Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

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From Research to Policy Recommendations: Julia VanRooyen & PHR Visit the Hill

HHI Fellow, Dr. Julia VanRooyen briefed members of Congress on conditions in Darfur refugee camps. The brief followed the recent release of the Obama Administration's Sudan Policy Review. HHI and the Physicians for Human Rights released a report earlier this year on the subject titled: "Nowhere To Turn: Failure to Protect, Support and Assure Justice for Darfuri Women."

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Characterizing Violence in the DRC 

Read our latest report on violence's implications for the protection of women in the DRC.  

2009 Humanitarian Action Summit Report Released  

The report presents challenges to humanitarian response and policy recommendations.

 
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Armenian-Turkish Reconciliation: Routes Through Empowerment

Join HHI Monday, November 16th from 7-9PM in the Tsai Auditorium for this Inter-communal Violence and Reconciliation Project event.

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Burden of Surgical Disease

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Leader:

Kelly McQueen, Fellow, Harvard Humanitarian Initiative

 

Participants:

Ellen Agler; Nadine Semer; Rossella Miccio; Michael Stabile; Thomas Weiser; Alexandra Mihailovic; Stephen Sullivan; Kathryn Chu; Richard Murphy; Samuel Broaddus; Masahiro Morikawa; David Mooney; Susan Briggs; Lori Warrens; Sathyanarayanan Doraiswamy; Deborah Baglole; Kathleen Casey

 

Burden of Surgical Disease Website:

You may visit the Burden of Surgical Disease Website by clicking here

 

State of the Art:

The global burden of surgical disease is largely unknown. However, the scope of the problem (unmet surgical need) is thought to be large based on WHO data and other estimates. Recent efforts are underway to improve data collection and evaluation necessary for accurate surgical epidemiology and estimates on burden of surgical disease. Health care infrastructure in many low and middle income countries challenges not only surgical delivery but also collection and evaluation of data pertinent to understanding unmet surgical need and surgical outcomes. International organizations (IO), non-governmental organizations (NGO) and private volunteer organizations (PVO) provide surgical services in many low and middle income countries and have a unique ability to collect data, report on infrastructure and advocate for surgical needs. However, many of these organizations are overwhelmed with delivery of care and response to humanitarian crises, disasters and other emergencies related to conflict and war. Therefore the data from these settings is often partially or poorly collected, rarely evaluated and infrequently shared between organizations.

 

Objectives:

  • Improving global surgical epidemiology, especially as it relates to trauma, obstetrical and surgical emergencies;
  • Providing standardization for improving and evaluating surgical outcomes provided by IO/NGO/PVOs; and
  • Provide an opportunity for collaboration between organizations and support other efforts (such as WHO and the Global Burden of Surgical Disease) with similar goals for nationally-based surgical evaluation.

 

Potential Deliverables:

  • Survey results from 100 international surgical organizations providing services worldwide;
  • Provide examples of field successes improving surgical safety and improving data collection;
  • Provide strategies for estimation of surgical unmet need and prioritization of resources for surgery
  • Establish a network for future dialogue between organizations supplying surgical services; and
  • Propose an agenda for establishing and disseminating global standards and surgical best practices.

 

Advance Reading: