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Published byJoseph Griffith Modified over 6 years ago
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“The more there are suffering, then the more natural their sufferings appear. Who wants to prevent the fish in the sea from getting wet? Bertolt Brecht
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$2.00
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Have you visited a developing country?
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“There are still around 1 billion people
living at the margins of survival on less than US$1 a day, with 2.6 billion—40% of the world’s population— living on less than US$2 a day.” 2007 Human Development Report (HDR) United Nations Development Program
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In this class we will often compare
the US and Haiti
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US Haiti Per capita national income $51749 $771 World Bank 2012
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US Haiti Per capita national income $51749 $771
That’s ~$2/day on average! World Bank 2012
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What’s the difference between mean and median?
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US Haiti Per capita national income $51749 $771 % of household
Income--bottom 40% 16% 8% % of household Income--top 20% 46% 63% And most Haitians aren’t even “average”! UNICEF 2010
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US Haiti Per capita national income $51749 $771 78 62 Life expectancy
This has consequences UNICEF 2010
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US Haiti Per capita national income $47140 $650 78 62 Life expectancy
Chances of dying Before age 1 0.7% 7.6% This has consequences UNICEF 2010
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What kills folks in the US?
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In contrast in the US we die of diseases of lifestyle or old age
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Poverty has its advantages: Haiti ranks 158th
In deaths due to traffic accidents
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Few US deaths are caused by infectious disease
and most of those occur among the elderly or infirm
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In the developing world treatable
infectious diseases remain big killers Leading causes of death in Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia for persons age 0-44 (World Health Organization)
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The picture’s even worse for
kids under 5
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with a concerted effort we can move in the right direction!
However, as we’ll see, with a concerted effort we can move in the right direction! Deaths New cases 3 million 5.3 million 2002 HIV/AIDs 1.6 million 2.3 million 2012
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Let’s use tuberculosis--TB--
as an example Leading causes of death in Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia for persons age 0-44 (World Health Organization)
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1.3 MILLION PEOPLE EVERY YEAR OVER 3500 EVERY DAY
TB KILLS 1.3 MILLION PEOPLE EVERY YEAR OVER 3500 EVERY DAY ONE PERSON EVERY 27 SECONDS Stats from WHO; 2012
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--one third of the world’s population--
Two billion people --one third of the world’s population-- are infected with the bacteria that causes TB World Lung Foundation (2008)
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New infections occur at a rate
of one per second! World Lung Foundation (2008)
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Left untreated, a person with active TB
will infect other people per year World Lung Foundation (2008) and
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It’s not who you know, its where you live.
Leading causes of death in Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Southeast Asia for persons age 0-44 (World Health Organization)
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It’s not who you know, its where you live.
SOURCES: World Health Organization; Doctors Without Borders | THE WASHINGTON POST
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TB is present world-wide but Incidence rates differ dramatically
CDC 2009
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80% of all TB cases are concentrated in 22 “high-burden” countries
STOP TB partnership
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rates of drug resistant TB
Why does the map of rates of drug resistant TB look different? CDC
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In contrast, 9945 cases In 2012!
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And that’s not all! Even with treatment, the average TB patient
loses 3-4 months of work, and up to 30% of yearly household earnings. WHO and World Bank
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And that’s not all! This robs the world's poorest communities
of an estimated US$12 billion in lost income WHO and World Bank
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And that’s not all! Loss of productivity totals
4-7% of total GDP in hardest hit nations. WHO and World Bank
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Our nation provides development assistance to the developing world
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But we are not doing our share……
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nor are we meeting the goal to which we agreed
Promised Delivered
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