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Syllabus
Poverty and Public Health (HSA 303)
This course was last offered prior to 2007. The syllabus may be revised for future offerings, including possible changes in the textbooks.
This is a three-credit graduate
course and is one in a series of courses in the online Humanitarian Services
Administration program developed by the University of Connecticut's Center for Continuing Studies. This course is an elective course in the online Master
of Professional Studies degree with a field of study in Humanitarian Services
Administration. The developer of this course is Dr. Ruth Rosenbaum.
Course Title: Poverty and Public Health (HSA 303)
Credits: 3
Instructor:
Dr. Ruth Rosenbaum
E-mail: ruth_rosenbaum@crea-inc.org,
Phone:(860) 527-0455
Poverty and Public Health provides
students with a foundational understanding of the complex and dynamic relationships
between poverty and poor health among the poor, worldwide. It examines classic
and current studies on poverty and public health from an historical and inter-disciplinary
perspective (Public Health, Epidemiology, Social Medicine, and Social Economics),
and reviews the ways in which governmental and non-governmental organizations
have addressed this problem. The course will prepare students to engage in
thoughtful debate about needed changes in values, perspectives and interventions
in order to address and ameliorate the health problems of the economically
poor.
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Students will describe the characteristics,
effects, and implications of poverty on systemic, national and local
levels.
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Students will analyze the relationship
between systemic poverty and the existence of patterns of disease.
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Students will describe various
aspects of health: personal, communal, societal and systemic.
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Students will explore the effects
of globalization, industrialization and development as they affect
levels of poverty and sustainability and the ability of societies to
address systemic poverty and the associated diseases.
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Students will discuss the efforts
to address poverty and associated disease on a systemic level.
| Course Requirements
and Grading |
Grades will be determined by participation in online
discussions, posting of reflections and other assignments as well as the
papers that are required. Language used in postings will be respectful
of the content we are discussing, the lives which are impacted, as well
as each other.
The apportionment of credit will be as follows:
25% - online discussion
25% - posting of reflections and assignments
50% - papers that have been assigned
As much as possible assignments are due on the
date assigned. If this is not possible, direct communication with the instructors
is requested.
You are responsible for acting in accordance with
the Student Code, available at http://www.dosa.uconn.edu/student_code.cfm.
These course texts may be purchased locally or
through an online bookstore.
Required Texts:
Sen, A. (2000). Development as freedom. Anchor Books. ISBN: 0385720270.
Note: Please have this book read by Module 5 of this course. Check the
calendar for exact dates.
Farmer, P. (1999). Infections and inequalities:
The modern plagues. Updated Edition with a New Preface. University of
California Press. ASIN: 0520215443. Note: Please have this book read
by Module 7 of this course. Check the calendar for exact dates.
Required Readings:
Articles not available on the Web will be provided in the course
through the Electronic Course Reserve (ECR).
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http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/irp/faqs/faq7.htm
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http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/income-defn.shtml
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http://aspe.hhs.gov/poverty/contacts.shtml#g
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http://millenniumindicators.un.org/unsd/mi/mi_series_xrxx.asp?row_id=581
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Papers 41 and 42 at http://www.crea-inc.org. Click Resources,
then Publications to download papers 41 & 42.
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Universal Declaration of Human Rights
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Review
of Poverty Concepts and Indicators by Renata Lok-Dessallien
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Health
Report 1996: Fighting Disease, Fostering Development (1996)
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Low Investment in Immunization and Vaccines Threatens Global
Health
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State of the World’s Children
1998 - Focus on Malnutrition
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State of the World’s Children 2002 - Leadership
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State of the World’s Children 2001 - Early Childhood
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Mayhew, H. (1849) A Visit to the Cholera Districts
of Bermondsey: www.victorianlondon.org/mayhew/mayhew00.htm
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Chadwick (1849) Report on an Inquiry into the
Sanitary Condition of the Laboring Population of Great Britain: www.victorianweb.org/history/chadwick2.html
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Virchow, R. (1848/1985). Essay III. Public
health services in Collected Essays on Public Health and
Epidemiology, 1, 14-28.
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Eisenberg, L. (1984). Rudolf Ludwig Karl
Virchow, Where are you now that we need you? The American
Journal of Medicine, 77, 524-532.
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Virchow, R. (1872/1985). On mortality in
berlin in Collected Essays on Public Health and Epidemiology,
541-554.
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The Alma Ata declaration
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Cheny, G.A. (2002, November 4). Is
anyone taking stock of the human condition? Hartford Courant
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World Health Organization, World
Health Report 1999: Making a Difference
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"Measuring disparities in health: Methods
andindicators" in Challenging
Inequities in Health: From Ethics to Action
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Leon, D. & Gill, W.
(2001). International perspectives on health inequalities and policy.
British Medical Journal (322):591-594.
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Tanzania:
Gaining Insights into Adolescent lives and Livelihoods (You can
download chapters in English or Spanish.)
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Mexico:
Marginality, Need and Resource Allocation at the County Level (You
can download chapters in English or Spanish.)
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Progress of Nations, 2000
- UNICEF
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"Special
Session on Children at the United Nations" as reported on the UNICEF website.
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Toolkit for Evaluating the Poverty and Distribution Aspects
of Economic Policies
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Sen, Amartya. (2002). Development
as Freedom. Anchor Books. ISBN: 0385720270
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World
Health Report 2000: Health Systems Improving Performance, World
Health Organization, 2000.
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World Health Report 1998: Life
in the 21st Century: A Vision for All
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Read "50 Facts from the World Health Report
1998" within the report Website of Partners in Health
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Africa's Economic problems have a medical solution
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If you have trouble with this link, log onto
to the website of the Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk.
Go to ARCHIVE. Type in the title of the article.
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Malaria, World Health Organization
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Farmer, P. Infections and Inequalities:
The Modern Plagues.
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United Nations:
The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
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de Waal, A. (2002, November 19). What
AIDS means in a famine. NY Times.
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Aizhi Newsletter
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July 10, 2002 Daily HIV/AIDS Report
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AIDS Epidemic Update: 2004.
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AIDS
20 Years Later: An International Health Conference: Lessons from the
Brazilian AIDS Program
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Conclusion:
Developing the Policy Response to Inequities in Health in Challenging
Inequities in Health: from Ethics to Action
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Allen, B. (1999). The World Bank: Friend or
Foe to the Poor. British Medical
Journal. 318.
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Attaran and Sachs. (2001). Defining and
refining international donor support for combating the AIDS pandemic.
Lancet, 357:57-61.
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Farmer, et al .(2001, August 4). Community-based
approaches to HIV treatment in resource-poor settings. The
Lancet, 358, 404-409.
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Farmer, P. (1999). Pathologies of power:
Rethinking health and human rights. American Journal of Public Health
(89)10: 1486-96.
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Aizhi Newsletter (provided)
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Global Fund
to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
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Module 1: What is Poverty?
1.1. Form A: An Established "Poverty Line" that is Used Within a Country
1.2. Form B: Living Standards Methodology
1.3. Form C: Possibilities and Capabilities
Module 2: What is Health?
2.1. The Right to Health
Module 3: The Origins of Public and International Health Consciousness
3.1. Epidemiology and Statistics
Module 4: Modern Research Perspectives on Poverty, Inequality and Health
4.1. Measurement
Module 5: The Role of Development, Industrialization and Economic Globalization
5.1. The Effects of Globalization
5.2. The General Agreement On Trade In Services (GATS) And The World Trade
Organization (WTO) - Impact On Health Services
5.3. Industrialization vs. Development
Module 6: Governmental, International and Non-governmental Responses to
the Health of the World's Poor
Module 7: Poverty and Health: Case Studies
7.1. Interview on Access to AIDS Medications
7.2. Case Studies
Module 8: What Needs to be Done?
Students will be provided an opportunity to
evaluate instruction in this course using the University's standard procedures,
which are administered by the Office of Institutional Research.
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