World Health Day 2009

WHO/Shareef Sarhan

A doctor surveys the damage to a medical facility in the Gaza Strip during the conflict in 2009. International humanitarian law urges combatants to respect the neutrality of health facilities, staff and ambulances during conflicts to ensure they are not caught up in the violence and can continue to provide care.

WHO/Christopher Black

In Pakistan’s most-affected areas during the 2005 earthquake, 49% of health facilities were completely destroyed, from sophisticated hospitals to rural clinics and drug dispensaries. A woman receives medical care outside a hospital in Muzaffarabad after the earthquake.

WHO/China

The May 2008 earthquake in China’s Sichuan province damaged or destroyed more than 11 000 health facilities and killed and injured tens of thousands of people. Chinese health, emergency and military authorities led a massive response effort shortly after the earthquake hit.

WHO/PAHO

To ensure health facilities can withstand earthquakes or avoid sea surges caused by cyclones and hurricanes, planning is needed in terms of proper site location, design and construction in compliance with building codes. Two construction workers review the model of a hospital in Costa Rica.

WHO/Myanmar

After Cyclone Nargis hit Myanmar in May 2008, makeshift health and accommodation centres were set up in temples, monasteries and other buildings that were unaffected by the cyclone. About 2.4 million people were affected by the cyclone.

WHO/Margie Peden

Members of an emergency aid team participate in a training session in Durban, South Africa. Simulating response scenarios and conducting field tests allow health workers to practice their skills and teamwork and be ready for real emergencies.

WHO/Paul Garwood

A nurse checks the intravenous (IV) fluid infusion for a patient at a treatment centre in the district of Norton in Zimbabwe during the cholera outbreak in 2008. Many emergencies occur in remote locations and require strong, flexible and multi-sectoral means of response to save lives and treat the critically ill.

WHO/PAHO/J. Vizcarra

Poorly built and located health facilities are extremely vulnerable to natural disasters but with modest investment and appropriate planning they can continue providing health services when most needed. Two nurses visit the site of a hospital being rebuilt in Mexico.

WHO/Christopher Black

Families of those affected by emergencies need help, particularly psychosocial services, to cope with the tragedy of the event. Mohammed Rafaiq brought to a hospital in Pakistan’s Muzaffarabad his son Razaif who was in shock after the 2005 earthquake, which destroyed their home and killed four in the family.

All photos from the WHO gallery.

Imagine you are one of the people in one of these photos.  Write about what you see, hear and feel.

A few health comparisons between Australia and some of our Asian neighbours.

Country     A                B          C         D            E           F

Australia    $3200                17        12          2.77             1             17

China            $94                  1            5         1.55           34             31

Fiji              $150                   9           ?           0.37             0             15

Japan         $2700                 18        12           2.18             1            29

Malaysia      $255                  7          15          0.87           22             21

New Zealand   $2420             19          ?          2.30             0              21

Papua New Guinea  $29          7         38           0.13        668              ?

Phillipines        $45                 6         37          1.14         122             23

Singapore     $1450                 6            ?          1.61             1             13

Vietnam           $47                  6         29          0.62          41             18

A=Health expense per person

B=% government spends on health

C= % population below national poverty line (different each country)

D= Doctors per 1000 people

E = Deaths from malaria in a year

F = % population smoke daily

What can these statistics tell you about our health and that of people in our neighbouring countries?

4 Comments »

  1. marnies604 Said,

    April 6, 2009 @ 7:43 am

    Hello Miss W! You were correct about the survey, the link was not the correct one. Now the actual link is up.

    Marnie

    [Reply]

  2. world health day|everything about world health day Said,

    April 7, 2009 @ 12:56 am

    [...] Organization (WHO). In 1948, the World Health Organization held the First World.http://www.sajid.inWorld Health Day 2009 | Technology in our classroomWHO/Shareef Sarhan A doctor surveys the damage to a medical facility in the Gaza Strip during the [...]

  3. tracis Said,

    April 7, 2009 @ 11:52 am

    I find this project interesting. I see the pictures, and wonder what the students think. Most people in the US don’t realize how the rest of the world lives. This project appears to challenge the students to look around them and imagine what the rest of the world goes through.

    [Reply]

  4. makaya06 Said,

    April 20, 2009 @ 12:16 pm

    thank you so much for your comment. I actually used iMovie to make my video and the hardest part was converting it to quicktime because youtube only lets you upload quicktime format. Once I figured out the process it became very easy and fast.

    I am very passionate about people that aren’t fortunate to have health care or money to even supply food for themselves just like the people in these photos, and I think that it is important to let them know that you care in any way possible. Even as simple as spreading the word.

    [Reply]

RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI

Leave a Comment

Create a free edublog to get your own comment avatar (and more!)

*
To prove you're a person (not a spam script), type the security word shown in the picture.
Anti-Spam Image