Title: BIOE 260: Intro to Global Health Issues
1BIOE 260 Intro to Global Health Issues
2Outline
- Links
- Health, Education, Poverty Economy
- Example
- Eradication of Guinea Worm
- Health Education
- Health Poverty
- Health Development
- Integrated Approaches
- MDGS Reduce poverty and improve health
- How to finance the MDGs
3Guinea Worm
- Parasitic disease once common throughout world
- Contracted by drinking stagnant water
contaminated with tiny fleas that carry guinea
worm larvae - Once in human, larvae mature in abdomen, grow to
average of 2-3 feet in length - After 1year, fully grown worm rises to skin to
lay larvae - Painful blister forms, usually in foot
- To ease pain, individuals submerge blister in
cool water - Blister ruptures and water is contaminated
- Worm emerges from blister over period of 8-12
weeks - Agonizing pain, debilitating bedridden for one
month - Worms coaxed out of blister by being wound around
a narrow stick, a few cm each day - Must not break worm or get painful inflammation
4Guinea Worm
http//pathmicro.med.sc.edu/parasitology/nematodes
.htm
5History
- 1981
- CDC launched eradication efforts
- Slow momentum, lack of prevalence data
- 1986
- Jimmy Carter convinced Pakistan to launch
eradication campaign - Focused efforts on Africa
- Recruited former heads of state in Mali and
Nigeria
6Eradication Campaign
- Provide safe water
- Deep well digging can be costly
- Larvicide
- Purifying water through nylon cloth filters
Dupont made 14M donation - Health Education
- Social marketing campaign
- Worm weeks
- Intensive health education when local and
international volunteers provide education
(plays, ceremonies with local officials,
demonstrate use of filters) - Surveillance and Case Management
7Impact
- Disease is in line to be eradicated
8Cost
- Over a decade, intervention cost 88M
- Cost per case prevented 5-8
- http//www.cartercenter.org/news/multimedia/media_
console/console.aspx?sectionIDHdirectoryEXTh08
linkEXTCC_slideshow.swf
9Health and Education
- Intergenerational links
- Educated parents have healthier children
- Malnutrition and disease
- School attendance
- Cognitive ability
- Prevention of illness
10Figure 3.1
11Health Poverty
- Increased productivity among healthy workers
- Less absence from work due to illness and ability
to continue earning - Costs of illness
- Treatment and drugs
- Absence from work
- Transportation to and from provider
- Cost of living with disability
12Health Poverty Individual
- Illness is often a cause of poverty for
individuals, particularly in developing countries - India 40 of hospitalized must sell assets or
borrow money to pay for their care, 25 pushed
below poverty line - Poor individuals often do not have access to same
care as do wealthier individuals - Figure 3.2, 3.3
13Figure 3.2
14Figure 3.3
15Health Poverty Countries
- Wealthy Countries
- Spend 9-12 of GDP on health
- Poor Countries
- Spend 3-6 of GDP on health
- Less annual economic growth in countries with
- Lower life expectancy (miss out on 1.6/year)
- Malaria (miss out on 1.3/year)
16Paradox Health Development
- Investment by local and foreign investors is less
likely in low-income countries with high burdens
of communicable disease - Higher levels of economic development promote
better health at individual and societal levels
17India
18India
19Africa
- Why did Africa miss out?
- Corruption?
- AIDS
- Malaria
- Landlocked
- Lack of natural resources
20Solutions
- Integrated package of interventions
- Agriculture
- Health
- Education
- Infrastructure
- Power, transport, communications
- Safe H2O, sanitation
- Cost
- 70 per person per year
- 70-80B/year
21Millennium Development Goals
- 1.1 billion people live in extreme poverty
- Need 1.08/day to meet basic needs
- Only have 0.77/day
- 124 billion/year needed to make the D
- 1.1 billion (1.08 - 0.77)(365 days/yr)
22How Much Do Wealthy Nations Give?
- 2002
- 76B total ODA
- 43B to low income countries
- Deficit of about 80B/year
23How Much Have Wealthy Nations Promised to Give?
- Several international summits
- 0.7 of rich world GNP
- 235 B
24(No Transcript)
25How Much Should Wealthy Individuals Give?
26Paul Allen
- Donated
- 800M
- Net Worth
- 16B
- Gave 5 of net worth
- Has he done enough???
27Bill Gates
- Net Worth
- 83B
- Donation
- 30B
- Gave 35 of net worth
- Lives in 66,000 square foot home
- Has he done enough???
28Warren Buffett
- Net Worth
- 44B
- Donation
- 31B to Gates
- 6B to other charities
- Gave 80 of his net worth
- Has he done enough???
29Zell Kravinsky
- Net worth
- 45M
- Gave it all away
- The hard part is not the first 45M, but the
last 10,000.
30How Much Could Wealthiest Americans Give?
- Need 80B to meet the MDGs
31Top 0.01 of Taxpayers
- 14,400 people
- Earn 184B/year
- Average annual salary 12.7M
- Minimum annual salary 5M
- Give 33
- Generate 60B
32Top 0.1 of Taxpayers
- 129,600 people
- Earn 260B/year
- Average annual salary 2M
- Minimum annual salary 1.1M
- Give 25
- Generate 65B
33Top 0.5 of Taxpayers
- 579,000 people
- Earn 360B/year
- Average annual salary 623,000
- Minimum annual salary 407,000
- Give 20
- Generate 72B
34Top 1.0 of Taxpayers
- 719,000 people
- Earn 230B/year
- Average annual salary 327,000
- Minimum annual salary 276,000
- Give 15
- Generate 35B
35Top 10 of Taxpayers
- 13,000,000 people
- Earn 1,711B/year
- Average annual salary 132,000
- Minimum annual salary 92,000
- Give 10
- Generate 171B
36 What Should a Billionaire Give And What Should
You? By Peter Singer, New York Times, 12/17/2006.
37Main Messages
- Education and health are closely linked
- Health is strongly associated with productivity
and earnings - Strong relationships exist between the health of
a population and the economic development of the
society in which they live - Wealthy countries have pledged enough funds to
meet the MDGs, but they have not lived up to
these promises