The purpose of this page is to provide access to resources developed for or during the Savar IPHU. See below.
Evaluation
All participants are requested to complete the online course evaluation here.
In addition the access to medicines participants are requested to complete their IPHU final assessment form here.
Access to medicines participants are also requested to complete a further evaluation form download here and send it to [email protected]. You are requested to submit this form before 2 PM on 13/11/2018. Please note that the A2M conclusion form and A2M evaluation form are two different documents.
On this page:
- Objectives
- Program Overview
- Practical Matters
- Logistics and arrangements
- Pre-reading
- Daily resources: common phase
- Daily resources: access to medicines
- Daily resources: gender and health
- Common phase resumed: day resources
Objectives
See course objectives here.
Program overview
Program overview here
Practical matters
Evaluation. IPHU courses are carefully evaluated as part of learning how to do it better (more on evaluation here). Nightly Program Committee meetings (open to everyone) and the Smiley reports are key mechanisms for in-course evaluation. The Smiley template can be downloaded here in Word format (here) for editing and posting for each day.There is also an end of course evaluation.
Social events. Evening social events are an important part of the IPHU experience (cultural events, films, etc). These are entirely participant organised.
Documentation. A disparate range of resources are produced during the IPHU (including precious photographs). The documentation collective collects these so that they can be made available to everyone after the course. See below for the daily reports of common phase and the medicines stream (prepared by Anoob, Arathi, Krishna, and Montse), and the gender stream (prepared by Melanie and Marta).
Social media. We use social media to communicate among ourselves and with the outside communities watching this IPHU. The social media group takes the lead in making this happen.
Logistics and arrangements
Pre-readings
See full list of readings on access to medicines. This is quite a large list and includes many references for use after the course. The priority references for use during particular sessions of the course are advised on the relevant daily schedules page (see below).
Readings on Gender and Health linked here
See under days and sessions below for more pre-readings
Daily Resources: Common Phase
Day 1, Tuesday 6 Nov
Key pre-reading
- The People's Charter for Health,
- Report of CSE4HFA project; see short report,
- the Movement-building Manual.
Browse and explore
Presentations
Day 2, Wednesday 7 Nov
Current issues in health systems. Following a brief presentation on health systems generally, participants are requested to select one or two of the following six readings and come prepared to contribute to a discussion about that chapter including its relevance to the struggle for health in their country and on how PHM could work more effectively in that area.
- UHC (GHW5-B1),
- Fiscal policies (GHW4-A2),
- Astana: Alma-Ata at 40; see also the WHO Astana webpage,
- CHW, (GHW4-B7),
- brain drain (GHW4-B9),
- austerity.
Current issues in the social determination of health. After a brief presentation on the social determination of health participants are requested to select one or two of the following six readings and come prepared to contribute to a discussion about that chapter including its relevance to the struggle for health in their country and on how PHM could work more effectively in that area.
- the SDGs (GHW5-A1),
- gender based violence (GHW4-C4),
- hunger (GHW4-C3),
- buen vivir (GHW4-E1),
- climate change (GHW5-C1),
- mega projects (GHW4-C6).
- a brief history of 'Health for All; chapter 2 of the CSE4HFA report (short version),
- global economic integration (GHW3-A1),
- agricultural dumping under NAFTA (Wise, 2010),
- trade and food sovereignty (Burnett and Murphy, 2014),
- capitalism, imperialism and class (Legge, 2018),
- the G77, UNCTAD and the NIEO (Toye, 2014).
- Access to medicines - an introduction (ASG)
- Medicines regulation - national (DL)
- The politics of international medicines regulation (GK)
- Overview: TRIPS and access to medicines (KB)
- Berman (2012). The Role of Domestic Administrative Law in the Accountability of Transnational Regulatory Networks: The Case of the ICH
- Oxfam (2011) Eye on the Ball. Medicine regulation – not IP enforcement – can best deliver quality medicines
- TRIPS flexibilities Part 2- post grant (SS)
- LDC transition (SS)
- TRIPS plus: introduction and data exclusivity (KB)
- Anti-microbial resistance (NF)
- Gender definitions
- Intersectionality
- Human rights instruments
- Sexual and reproductive health rights
- Infertility and assisted reproductive techniques (SAMA)
- The Norplant Campaign - Bangladesh
- Conflict
- Conflict, gender and health: the Rohinga refugee crisis
- Gender based violence as a public health issue
Day 3, Thursday 8 Nov
Current issues in the political economy of health. After a brief presentation on the political economy of health, participants are requested to select one or two of the following six readings and come prepared to contribute to a discussion about that chapter including its relevance to the struggle for health in their country and on how PHM could work more effectively in that area.
Daily Resources: Access to Medicines Stream
Day 4 (Meds1), Friday 9 Nov
Presentations
Pre-reading
Day 5 (Meds2), Saturday 10 Nov
Presentations
Day 6 (Meds3), Sunday 11 Nov
Presentations
Day 7 (Meds4), Monday 12 Nov
Presentation
Daily Resources: Gender and Health Stream
Presentations
Day 4 (Gender1), Friday 9 Nov
Day 5 (Gender2), Saturday 10 Nov
Day 6 (Gender3), Sunday 11 Nov
Day 7 (Gender4), Monday 12 Nov
Project reports
Comprehensive sex education campaign plan
LGBTQ+ access to health care: research plan
The Gender Stream in summary
Click here for a summary report of the Gender Stream discussions, prepared by Marta Jiménez