Monday, September 21, 2009
Rallying for Health Care Reform
September 11, 2009
An estimated one thousand people came out to the Boston Commons on Labor Day for a health care reform rally hosted by Organizing for America, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), and other labor unions and health care reform advocacy groups. Speakers included Massachusetts politicians (several of whom may be vying for the late Senator Kennedy’s vacant Senate seat), Boston politicians, labor union leaders, physicians, and community members personally affected by a lack of or inadequate health insurance coverage.
Many attended the rally bearing homemade signs iterating the urgency of health care reform. Some signs read: “Help make America as healthy as insurance profits,” “The health of the people is the highest law of the land,” “Public option means affordable health care,” “Health care is a human right!” In addition, signs and speeches called for health care reform honoring the late Senator Kennedy’s cause.
Rally participants ranged in age, race/ethnicity, physical ability, and social class – chanting at times in favor of health care reform and applauding politicians who articulated their support of a public insurance option. Representative Stephen Lynch, who supports health care reform, but does not support the public option, received loud boos from rally participants, often drowning out his speech. Chants that circulated among rally participants included “What do we want? – “Health Reform” – “When do we want it?” – “Now!” and “Public Option! Public Option!”
In addition to showing support for health care reform, rallies such as this one also sought to visibly demonstrate the number of people who support healthcare reform, with the intention of eclipsing the famed town hall objections that have often been featured in the media.
Alana Wooley
ScM Candidate, 2010
Society, Human Development, and Health
Harvard School of Public Health
awooley@hsph.harvard.edu
Tuesday, September 15, 2009
Sights of Kenya
Here are some of the pictures I took during my internship with Aga Khan Foundation Community Health Department in Mombasa, Kenya. Some pictures from Nairobi are included as well.
In addition to my work at the health department, I often visited an orphanage for children below the age of two years-- just in case you are wondering who those adorable kids are.
Enjoy!
Bolanle Bukoye
ScM Candidate, 2010
Global Health & Population
Harvard School of Public Health
bolanlebukoye@gmail.com
Saturday, September 12, 2009
The Journey so Far!





A year ago I was getting ready to leave my job in the trauma center where I had spent the last seven months as a medical officer sewing up people who had sustained wounds from assault or road traffic accidents and resuscitating people who were unfortunate to be victims caught up in the crossfire between rival militant gangs or armed robbers in one of the states in the Niger Delta. I was embarking on a new phase of life. It was a relief to leave the streets of the Niger Delta for the more peaceful streets of the Federal Capital territory. It was one major reason I was leaving but the other was to change my focus and steer me away from other distractions to proceed along the path of Public Health. I had spent one year of the compulsory youth service in the Northern Part of my country and had gone on medical outreaches were I was the only health worker seeing close to two hundred patients over a two day span. This was when I began to realize that my love for surgery would take back seat to a public health pursuit.

My new job had the rather long and clumsy to explain title of Emergency Preparedness Doctor. I was to be responsible for monitoring outbreaks in the North Eastern Part of the country acting as a liaison between the local Health authorities in the different states and my organization and carrying out exploratory missions when there were cases reported (I worked for the French Section of Medecins Sans Frontieres).
When I first saw the job advertisement it had on it a caveat- Traveling 60% of the job, do not apply if not willing to travel, for me it was not a deterrent but a welcome home sign for one thing I do love is to travel! (Don't ask me where I have been, for many of the places I have traveled to are on the pages of books and my mode of transportation is my mind:)

Thus I started my trips round the North Eastern part of the country, many of the states were places I had been to when I was five for my parents took my twin and I on a trip round Nigeria and they form my early memories. But this was a whole new world for me for I now had the capacity to form more tangible memories.
My first job was as a doctor in a post measles malnutrition center, I had been employed at the end of a measles outbreak so I was sent to the field to see how a malnutrition center was being run, then I made some trips to some other states to monitor reported cases of cholera and then this year I spent most of my time working during the big meningitis outbreak. My last job before I left was to conduct a Nutritional Survey with my colleagues. All these activities took place in different states and most times I was on the road for long periods of time. It was fun to work and travel at the same time and I usually took pictures of the scenes along the way.
It was fun while it lasted and I am at the school of Public Health hoping that the journey will be even more fruitful than my past experiences. Looking forward to having a lovely time with everyone.


Olaoluwatomi Kehinde Lamikanra
MPH Candidate, 2010
Health Policy & Management
olamikan@hsph.harvard.edu
Monday, September 7, 2009
[The faces behind the numbers...]
Scenes around Mission Hill taken by A. A. Babar
Every time I see someone digging through our trash, I am struck with a mixture of shame, awkwardness, empathy, and perplexity. A mixture dissolved in irony.
There are homeless people all over the world—people whose survival is a daily struggle, people who do not have food nor water, people whose lives are vulnerable to all sorts of physical and mental harm. But here, in Roxbury—just a hop, skip, and a jump from some of the world’s greatest educational institutions, hospitals, developments—it seems to be such a contradiction to witness such immediate poverty in the midst of such wealth.
I witnessed this semi-collision of worlds a few days ago, when dignitaries—namely the Presidents of the United States—sat together to commemorate the legacy left by Ted Kennedy in the Basilica just a few blocks down. Although I have lived in Roxbury for only a year, I was struck for one of the first times with a certain sense of pride to be a part of a community where something seemingly quick and powerful happened within such diversity. Diversity of power, skin-shades, wealth, and experience.
It reminds me why I’m here in the first place, burying my head in numbers, formulas, words I can not/nor care to pronounce. I guess you could say that I am one of those “social epi” people out to “bridge the gaps”. While the books guilt-trip me into reading just one more page, I am obligated to also take my head out of the sand, and to open my eyes to see the life that is happening all around me.
To ignore the faces behind these numbers drowning in statistical vacuums would be fatal. We owe it to those who have fought before us--some silently, some loudly--proclaiming the need to address the disparities between rich and poor. Between black and white. And between the powerful and powerless.
Amenah A. Babar, MPH
SD Student
Society, Human Development, and Health
Co-Editor in Chief
Saturday, September 5, 2009
HSPH Students Attend Town Hall Meeting on Health Care Reform
Paul Kokorowski (MPH-CLE, '10) said, "After hearing Senator Kerry speak, I am confident that a reform bill will pass. However, I am concerned that costs may not go down or that all Americans won't be covered."
Wednesday, September 2, 2009
Welcome Back!
I am certain that health reform will be a topic in many of our classes (whether taken here or at the Kennedy School), and I hope that this blog can inspire and be a forum for student-led discussion.
There lots of new faces at HSPH who will likely contribute great ideas, experiences, and lessons to the classroom discussions here at school. I hope that this blog can be a forum that expands the classroom beyond Kresge and FXB and makes them available for a wider audience of people interested in public health at Harvard.
So I pose this question to you (whomever you are...)
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Emotions and Cancer
The want to be immortal,
My fate is not certain.
The desire for the "Forever",
My end is not near.
The aspiration to multiply,
I spread my spy.
The ambition to last,
Makes me the outcast.
The dream to reach,
Has left me no peace.
The hope to win,
Not sparing my kin,
Leaves me remorse.
I am the crooked,
I am the wicked,
I am - the cancer cell!
This is a self written verse, describes the complexities of emotions and the plethora of illness that can be caused when we either neglect our emotional needs, suppress it or over express it! Phew!!The world goes around and around emotions...Love, dating, breakups, marriages, children, friends, family, job, fun, sex, friends, heartbreaks, betrayals, dejection,etc are very very powerful emotions or situations which we come across on a daily basis. The emotions create experiences which shape our personalities. I would like to research what are the impact of the so called negative emotions on cell cycle, aging, mitosis,etc. I believe that cancer in a form of manifestation of negative energy or any kind of resentment that we have in us. It could be a failed marriage, unhappy family, bad parenting, break ups, annoying people, I hate my job and so on and so forth. The idea of preventive medicine is to detect any cause which can measure conditions which predispose a disease. I want to find tools, methods or systems to map out emotional intelligence, emotional make up and emotional personality of a person and relate it to types of diseases that they suffer. For example, angry people have high blood pressure. Now no doctor will ever write Rx anger management. It is essential from public health practitioners point of view that we view certain varieties of cancer as built on repressed emotions and seriously start directing programs and research in that aspect!