direc-tor of Heartland Interna-tional Health Center. He has served as Vice-Chair of Community Medicine, Department of Fam-ily & Community Medi-cine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University. He has been awarded Loretta Lacey Maternal and Child Health Advocacy Award, Illi-nois Maternal and Child Health Coalition, 2009; Health Professions Train-ing and Education Award, National Association of Community Health Centers, 2008; American Academy of Family Physi-cians Foundation, Pfizer Teacher Development Award, 2007; and Forrest Riordan Humanitarian Award, 2005.

Ann Clark designed Part-ners In Health’s new 180,000-square-foot hos-pital in the Central Plateau town of Mirebalais, Haiti. The hospital will serve 500 patients a day and train a new generation of doctors, nurses, and health work-ers. Ann’s design focuses on utilizing local work and materials and minimizing environmental impact while maintaining the high-est quality and economic viability. Prior to her deci-sion to study architecture, Ann lived in New York City where she worked at an art publication and pursued her lifelong interest in painting. Ann has international expe-rience having studied as an undergraduate in Erlangen, Germany and as a gradu-ate student in Rome, Italy. Ann is a registered architect in Illinois and a member of the Association of Licensed Architects.

Emma Clippinger founded Gardens for Health International, a non-profit organization that supports those who face chronic malnutrition with the resources and knowledge for greater self-su!ciency. Currently operating in Rwanda, the organization serves over 4,000 HIV-positive individuals and their families through its programs. Gardens for Health International has received numerous accolades, including an Echoing Green Fellowship and the grand prize in the Dell Social Innovation Competition, the JPMorgan Good Venture Competition, and the Ashoka/Staples Youth Social Entrepreneur Competition. Emma graduated from Brown University.

“Preservation of one’s own culture does not require CONTEMPT or DISRESPECT for other cultures.” Cesar E. Chavez

INSPIRING QUOTE:

CURRENTLY READING:THE PRICE OF GOVERNMENTDAVID OSBORNE & PETER HUTCHINSON

CURRENTLY READING:MISSION IMPACTROBERT SHEEHAN

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SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES26

ERNESTO DE LA TORREGlobal Public Health Coordinator,CHEVRON CORPORATION

LINDA DISTLERATHSenior Vice President,Healthcare PracticeAPCO WORLDWIDE

PERRY DOUGHERTYAssociate Director,STILL HARBOR

ANDREA FLYNNExecutive Director,MAC AIDS FUND

Ernesto coordinates Chevron’s Global Public Health e!orts to deliver award-winning awareness, education and prevention e!orts to the global workforce. In his current role De La Torre is responsible for coordinating the global delivery of Chevron’s Corporate HIV/AIDS Policy and internal public health e!orts Additionally, he coordinates the development and fulfillment of global workforce training in the areas of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. Before joining Chevron, De La Torre worked in higher education with a passion for developing the leadership skills of student leaders. At CSU, Chico Ernesto was responsible for multiple student programs including the Women’s Center, the campus radio station, and numerous councils and clubs.

Linda M. Distlerath, PhD, JD, works at APCO Worldwide, a global strategic communications, public a!airs and management consulting firm headquartered in Washington, DC. Linda has 25 years experience in the health care sector spanning basic and clinical research, public policy, communications, and global health with particular expertise in HIV/AIDS. She was vice-president at Merck & Co., Inc. in corporate public a!airs, global health policy, and Asia regional health policy. She is adjunct professor at the College of Public Health at East Tennessee State University, a trustee of the Committee for Economic Development, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the Economic Club of Washington, DC. She also served as the Global Executive Director for the Partnership for an HIV-Free Generation, a public-private partnership with the U.S. government focused on HIV prevention among youth in sub-Saharan Africa.

Perry Dougherty works as the Associate Director of Still Harbor, a non-profit organization dedicated to developing human capacity for social justice service through a variety of retreat, training, and educational opportunities. Prior to joining Still Harbor, she served as the Principal Gifts O"cer at Partners In Health, where working closely with the Partners In Health’s Board of Directors and executive leadership she helped increase the number of individual donors giving more than $100,000 annually. During her four years at Partners In Health, Perry also served as Special Project Manager and Assistant to the Executive Director. Perry has also previously worked for Better Communications, Inc., DMA Health Strategies, and the Massachusetts Children’s Trust Fund. Perry graduated with a dual degree in Social Thought & Analysis and Spanish from Washington University in St. Louis in 2005. Perry currently lives just outside of Boston with her six-year-old son.

Andrea Flynn directs the MAC AIDS Fund - the philanthropic wing of MAC Cosmetics that supports men, women and children a!ected by HIV/AIDS globally. MAC directs every cent of the selling price of the VIVA GLAM lipsticks to the MAC AIDS Fund. With a total of four VIVA GLAM lipsticks now sold worldwide, and through the annual Kids Helping Kids Card Program, $36 million to date has been provided for MAC AIDS Fund programs. The fund supports e!orts to promote AIDS awareness, community-level HIV testing, and basic HIV treatment. The MAC AIDS Fund is the heart and soul of the company - with its employees giving their time, energy and talent to help those a!ected by HIV/AIDS worldwide.

CURRENTLY READING:THE STUFF OF THOUGHTSTEVEN PINKER

GLEECURRENTLY WATCHING:

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2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit 27

STANLEY FOSTER

Professor,EMORY UNIVERSITY

OLIVIA KOSHYChapter Founder,GLOBEMED AT UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS

DAVE LAWExecutive DirectorJOY!SOUTHFIELD, COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION

LIVY LOWCo-PresidentGLOBEMED AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY

Stanley Foster, MD, MPH, OBN led smallpox eradication teams in Nigeria and Bangladesh from 1966-1976. During the 1980s, he was part of the CDC’s Combating Childhood Communicable Diseases team that worked with 12 African countries to strengthen their capacity in improving children’s health through preventive and curative strategies. In 1994, Dr. Foster joined the faculty at Rollins School of Public Health and teaches three classes: Global Challenges and Opportunities, Community Transformation, and Evidence-Based Strategies. Together with his wife Dorothy, a linguist fluent in Mam Guatemalan Indian Language, they annually hold workshops for women from 22 villages on topics - ranging from microfinance to environmental toxicity - selected by the women.

Olivia is a junior at The University of Texas at Austin studying Marketing and Psychology. As one of the newest GlobeMed chapter founders, she never ceases to be inspired and challenged by GlobeMed’s all-encompassing vision. Olivia truly believes that the movement for global health equity transcends the boundaries of student majors and allows diverse student advocates to champion compassion, human rights, and social justice. Her specific future interests lie in social entrepreneurship and nonprofits, specifically related to health. In her free time, she enjoys volunteering at Ten Thousand Villages, a nonprofit fair trade store, and being a big-time foodie.

After a 32-year biomedical research career, Dave Law, PhD, became the Executive Director of Joy-Southfield Community Development Corporation (JSCDC) in Detroit, Michigan in 2006. JSCDC is a community-based non-profit committed to comprehensive neighborhood revitalization through free healthcare for the uninsured, preventive education, chronic disease management, home repair, home foreclosure prevention, local economic redevelopment, and youth mentoring. JSCDC also operates a childhood obesity prevention program, including school - and community -based interventions, food security programs with youth involvement, and development of safe recreational facilities. Dave is a decorated combat veteran of Vietnam, a founding member of the Michigan Minority Health Coalition, and was recognized as an honorary pallbearer for Mrs. Rosa Parks by the Rosa & Raymond Parks Institute for Self Development in Detroit. When not on the job, Dave loves spending time with his awesome wife Marion

Livy is a sophomore at Barnard College majoring in Political Science, and aspires to work in global health. She is the current Co-President of GlobeMed at Columbia University, and is thrilled to be a part of such an incredible movement of student leaders! Last year, she traveled to Uganda to study nutrition and food security, and cannot wait to return this summer with the GROW team to work on HIV/AIDS and maternal health. Livy is always repping the Bay Area and enjoys using her Californian, laid back nature to make New Yorkers uncomfortably at ease with life.

INSPIRED BY:PAULO FRIEIRE

CURRENTLY READING:HALF THE SKYNICHOLAS D. KRISTOF & SHERYL WUDUNN

DAY BY DAYPETER HARPER

CURRENTLY LISTENING:

IT’S NEVER BEEN LIKE THATPHOENIX

CURRENTLY LISTENING:

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SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES28

PETER LUCKOW

Director of Operations,TIYATIEN HEALTH EVAN LYON

Physician,PARTNERS IN HEALTH

SUKI MCCLATCHEYSenior Manager,GLOBAL CITIZENSHIP AND POLICY FOR ABBOTT

JOANNA MICHEL

Assistant Director,URBAN MEDICINE, UIC COLLEGE OF MEDICINE

Peter Luckow is a founding member of GlobeMed, now working at Tiyatien Health in Boston. During his tenure with the GlobeMed National O!ce, Peter directed the Global Health Summit, served as one of the first full-time sta" members, and nurtured GlobeMed’s growth to 32 chapters. He remains involved as a member of the Board of Directors. In addition to GlobeMed, Peter interned with Partners In Health’s Institute for Health and Social Justice and Brigham and Women’s Hospital’s Division of Global Health Equity. Echoing Green selected Peter and Tiyatien Health Executive Director Rajesh Panjabi as finalists for the Echoing Green Fellowship. Aside from global health, Peter loves Chipotle burritos, the Cubs, and Words With Friends.

Evan Lyon, MD focuses on community-based approaches to HIV and TB treatment, providing primary care in resource-poor settings, and management of chronic disease using community health workers. He has worked in Haiti since 1996 and was active in the response to the 2010 earthquake. Dr. Lyon’s clinical work has focused on providing community-based HIV care in both south and west Alabama as well as in Haiti. Dr. Lyon continues to work on health and human rights advocacy, prisoner health and legal care, in the US and in collaboration with Zanmi Lasante in Haiti. Dr. Lyon is also an editor of the journal Health and Human Rights. Beyond working to provide care in poor communities, Dr. Lyon’s research and advocacy work has focused on economic, social and political inequality, the health consequences of war and political violence - with particular emphasis on the Iraq war, the right to health, and popular, community-based responses to global health problems.

Suki McClatchey, MPH is responsible for managing and developing programs with not-for-profit organizations that address global needs in the area of access to health care. She also oversees the company’s disaster relief e"orts and product donations programs. McClatchey serves on the board of Partnership for Quality Medical Donations and currently the chairman of the organization’s research committee. Before assuming her current position in 2006, McClatchey served at Abbott as the manager of Abbott’s Prevention of Mother-to-Child-Transmission of HIV/AIDS donations program. Prior to this, she conducted pharmaceutical and nutritional market research in Abbott’s international pharmaceutical division. McClatchey joined Abbott after spending three years with the World Health Organization (WHO) in Geneva, Switzerland. During her time at the WHO, her primary responsibility was to research and report on the global impact of micronutrient malnutrition on the health and well being of vulnerable populations.

Joanna Michel, PhD teaches seminars on community-based research, alternative medicine, and public health interventions at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She is also responsible for developing and implementing longitudinal community rotations aimed at developing culturally competent physicians whose projects address issues of health disparities among urban disadvantaged populations. Over the past ten years, Dr. Michel has been successful in securing national and international funding for community-initiated research and education related to nutrition, sustainable food systems, herbal medicine, women’s health, and community health worker training. As an applied researcher, Dr. Michel utilizes her interdisciplinary training and skills to develop community-based participatory research (CBPR) models and strategies that focus on using cultural strengths and community resources to promote health and prevent disease.

INSPIRED BY: DESMOND TUTU

“You cannot carry out FUNDAMENTAL CHANGE without a certain amount of madness. In this case, it comes from nonconformity, the COURAGE to turn your back on the old formulas, the courage to invent the future. It took the madmen of yesterday for us to be able to act with extreme clarity today. I want to be one of those MADMEN. We must dare to invent the future.” Thomas Sankara

INSPIRATIONAL QUOTE:

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2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit 29

FRAN QUIGLEYAssociate Director,INDIANA!KENYA PARTNERSHIP/AMPATH

SANA RAHIMCo-Director, GLOBAL ENGAGEMENT SUMMIT

JEFF RICHARDSONVice President,ABBOTT FUND

VICTOR ROY

FEINBERG SCHOOL OF MEDICINE

Fran Quigley, JD is a visiting professor at the Indiana University School of Law-Indianapolis, associate director of the IU Center for Global Health and Indiana-Kenya Partnership/AMPATH, and a sta! attorney at Indiana Legal Services. His 2009 book, Walking Together, Walking Far, chronicles the U.S. and Kenyan medical school partnership, AMPATH, which has become one of the world’s most comprehensive and successful responses to the HIV/AIDS pandemic and health and poverty crises in sub-Saharan Africa. He is a co-founder of the Legal Aid Centre of Eldoret (LACE), a human rights law clinic devoted to representing low-income individuals in western Kenya. Fran has served as the executive director of ACLU of Indiana and as a public defender and civil rights attorney. Beginning in Fall Semester 2011, Fran will join the clinical faculty at IU Law School-Indianapolis and begin teaching and directing the Health and Human Rights Clinic at IU Law School-Indianapolis.

Sana is a senior at Northwestern University and director of the Global Engagement Summit (GES), an international conference on grassroots development and social entrepreneurship. GES brings together delegates from across the globe to present their projects and then assists them in funding, project development, and networking. Sana spent the summer of 2009 working at the Istanbul Bilgi Human Rights Research Center focusing on women’s rights and NGO approaches towards gender discrimination She also completed an internship at the Istanbul Policy Center (IPC) at Sabanci University in the department dealing with US-Turkey relations. She is a former GlobeMed National O"ce intern and longtime friend of the GlobeMed family.

Je! Richardson, JD, MPA oversees its Global Health Access program throughout the developing world. He previously served as a managing director in Burson-Marsteller’s U.S. healthcare practice. Before joining Burson-Marsteller, Richardson was Executive Director of the GMHC, the largest U.S. AIDS service organization. He served under Governor Evan Bayh as Secretary of the Indiana Family and Social Services Administration and as Commissioner of the Indiana Department of Human Services. Richardson has been an adjunct professor at Indiana University and the City University of New York and currently teaches as a guest lecturer on global health issues at Northwestern University.

First confronted with injustice in the villages of India alongside his grandfather, a rural physician for the poor, Victor’s experiences throughout his youth and college years a"rmed a central belief: young people could become a collective force for social justice by partnering with those living in poverty around the world. Working with a dynamic team of peers, Victor has helped develop GlobeMed to advance this shared vision. As a founding member, Victor served as GlobeMed’s first full-time Executive Director from 2006 to 2009. During this time, GlobeMed grew to 19 university chapters and attracted seed funding for a National O"ce with full-time sta!. Last year, he earned an MPhil in Sociology at Cambridge University on a Gates Cambridge scholarship. Currently, he is studying medicine at Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine and serves on GlobeMed’s Board of Directors.

CURRENTLY READING: CONVERSATIONS WITH MYSELFNELSON MANDELA

CURRENTLY READING: THE HOUSE ON SUGAR BEACHHELENE COOPER

“A woman is handicapped by her sex, and HANDICAPS society, either by slavishly copying the pattern of man’s advance in the professions, or by REFUSING to compete with man at all.” Betty Friedan

INSPIRATIONAL QUOTE:

“If a bullet should enter my brain, let that bullet DESTROY every closet door.” Harvey Milk

INSPIRATIONAL QUOTE:

Board Member,

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SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES30

DOUG SCHENKELBERGAssociate Director,HEARTLAND ALLIANCE

RYAN SCHWARZVice President,US OPERATIONS FOR NYAYA HEALTH

PRABHJOT SINGHDirector of Program for Health Systems,EARTH INSTITUTE

DAVID STUCKLERAssistant Proferssor of Political Economy,HARVARD SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH

Doug Schenkelberg works in Policy and Advocacy at Heartland Alliance for Human Needs & Human Rights, a service-based human rights organization that addresses the needs of the most vulnerable in our society and works with over 600,000 individuals each year locally, nation-ally, and throughout the world. During his tenure, he has successfully advocated for Illinois to establish the first-in-the-nation Com-mission on the Elimination of Poverty, which focuses on poverty reduction in a manner consistent with international human rights standards, as well as worked on numerous legislative and budgetary issues related to those living in poverty. In addition, he leads Heartland Alliance’s policy and advo-cacy e!orts on state health reform implementation, fo-cusing in ensuring the most vulnerable are adequately served in a changing health care environment.

Ryan Schwarz is in his fi-nal year of the combined MD/MBA program at Yale University. Prior to com-ing to Yale, Ryan gradu-ated from Bard College where he studied an-thropology and neuro-science. After Bard, Ryan worked for the Interna-tional AIDS Vaccine Ini-tiative (IAVI) in the USA and South Africa. At Yale, Ryan’s research focused on health service delivery to injecting drug users, and he spent 2 years di-recting the HAVEN Free Clinic, a clinic serving the uninsured of New Haven. In June 2011, Ryan will begin a Medi-cine-Pediatrics residency at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Children’s Hospital of Boston, with an ultimate focus on the development of health-care systems for under-served and marginalized communities.

Prabhjot Singh MD, PhD is Assistant Professor of Inter-national and Public A!airs at Columbia University. He works with national gov-ernments to improve the financing, implementation and delivery of community health systems. Prabhjot Singh’s work encompasses clinical practice, national policy advisory and research in the context of interna-tional health system devel-opment. His work can be placed in three categories: 1) organizational manage-ment, scalability mechanics and real-time monitoring of Community Health Worker programs, 2) the develop-ment of analytic tools and technology to improve low-resource health sys-tem performance and 3) inter-sectoral relationships between health, agriculture, food systems and economic development.

David Stuckler is a so-ciologist at the Harvard School of Public Health. His research integrates the sciences of pub-lic health with political economy and develop-ment economics. Cur-rently, he focuses on evaluating the devastat-ing mortality crisis that occurred after the col-lapse of the Soviet Union. More specifically, the role of economic processes, and their interactions with culture, firms and the state, is analyzed using quasi-experi-mental approaches. He also examines the po-litical economy of global health: understanding the current and changing roles of global institu-tions, states, NGOs, the private sector, civil soci-ety and the interactions among them for control of chronic and infec-tious diseases. His final branch of research seeks to model and analyze the e!ects of market forces on patient decision-making, medical errors, and access to and quality of healthcare.

CURRENTLY READING:FREEDOMJONATHAN FRANZEN CURRENTLY READING:

ATLAS SHRUGGEDAYN RAND

CURRENTLY READING:UNQUIETZARINA PATEL

“Injustice ANYWHERE is a threat to justice EVERYWHERE” Martin Luther King, Jr.

INSPIRATIONAL QUOTE:

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ROGER THUROWSenior Fellow,CHICAGO COUNCIL OF GLOBAL AFFAIRS

LÉA TIÉNOURefugee Family Services Supervisor,HEARTLAND ALLIANCE

JOSEPH WESTProgram DirectorSINAI URBAN HEALTH INSTITUTE

Roger Thurow joined The Chicago Council on Global A!airs in January 2010 after three decades at The Wall Street Journal. For 20 years, he served as a Journal for-eign correspondent, based in Europe and Africa. His coverage of global a!airs spanned the Cold War, the fall of the Berlin Wall, the release of Nelson Mandela, the end of apartheid, the wars in the former Yugo-slavia and the humanitarian crises of the first decade of this century – along with 10 Olympic Games. In 2003, he and Journal colleague Scott Kilman wrote a series of sto-ries on famine in Africa that was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in International Re-porting. Their reporting on humanitarian and develop-ment issues was also hon-ored by the United Nations. Thurow and Kilman are authors of the recent book, ENOUGH: Why the World’s Poorest Starve in an Age of Plenty.

Léa Tiénou serves in Heartland’s Refugee & Immigrant Commu-nity Services, where she oversees the Resettlement & Placement and Youth & Family Services programs. Ms. Tienou has worked in the field of refugee resettlement for five years in several capacities including health promo-tion, case management and youth programming. Prior to her work with ref-ugees, Ms. Tiénou served with the Peace Corps in Chad, where she taught English and worked on a number of community development projects. An avid traveler, Ms. Tiénou has also lived in Cote d’Ivoire and France.

Joseph West, SM, ScD is a social epidemiologist with research focused on diabe-tes, men’s health and hu-man development in North Lawndale and Chicago. He is the author of the mem-oir, Trod the Stony Road: A Young Man’s Journey from the Mississippi to the Charles. His work has been featured in Harvard Maga-zine, the Chicago Tribune and academic journals. He’s a frequent guest on numer-ous radio and television media discussing public health and healthcare top-ics. He has received several awards for his community-based work including being named an Eisenhower Scholar and awarded the Al-bert Schweitzer ‘Reverence for Life’ award. West is also a playwright. His most recent work is Suga’ Foot Blue – “A timeless drama on bad sugar‘s pain, love‘s lingering and longing for the sweet-ness in life.”

STRENGTH IN WHAT REMAINSTRACY KIDDER

CURRENTLY READING:

THOMAN SANKARAINSPIRED BY:

EL!HAJJ MALIK EL!SHABAZZ "MALCOLM X#

INSPIRED BY:

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32 CHAPTERS

AMHERST COLLEGESara AbrahamsEthan BalgleyMegan CurryJames JonesLais Miachon SilvaEllen Swiontkowski

BARNARD/COLUMBIAUNIVERSITYSewa AdekoyaNicole DussaultSamantha HendersonLillian JinNicole KleinLexa KoenigKathryn LauLivy LowJessica NorthridgeKarina Yu

BOSTON COLLEGERyan FinnRichard PizzoMara Renold

BUCKNELL UNIVERSITYDanielle BrottmanCraig TullerHeather Wakeman

CORNELL UNIVERSITYRachel LeopoldSanjana PatelTina Roy

DEPAUL UNIVERSITYAnna DiedeRose DiskinSamantha Grund-WickramasekeraDevin MeyerKera MogilevskyAshley Snou!erDevin Sundquist

DUKE UNIVERSITYChristina ChenApril HarrisonJayoung O

FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITYLina CastroMichelle Clark

Ti!any LaitanoLindsay PingelDeanna Stephens

GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITYJaishri AtriAlexandre BoulosSamantha DankoRachel ForstSara GrossmanBritt LockhartEliza MetteEmma MorseAlyssa SmaldinoKaty Stewart

GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITYAnja FrostPerry RogersAshley SharpAnna Trakhtenberg

INDIANA UNIVERSITYYuchen (“Tony”) GaoMohsin MukhtarRachel Schae!erPatricia Signe White

LAWRENCE UNIVERSITYBethany LarsenBeth LarsonGayatri MalhotraDiane McleodKaleigh PostKate RosenbalmEmma Kane

LOYOLA UNIVERSITYSasha AttohLee BaumgartenKatie CoakleyFify FrancisGerald GuevarraJeslyn KoovakadaHaley MeagherNick ReynoldsJohn Weatherly

MIDDLEBURY COLLEGEGrace DonovanGenevieve DukesRachel MaddingMaya Najarian

Sam PeischDevin PerkinsKatie RuymannBenjamin Wagner

NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITYBrad GuilloryAllison Hillner

NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITYTeresa CayaJeongwoo ChoiKerianne FullinLauren GoralskiSasha JonesParul KathuriaEmily MelloChristopher MillerCeleste MoraSvyat NakonechnyAimee PengHeather PolonskySana RahimDeepa RamaduraiLaura RuchShainee ShahKalindi ShahAvra ShapiroKatie SinghKathryn SmileyRachel SpannAllyson WestlingTi!any WongShruti ZaveriDaisy ZhuPENN STATE UNIVERSITYEva AmentaBrian BeachlerCourtney CurtinChelsey DuboisChristopher HohenbergerRachael KaneSavannah LennertzMatt O’DonnellRicardo OrtizSylvia RanjevaJake Simon

PRINCETON UNIVERSITYNatalie GuoCornelia LluberesAndrew LuAlex Stokes

SUMMIT DELEGATES32

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246 DELEGATES

RHODES COLLEGEDonya AhmadianSarah EndresShannon FullerChris MooreParker NelsonAshley NewmanChristopher PerkinsJonathan SokollEmily Woods

STANFORD UNIVERSITYLouise LuJoseph Levenson

TRUMAN STATE UNIVERSITYAnn BrunoPatrick CaseyAllison Co!eltEmily Davis Emily DenightAshley HartmanSummer JensenEmily JohnHazar KhidirElizabeth KoehneKyle LavelleErin MedinNick PresleySam Spencer

UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA at LOS ANGELESLiane DallalzadehSagar DesaiAmorette JengMeghan KennedyKristina LaiCatherine NiLeah Paz

UNIVERSITY of NORTH CAROLINA at CHAPEL HILLTanya Davis-CastroJesse GoldbergSarah JagdmannElliot MontpellierGabrielle Neri-MynattAmy PatelAlecia Westphalen

UNIVERSITY of CHICAGOTammy AbughnaimKristina Brant

Elizabeth GastonAlec GazdaAnkita PradhanRyota SekineElizabeth TadieEthel Yang

UNIVERSITY of COLORADO at BOULDERAshley ArmstrongSarah BudisavlejvicRosalind DillonRachael DurhamSarah HaNavodita K.C.Makenzie LewisScott MahlbergGabriela NagyJuliane SurfusMelissa TaylorJillian Warner

UNIVERSITY of MICHIGAN at ANN ARBORMichael BudrosEmily ChiuCaitlin DaneJeremy KratzJae KwakJessica LaiNicholas MajieHiten PatelEmily SchillerKari VredenburgMonica WallsAileen XuColin Yee

UNIVERSITY of MISSOURI at KANSAS CITYAnne-Elise BaiottoMatthew GoersLogan Terry

UNIVERSITY of ROCHESTERRohini BhatiaEmma CaldwellAriel ChezAnupa GewaliAnisha GundewarJeremy HardingSara LeverRia PalShouling Zhang

UNIVERSITY of SOUTHERN CALIFORNIAAlice KimCharlene Nguyen

UNIVERSITY of TEXAS at AUSTINChristine CarcanoIsha KaulMadison KlimOlivia KoshyJeevitha Patil

VANDERBILT UNIVERSITYRebecca CopelandDaniela IsazaAmanda SarpolisJoseph Starnes

WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY in ST. LOUISAleena AgrawalMicaela AtkinsLaura EdisonPreethi KembaiyanMichelle KnoppKate KrauseAmir MunirAdam NadlerKatherine PalmerSammita Satyanarayan Alaina SmithErin Thimmesch

2011 CHAPTER FOUNDERSEmi KihslingerMarina FitzpatrickAndre ScarlatoGenevieve Gill-Wiehl

GLOBEMED ALUMNIRachel BerkowitzRyan BiehleSarah DorwardAshley HagamanEmily KingJonathan LichkusPeter LuckowDivya MallampatiKristina RedgraveVictor RoyKatie Schmidt

2011 GlobeMed Global Health Summit 33

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WE WOULD LIKE TO THANK ALL OF OUR GENEROUS SUPPORTERS FOR MAKING THIS YEAR’S SUMMIT POSSIBLE.

34

In particular, we want to express our deep gratitude to Northwestern University for their wide-ranging support for GlobeMed and the Global Health Summit over the past several years. Thanks to the support of the Bu!ett Center, the O"ce of the President, and the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences, the GlobeMed Summit has grown dramatically since its start in 2007.

We would especially like to thank the Abbott Fund for their incredible ongoing support and partnership. Without your generous support, we would not have been able to advance this movement this far.

In solidarity,

Jon Sha!erExecutive Director

Anthropology Department

Center for Civic Engagement

Center for Global Health

International Studies Department

O!ce of the President

Masters of Public Health Program

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT FROM

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Evanston

Workshops

Overview Workshops

Fisk Hall

Kresge Hall

Harris Hall

University Hall

McCormick TribuneCenter

Alice Millar Chapel Levere

Temple

Bu!etCenter

LeveroneAuditorium

GlobeMed HQ

IMPORTANT LOCATIONS:GlobeMed HQProgram of African Studies620 Library Place

Leverone AuditoriumDonald P. Jacobs Center2001 Sheridan Rd.

Bu!ett Center1902 Sheridan Rd.

Alice Millar Chapel1870 Sheridan Rd.

Hilton Orrington1710 Orrington Ave.

Celtic Knot1881 Sheridan Rd.

Evanston

Best Western

Celtic Knot

Hotel Orrington

The KegH

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www.globemed.org

2011 GLOBEMED GLOBAL HEALTH SUMMIT

SUMMIT PROGRAM DESIGNED BY SHIRAZ [email protected]