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Global Challenges to Public Health:

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Title: Global Challenges to Public Health:


1
Global Challenges to Public Health War,
Terrorism, and Public Health Victor W. Sidel
and Barry S. Levy
2
SOME DEFINITIONS
  • War df. 1. Armed conflict conducted by
    nation-states against one another or a group
    that threatens the nation. 2. Armed conflict
    within nations. 3. Armed actions by clandestine
    groups against governments or occupying forces.
  • Terrorism df. Politically motivated violence or
    the threat of violence, especially against
    civilians, with the intent to instill fear.
  • Public health df. What we, as a society, do
    collectively to assure the conditions in which
    people can be healthy.

3
WAR, TERRORISM, AND PUBLIC HEALTH
  • Sidel and Levy note that the concept of a just
    war is important in ethics, law and medicine.
  • And as they note, persons called terrorists by
    one group may be considered to be freedom
    fighters by another group.
  • Also, The meanings of terrorism have
    considerable overlap with the meanings of war
    and many actions conducted during war fit our
    definition of terrorism.
  • War and terrorism are generally anathema to
    public health, and present serious challenges to
    law, medicine, and ethics.

4
THE HORRORS OF WAR I
  • Sidel and Levy list several devastating
    consequences of war.
  • 1. War results in more deaths and disabilities
    than many major diseases.
  • 2. It can not only destroy families and
    communities, but entire nations and cultures.
  • 3. It deprives health and human services of
    precious resources and damages the infrastructure
    supporting these services.

5
THE HORRORS OF WAR II
  • 4. War violates human rights.
  • 5. It tends to promote the pernicious view that
    violence is an acceptable, and perhaps the best,
    means of solving problems. As a result, it
    contributes to domestic violence, street crime,
    and other forms of violence.
  • 6. It damages the environment.
  • 7. In addition to threatening public health, it
    damages the very fabric of civilization.

6
Guernica, Pablo Picasso, 1937
7
EFFECTS OF WAR I
  • Not just combatants, but many civilians are
    casualties of war.
  • Sidel and Levy An estimated 191 million people
    died directly or indirectly as a result of
    conflict during the 20th century, more than half
    of whom were civilians.
  • People who are not killed may nevertheless be
    maimed, psychologically traumatized, or both.

8
EFFECTS OF WAR II
  • Many civilians, including children, in war are
  • physically or sexually assaulted at least
    10,000 women were raped by military personnel
    during the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
  • forced to fight against their will
  • see their loved ones killed, mutilated, or
    assaulted
  • witness the destruction of their homes and
    communities.
  • These things can result in disturbed and
    antisocial behavior such as violence towards
    others, including family members.

9
EFFECTS OF WAR III
  • Sidel and Levy The infrastructure that supports
    social well-being and health is destroyed during
    many wars, so that many civilians do not have
    access to food, clean water, medical care, or
    public health services.
  • War produces refugees who are vulnerable to
    malnutrition, infectious diseases, injuries, and
    criminal and military attacks.

10
TERRORISM AND PUBLIC HEALTH
  • Sidel and Levy Like war, terrorism has direct
    and indirect consequences for public health
    services and the health of populations.
  • Fatal and non-fatal injuries can result from a
    terrorist attack, but a terrorist attack may have
    an effect on infrastructure, social relations,
    and the public health system.
  • Most terrorist acts are committed with small
    arms, explosives, and incendiaries.
  • However, chemical, biological, and nuclear
    weapons are also a threat.

11
TERRORISM AND PREPAREDNESS
  • Sidel and Levy terrorism preparedness requires
    a balance between the protection of the
    population from hazards of terrorism and
    protection of the population from the
    consequences or collateral damage of
    preparedness.
  • These include the risk of adverse consequences
    of inappropriate warnings, hazardous
    immunizations, inappropriate use of antibiotics,
    and inappropriate isolation and quarantine of
    individuals or populations.
  • Such adverse consequences of preparedness are
    especially likely in the case of bioterrorism.

12
PREPAREDNESS AND RESOURCES
  • Sidel and Levy think that funding for
    bioterrorist preparedness diverts state and
    local health departments from urgent public
    health work on such widespread problems as
    tobacco dependence, alcohol and substance abuse,
    firearm-related injuries and fatalities.
  • Funds are also being diverted from protection
    against existing chemical risks, such as spills,
    leaks, and explosions.
  • It affects serious infectious diseases, such as
    AIDS, and such chronic diseases as heart disease,
    stroke, cancer, and diabetes.

13
CAUSES OF WAR AND TERRORISM
  • 1. No democratic process that allows equal access
    to power.
  • 2. Power obtained in virtue of religious
    affiliation or ethnic identity.
  • 3. Repressive leaders that abuse human rights.
  • 4. Social inequality.
  • 5. Unequal distribution of resources, especially
    in a bad economy.
  • 6. Control of valuable natural resources by one
    group.
  • 7. Loss of employment and basic necessary
    services and opportunities.

14
WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE I
  • According to Sidel and Levy, The United States
    and other nations must increase funding for
    humanitarian and sustainable development programs
    which address the root causes of terrorism, such
    as hunger, illiteracy, and unemployment.
  • The United States must change priorities to
    reflect real security needs. This should be done
    by eliminating military spending for wasteful
    Pentagon programs and investing those resources
    in urgent domestic needs for health care,
    education, and jobs.

15
WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE II
  • The United States must change priorities to
    reflect real security needs. This should be done
    by
  • providing new investments in renewable energy
    alternatives to reduce U. S. dependencies on
    foreign oil
  • providing adequate peacekeeping funding to
    nations, such as Afghanistan, Liberia, and the
    Congo, that would secure peace and stability.

16
WHAT NEEDS TO BE DONE III
  • The focus should be on promoting and protecting
    health care and social services where they are
    most needed.
  • Major problems - including tobacco, alcohol,
    drugs, violence, AIDS, chronic diseases, and
    occupational and environmental health problems -
    should be addressed to help those who suffer due
    to them.
  • Countries that are less developed than our own
    should be assisted to meet basic needs, to
    provide essential health services, and to promote
    maternal and child health.
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