Creating a Pandemic of Health: global conference gathers experts at U of T
They鈥檙e calling it a health epidemic. And organizers of an upcoming global health equity and innovation summit at the 重口味SM say they hope it will be contagious.
In a bid to shift the emphasis in health care away from disease and towards health, the Dalla Lana School of Public Health is convening from November 3 to 5, 2014. The summit will focus on global health, equity and innovation.
The idea of starting a pandemic of health is provocative, said Rani Kotha, senior strategist in global health and innovation at U of T鈥檚 .
鈥淎t the core of this idea is the belief that health is about more than the absence of disease,鈥 Kotha said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 thinking about health from a holistic perspective. Public health should really be about being able to self-manage, adapt and thrive.鈥
Alejandro (Alex) Jadad, a professor in the Dalla Lana School of Public Health and the Faculty of Medicine is a major proponent of social contagion. A Canada Research Chair in eHealth Innovation, and founder of the at the University Health Network, Jadad said that any effort to create a health pandemic must be equitable.
鈥淲e need to look at how we can create and spread health in such a way that every person in every community in the world has the same opportunity to achieve a healthy life until the last breath,鈥 Jadad said. 鈥淲e can and must try to achieve this. To succeed, we鈥檒l need innovative methods, indicators, policies and effective communication.鈥
鈥淲e want to create an enthusiastic, energetic, irresistible movement for positive change.鈥
Ross Upshur, head of the School鈥檚 and the Canada Research Chair in Clinical Global Health, believes the 重口味SM community can learn useful lessons about managing health from its partners nationally and worldwide.
鈥淲e have strong university connections with Ethiopia, China and Brazil, and it鈥檚 worth doing a cross-comparison between the four systems to see where the best integration of public health, disease prevention and clinical services occurs,鈥 said Upshur.
The School is the ideal host for the summit because it is home to the Institute for Global Health Equity and Innovation, organizers said. The Institute, which is focused on breaking new ground in public health research and advocacy, expects the summit will generate new ideas and provide new direction.
Professor Abdallah Daar, chair of the School's undergraduate initiative in global and public health, says the summit is the starting point for a long-term program that will foster the spread of the health epidemic.
鈥淲e鈥檒l come out of this with great ideas, innovations that people haven鈥檛 yet addressed seriously, global partners, curriculum materials and research questions,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he attendees will be inoculated with these ideas and take them to their own centres and universities, and we鈥檒l build a global community of people who think alike.鈥