Title: Hserv 534 Global Population Health and Development
1Hserv 534Global Population Health and
Development
- Stephen Bezruchka
- TA Ira Stollak
- 3 credits
2Course ObjectivesStudents will
- describe the basic assumptions and approach
towards studying the determinants of health of
populations - discuss how different populations have achieved
different levels of health - carry out various exercises that have an activist
element to them
3Agenda today
- Enrolment limited to 24 (room size),
- can take as independent study (see instructor)
- Sign-up sheet
- Sign up for facilitating discussion of papers
- Review syllabus
- Entry Survey
- Producing health
4How?
- Reading before lecture 1/2-1 hour
- READING PACKET TO BE PURCHASED
- Rams Copy Center 4144 Univ Way NE
- DVD's CD's on reserve at the Health Sciences
Library, T 344 - Lectures (slides from last year are on web may be
updated after lectures) - http//courses.washington.edu/hserv534/
- DISCUSSION
- Class begins with 20 minutes of time for
discussion of assigned reading, with student
facilitator
5Textbooks
- Wilkinson, R. G. (2005). The Impact of
Inequality how to make sick societies healthier.
New York, New Press. - Wilkinson RG. Unhealthy Societies The
Afflictions of Inequality. London Routledge,
1996. - SOUTH CAMPUS BOOKSTORE look also at Hserv 482
there -
6Other Important Books, Readings Web Sites
- See web-syllabus there is much expanded from the
handout and has many sources
7Whether you?
- Student facilitator (15)
- Commentary on Great Leveller (10)
- Class participation (10) Initial attendance
sheet - Student awareness vital signs monitor (10)
- DISSEMINATION EXERCISE (30)
- Essay (25) on constrained topic (see syllabus)
8Student Facilitator Reading Discussion
- Sign-up sheet for students
- EVERYONE reads the articles, book chapters
assigned for discussion at the beginning of each
session, based on material from the previous one - FACILITATOR organizes the class discussion
around that point for beginning 20 minutes - two students will sign up for some days and
balance participation with more than one paper. - Facilitator guidelines in course reading packet
15
9READINGS
- Consider reading them before the class for which
they are related to, and reviewing them just
before the next class when they will be discussed
Session 4 (Apr 4) Happiness Readings
discussed before pertain to History prehistory
Session 5 (Apr 6) Childhood Readings
discussion before lecture pertain to Happiness
10Facilitator Sign-Up Sheet
- -email Ira with 1st, 2nd, and 3rd choice of days
by 8 pm Wednesday (March 29, TOMORROW) - (Readings for Session to be done at the
beginning of the following class) e.g. - 1ST CHOICE () to facilitate Tues April 11
- 2nd Choice () to facilitate Thur May 19
- 3rd choice () to facilitate _______
- Ira will build a schedule from that
11Facilitator Evaluation
- Content and Planning
- -Formulated engaging questions for discussion
- -Goals of discussion outlined
- - Reflects understanding of readings
- - Keeps discussion focused on readings previous
lecture - - Focused on a few main issues
- Facilitation Skills
- -Guides discussion (doesnt lead)
- - Encourages a safe environment
- - Manages participation (engages quieter members,
ensures ability for all to participate, limits
monopolizing of discussion by students) - (- Effectively coordinates with other
facilitator) - - Manages time effectively
12DISSEMINATION EXERCISE
30
Debriefings June 1
Outline April 27
CHOOSE ONE OF
- Pre-nuptial agreement
- Primary school curriculum
- Draft
- union pamphlet/flyer
- Legislation
- Produce one of
- PSA (for teenagers)
- Website
- Graphic (art communic.)
- Adbusters' counter ad
- Poster for Ave homeless
- Patient fact sheet
- Do Survey
- Develop use talking points script with
shopkeepers (7-11, or Nordstroms) - Give a lecture to group near UW (church,
homeless, rounds, ) - Play Money Game
- Give lecture
- Work with community Group
- Take lead for HS Open House table for PHF April
28, 29 - Meeting today 4 pm H 670
13CRITICAL ESSAY (25)
June 2
OR
AGAINST IDEAS
FURTHER ANALYSIS
- Why ideas not in other courses
- Gov't sponsored research as foil
- How to redistribute?
- Compare US and 2 other country's health outcomes
- 2 countries in World Health Chart
- Population-health related articles in major media
SEE ME OR TA IF WANT TO WRITE ON SOMETHING ELSE
14JOIN Population Health Forum LISTpart of class
participation
- MISSION an organization of health activists
originally launched at the University of
Washington, raises awareness of, promotes
dialogue about, and explores how political,
economic and social inequalities interact to
reduce the overall health status of our society.
We host forums, sponsor discussions, develop
curriculum, teach courses, sponsor workshops,
and provide speakers to promote knowledge and to
advocate for action in service of a healthier
society. - Monthly or more frequent meetings
- SUBSCRIBE email to
- pophealth-join_at_mailman.u.washington.edu
- PHF website http//depts.washington.edu/eqhlth/
- GET ON LIST AND MAKE ONE POSTING IN THE FIRST TWO
WEEKS OF THE COURSE, AND ONE BEFORE LAST CLASS - FIRST MEETING THIS QUARTER AT 4 PM TODAY IN H 670
15What is health?
16What would you do to produce a healthy individual?
- What do you do yourself to be healthy?
- If you have children, what do you do for them to
be healthy?
17What would you do to produce a healthy individual?
- What do you do yourself to be healthy?
- If you have children, what do you do for them to
be healthy? - HOW WOULD YOU KNOW IF YOU ARE SUCCESSFUL?
18What would you do to produce a healthy family?
- Next generation of families in the USA to be
healthy?
19What would you do to produce a healthy family?
- Next generation of families in the USA to be
healthy? - HOW WOULD YOU KNOW IF YOU ARE SUCCESSFUL?
20What would you do to produce a healthy USA??
- HOW WOULD YOU KNOW IF YOU ARE SUCCESSFUL?
21How healthy is the US (2003) ?Health
Olympics(ranking of countries by Life Expectancy)
- Number one Gold
- 1-5 _______
- 6-10 _______
- 11-15 _______
- 16-20 _______
- 21-25 _______
- 26-30 _______
- 31 _______
22How healthy was the US 50 years ago?Health
Olympics
- 1-5 _______
- 6-10 _______
- 11-15 _______
- 16-20 _______
- 21-25 _______
- 26-30 _______
- 31 _______
23HEALTH OLYMPICS 2003 UN Human Development Report
2005
24EPISTEMOLOGY Three types of Questions
- questions of fact
- questions of interpretation
- What do people say about the facts
- questions or presuppositions
- What is unexpressed?
- What is the framework of discussion or
assumptions? - what are the premises that bound the thinking
that you are supposed to not reflect upon or not
be subject to discussion? - what are the set of questions you are allowed to
ask and the ways you are allowed to look at them?
25EPISTEMOLOGY Scientific Revolutions
26EPISTEMOLOGY Scientific Revolutions
- Ptolemaic universe to Copernicus
- Aristotelian dynamics to Newtonian mechanics to
Special and General Relativity - Greek atoms to Bohr model
- Hans Bethe and energy source of stars
- Creationism to evolution
- Human body, genetics, biomedical revolution?
27 Scientific Revolution
- Popular beliefs do not explain the facts about
health - Normal science often suppresses ideas that could
undermine its foundations and "research" tries to
force nature into normal science boxes (of past)
and have adherents invested in this - Kuhn shift with professional commitments has not
yet occurred with health of populations (Sci Rev)
because need to revaluate the prior "facts" - "Pre-paradigmatic pop-health schools" (Europe,
UK, Canada, Australia, US (Harvard, Michigan,
Seattle)
28COURSE Non-disciplinary synthesis
- Key idea quality of social relations and
overall health is better in more equal societies - -psychological literature concentrates on
individual, ignoring susceptibility to powerful
sociological processes - -sociological literature addressing social class
stratification ignores interaction with
individual psychology - -global biology provides mechanisms through which
caring and sharing acts to produce health in
populations - to produce health, we have to change the
structure of society that determines who gets
what - -these ideas take considerable time to mature
29Expectations of students from this course
- produce a shift in thinking from traditional
public health interventions towards producing
health at the population level (become a global
surgeon) - develop an ability to think critically about the
material presented - plant the glimmers of thinking that student can
use to work on "health" issues broadly construed - serious consideration of epistemology, ie
critical of how we come to think things are true - getting items in one's political toolbox
30BEFORE NEXT SESSION
- Purchase course packet at Ram's Copy Center 4144
Univ Way NE - Read
- Concepts, measures (health, economic, income
distr) In SYLLABUS - Blaxter paper in course packet
- Book Reading
- Impact of Inequality Chapter 1
- Unhealthy Societies Chapters 1, 2
- Complete VITAL SIGNS MONITOR (if not already
done) - EMAIL IRA with facilitation choices by 8 pm
tomorrow