EVENTS
FAQ
DONATE
CONTACT PIH
Who We AreWhat We DoWhere We WorkIssues We FaceWhat You Can DoInformation Resources
INFORMATION
NEWS ARCHIVES
PUBLICATIONS
RECOMMENDED READING




SIGN UP FOR EMAIL UPDATES FROM PARTNERS IN HEALTH

Partners In Health News Archive

2009

 
"What are we doing about global AIDS?"
As the supervisor of a clinic that treats HIV/AIDS patients in rural Malawi, Samson Njolomole sees many sick people. Many don't believe that they could be HIV positive, or are too scared to get tested. Samson's trying to change this. Read his story and find out a simple way you can help him in his work to spread awareness.

Water as a source of life and of loss
A team from PIH and the nonprofit organization charity: water recently visited Haiti hoping to learn how water affects poor Haitians in their daily lives. They joined young children and weary women on a grueling walk to fetch water—a hike that is taken daily by the local villagers. Read more about their trip to Haiti and what they learned.

 

"One patient per bed"
PIH's partner organization Abwenzi Pa Za Umoyo recently opened Malawi's newest, full-service district hospital. The facility houses an arsenal of resources to help the staff effectively provide health care to a community in desperate need: an emergency room, two operating rooms, a blood bank, and x-ray services, as well as several bright and airy wards with dozens of beds for the sickest patients. "We [now] have only one patient per bed, where we used to have two," says PIH Project Manager Jenna LeMieux.

 
Tiny twins get double the care in the Central Plateau
Weighing less than two pounds, the tiny baby would have struggled to survive in even the most well-equipped neonatal intensive care unit in Boston. But born on the rural central plateau of Haiti about a month prematurely, the small infant and her equally underweight twin brother, both born without the simple mechanisms for life, faced grim odds. Could the hospital at Cange and the dedicated staff of Zanmi Lasante save them?

Partner in profile: A pediatrician in Haiti
Dr. Jean Louis Romain used to only know story after story of the child who died of meningitis because her family could not pay for the medicine needed to treat the infection, or the boy who died because he wasn’t at a hospital equipped to treat an intestinal blockage. “We would know what they have—we would diagnose them, and then they would be sent home to die.” Today, Dr. Romain works at the Zanmi Lasante (PIH’s partner organization in Haiti) hospital in Cange precisely because the organization offered him the opportunity to practice medicine with the tools and resources a doctor needs to effectively treat patients—whether they have HIV or severe malnutrition—and regardless of their ability to pay. He can now tell a very different kind of story.

 

"Give us just two weeks"
After suffering a fall that left him paralyzed for life, Patrick languished in a hospital for weeks as a victim of Malawi's severe shortage of healthcare workers. His bedsores became infected, his body wasted from malnutrition, his will to live dimmed. All he wanted was "to be taken home to die." PIH's partner organization in Malawi knew they could help him. He grudgingly gave them two weeks to try.

Global health recommendations for a new administration and congress
Following the election of Barack Obama as the 44th President of the United States, a coalition of organizations dedicated to global health equity, including Partners In Health, came together to prepare recommendations for steps the new Administration and new Congress could take to seize "a unique opportunity to redefine foreign aid policy to help those most impoverished and to save lives."

Hard times come again no more: A special message from PIH's Medical Director
Hard times, like the current global financial crisis, inevitably bring sad stories. "It is in recounting the saddest stories that I am often asked, 'Does what we do matter?'" writes PIH Medical Director Joia Mukherjee in a recent letter to supporters. "I always say, resoundingly, 'Yes.' We won’t win every battle. We won’t save every child. But together we can be the standard bearers of human dignity by being present in humility and in solidarity with the world’s most vulnerable individuals, families, and communities." Read the full letter and help PIH work to ensure access to food, medicines, school, jobs, housing—the basic needs of a life—for those who live without.

Walking for Haiti, health, hope, and houses
A three-mile walk through the streets of Cambridge, MA, may help change the lives of five families living in some of the poorest communities in the poorest country in the western hemisphere. The 6th annual Urban Walk for Haiti on Saturday, April 4, will help bring awareness to the dire situation faced by millions of Haitians forced to live with homelessness, hunger pains, HIV/AIDS, unsanitary water supplies, and other dire circumstances caused by poverty. Find out how you can help.

House of Hope: A new home and family for children orphaned by AIDS and tuberculosis
"It was painful to see them, the wind was so freezing, they were so hungry... [Their clothes] hardly covered their little bodies," Dr. Hind Satti of PIH Lesotho lamented after meeting three young sisters. The girls, who range in age from 10 to 6 years old, had lost their mother to tuberculosis. With no one to care for them, the sisters were forced to beg for food in their village. Unfortunately, their situation is far from unique. The pandemics of HIV/AIDS and multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) threaten to wipe out a generation of adults across Africa, orphaning millions of children in the process. Read about PIH Lesotho's new program to help these three sisters and other orphans like them. 

2008

Village Health Works: Healing people and communities in Burundi
In 1993, Deo escaped a civil war in his native country of Burundi, but he couldn’t leave it behind. He was consumed by memories of death and despair, and distraught because he didn’t know whether his family was alive or dead. After meeting PIH co-founder Paul Farmer and learning about the work of PIH firsthand, he finally returned to his home country in 2005 with the goal of opening a free medical clinic in his native village. Read this story

To fight malaria, APZU blankets district in bednets
Last year, the impoverished Neno District of Malawi reported more than 52,000 cases of malaria. The disease was responsible for hundreds of deaths—most of them children—and was the most common diagnosis in the outpatient clinics. To tackle this deadly disease, PIH’s partner organization in Malawi (APZU) recently launched a campaign to distribute over 26,000 mosquito bednets to households with individuals most at risk of contracting the disease.

  Dumanel

Right to Health Care program brings Haitian boy to Boston for skull surgery
In a cozy, sunny room on the ninth floor of Children’s Hospital in Boston, 11-month-old Dumanel Luxama happily coos and chortles as his father stands beside him. Just a few days earlier, the little Haitian boy had undergone major surgery to prevent brain tissue from bulging through a hole in his skull. Through its Right to Health Care program, PIH has a history of bringing patients who cannot be treated at local sites to larger, better-equipped hospitals in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Studies confirm XDR-TB can be cured
Extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) is curable with intensive and specialized care conclude two recent studies published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) and The Lancet. Researchers found that fully 60 percent of the patients enrolled in the studies with XDR-TB were successfully treated and cured.

Malaria Net Challenge
The floodwaters from four hurricanes have receded in Haiti, but countless pools of stagnant water still remain—the perfect breeding ground for mosquitoes and a massive outbreak of malaria. To prevent this, PIH kicked off the Malaria Net Challenge to raise money to distribute 10,000 bednets to the families in most need. Find out how you can help.

World AIDS Day 2008: PIH partners celebrate with speeches, song, dance, and solidarity
Almost three decades after the emerging AIDS pandemic became widely recognized, staff and community members at Partners In Health sites around the world celebrated the achievements they and others have made in combating the spread and deadliness of the disease. December 1 was the twentieth annual observance of World AIDS Day, a day dedicated to raising awareness and mobilizing action to fight a disease that more than 33 million people are now living with, and that has killed more than 25 million people. The events at PIH sites stressed not only how far the fight against AIDS has come, but how far it still has to go.  

 

Choppers for doctors: Motorcycles help health workers traverse Lesotho's mountains
In Lesotho, it’s difficult to get around. Villages in the mountain kingdom are sometimes accessible only by single-engine propeller aircraft or on horseback. There are often no roads in rural areas and patients must walk hours to clinics, which is extremely difficult for the critically ill, and transporting patients and medical supplies is often an ordeal. The nonprofit organization Riders for Health is working to help change this by donating ultra-rugged motorcycles for PIH Lesotho staff to use. The vehicles are expected to greatly enhance health-care delivery, allowing health workers to regularly and reliably visit communities previously inaccessible except on foot.

Annual Symposium pushes boundaries
PIH's 15th annual Thomas J. White Symposium focused on the theme "Pushing boundaries: past, present, and future." The program featured a panel of HIV patients who shared their stories of being provided with life-saving antiretroviral drugs. Another panel featured activists who have used the PIH model and philosophy of social justice to create their own programs to provide healthcare to the poor and inspire the next generation of social justice activists. View these panels as well as speeches from PIH co-founders Paul Farmer and Ophelia Dahl. 

A year of accomplishments for Lesotho's national multidrug-resistant TB program
In the small mountainous country of Lesotho, patients infected with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) faced almost certain death just one year ago. Today they and their families have reason to hope for a better prognosis. Last July, the first patients enrolled in Lesotho’s national program to treat multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB). PIH Lesotho’s MDR-TB Program Director, Dr. Hind Satti, recently reflected on many successes of the program, which she helped spearhead last July, and the challenges it currently faces.

Socios En Salud honored with two major awards
In recognition of its success in combating MDR-TB and other global health issues, Socios En Salud (PIH's partner organization in Peru) recently accepted two distinguished awards—one from the Carso Institute and the other from the Stop TB Partnership and the Kochon Foundation honoring leaders in the fight against tuberculosis.

Partner profile: pedaling for patients
Visiting 16 patients scattered among the rural hills of Malawi not once but twice every day? "No problem!" says one village health worker named Briston Threemunthu.

Bringing vital skills to operating rooms in Haiti
As a child growing up in Haiti, Marie Myrléne St. Vil Marius decided to dedicate her life “to people who have nothing and are in need.” This commitment was Marie's motivation for becoming a nurse, and later, for leaving the relative comfort of a hospital in the capital city to work at PIH’s partner organization Zanmi Lasante in Haiti’s impoverished Central Plateau. Most recently, it brought Marie to Boston, where she and three colleagues received formal training for operating room nurses that is not offered anywhere in Haiti.

  
  

Fighting hunger in the mountains of Lesotho
19-month-old Malipho Ramahapa weighed less than 12 pounds last fall when his desperate mother brought him to PIH's clinic in Nohana, Lesotho. Months before headlines and television reports announced a global food crisis, children like Malipho alerted PIH to a spike in the hunger and malnutrition that chronically afflict poor communities in Lesotho and other countries where PIH works. In a single week last October, more than 100 children were diagnosed as malnourished in the community of Nohana alone. Find out how PIH's partners are treating and saving them through a comprehensive food program.

Report indicts U.S. government and Inter-American DevelopmentBank for violations of the rights to clean water and health in Haiti
  Cover of IDB report

In 1998, the Inter-American Development Bank awarded $54 million in loans to the Haitian government to improve the country’s patchwork, crumbling public-water system. The money was intended to bring clean water to people who for many years had been denied this basic human right. But after ten years of red tape and delays, the situation has grown worse. A recent report from Partners In Health, Zanmi Lasante, the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, and the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center exposes the U.S. government's role in blocking the disbursal of loans that would have had life-saving consequences for the Haitian people.

60 Minutes to watch... and a lifetime to act
This May, CBS's 60 Minutes featured a segment on the work of Partners In Health. In case you missed any part of the broadcast, it can be viewed here. If the images you saw and the voices you heard have inspired you, learn more about how you can contribute to PIH's work in Haiti, and the movement for health and social justice around the world.

Croc attack: Trendy footwear fights sand fleas in Haiti
They’re bright. They’re comfy. They’re trendy. They’re Crocs – the gaudily colored plastic shoes worn by fashionistas across the US. This summer, they're also on the feet of thousands of children, women and men in the central plateau of Haiti. But this sudden popularity wasn’t dictated by fashion. The shoes were prescribed by doctors to treat a major public health problem – an epidemic of tungiasis (sand fleas). Read more and watch a video on YouTube.

Rwanda's rural health initiative brings quality care and home visits to Burera
A young, widowed mother of five named Patricie was suffering from both advanced HIV/AIDS and disseminated tuberculosis. So PIH's Dr. Patrick Almazor decided to pay her a visit at her home--a two hour climb up the hills of rural Rwanda. For PIH, such home visits are an integral part our work. There is no substitute for the opportunity to sit with a patient in his or her home in an effort to understand the social, economic, and structural forces that shape lives and contribute to illness. So Dr. Patrick's trek was business as usual. But what made this particular visit special was the fact that it was the first home visit from the new Burera District Hospital. Just a few months ago, there was no hospital and just a handful of health workers to care for Burera's population of nearly 400,000.

Accompaniment Guide for MDR-TB patients
Socios En Salud, PIH's partner organization in Peru, has published a simple, illustrated guide for participants in their Peer Mentorship program. The participants are former MDR-TB Patients who provide education, advice and treatment support to help current patients through the two long years of treatment. The SES Accompaniment Guide is now available for download (in Spanish).
[Download PDF, 9MB]

PIH helps bring quality care to the only district in Rwanda without a hospital
For years, the 360,000 residents of the Rwandan district of Burera relied on a single doctor and a hospital that existed only in name. Not any longer. On March 20, what had been "an abandoned building where goats were hanging out" opened its doors as a beautiful new 24-bed ward, staffed by 43 skilled health professionals. The inauguration of the new ward marked a major milestone for the effort by the Rwandan government, PIH and the Clinton Foundation to bring quality health care to every corner of rural Rwanda.

Healing hearts in Rwanda
A volunteer surgical team from Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston recently began a mission to help Rwandans suffering from heart failure (often caused by Rheumatic Heart Disease, or RHD). This condition leaves thousands of Rwandans gasping for breath in a process of slow suffocation that can only be treated with surgery, which medical facilities in Rwanda currently cannot provide. Enter Team Heart. This spring, the team began began performing life-saving surgeries while working with PIH, a local hospital, and the Rwandan Ministry of Health to establish a self-sustained cardiac surgery program in the country. Team Heart has started a blog to document their innaugural trip. PIH co-founder Paul Farmer was one of the first to post.

Interactive website features PIH programs
The Harvard News Office recently produced a multimedia website featuring Zanmi Lasante, PIH's partners in Haiti. The site is part of a project to document the global involvement of Harvard affiliated organizations (including PIH) in helping to improve health around the world. Videos and articles follow the work of PIH co-founders Paul Farmer, Jim Yong Kim, and PIH doctors Louise Ivers and David Walton. more

New hospital opens in Haiti's Central Plateau
A new hospital opened in January in the Central Plateau of Haiti. Built through a partnership between the Haitian Ministry of Health and Zanmi Lasante with funding from AmeriCares, the new facility will help serve the communities of Lascahobas and Lacolline. Before the construction of the hospital, patients had literally flooded into a small, poorly-equipped health center. “The people of Lascahobas and Lacolline, like all the people of Haiti, deserve modern health infrastructure,” said PIH Co-founder Dr. Paul Farmer, who attended the event along with Haitian President René Préval.  

2007

Battling HIV/AIDS: World AIDS Day brings a cause for celebration around the world
World AIDS Day on December 1 was the occasion for celebrations by PIH partner organizations around the world and for reflections by PIH Medical Director Joia Mukherjee on the progress that has been made over the past two decades. From Haiti to Rwanda, from Malawi to Peru, thousands of PIH staff, patients and community residents gathered to enjoy games, dances and songs, to hear lessons and testimonials from medical staff, community health workers and people living with HIV, and to celebrate, in Joia Mukherjee's words, "solidarity and what communities’ voices can achieve when raised together."

"Solidarity can end structural violence" – Report from the Cange Forum on health and human rights
On September 6 and 7, Zanmi Lasante held its thirteenth forum on health and human rights, “Sante ak Dwa Moun,” a gathering of the whole Zanmi Lasante family—patients, their families, people from the communities of the Central Plateau and the neighboring Artibonite Department, accompagnateurs, teachers, archivists, cleaners, nurses, doctors and students. ZL Director of Operations Loune Viaud and PIH Medical Director Joia Mukherjee report.

Socios En Salud responds to earthquake in Peru, calls for support for victims
A rapid-response medical team from PIH's partner organization, Socios En Salud (SES), was among the first to arrive ready to provide relief, guidance, and a little bit of hope to survivors of the recent earthquake in Peru. SES was able to contribute badly needed medicine, food, clothing, and blankets. Although no deaths have been confirmed among SES's 115 multidrug-resistant TB patients in the area, the quake destroyed the homes of more than half of them and several lost at least one family member.

PIH Lesotho celebrates first anniversary in Nohana
August 22, 2007 is a date that the people of the tiny mountain village of Nohana, Lesotho, will never forget. That was the day their community hosted a gala celebration marking the first anniversary of PIH’s work in Lesotho. “It was the most remarkable thing I have ever seen,” said PIH Country Director Jen Furin. “The joy and pride of all those there was clearly visible and very real.” No small feat and no small party, thousands of people attended the event.

Paul Farmer reports from Lesotho on the eve of PIH's first anniversary
All of PIH-Lesotho will be celebrating a birthday on August 22, when co-workers from Lesotho, Rwanda, Malawi, and Boston join the Minister of Health, the Clinton Foundation, the Irish Government (which has funded much of our work in Lesotho), and many other partners and supporters in the same town, Nohana. Nohana has been transformed in many ways: the facilities there have been retrofitted for infection control; a new clinic has been built; and hundreds of patients with AIDS and TB are receiving world-class care.

PIH ramps up advocacy work with focus on community health workers and XDR-TB
Since the beginning of 2007, PIH has ramped up its advocacy activities aimed at inluencing policy and funding priorities at the national and global levels. PIH staff have testified in Congress, spoe press conferences and taken a leading role at meetings organized by the World Health Organization. Recent advocacy efforts have focused on increasing awareness and funding to address both the health worker crisis in Africa and the global spread of extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB).

PIH receives $3 million grant to develop model for treating XDR-TB and HIV
With help from a $3 million grant from the Open Society Institute, PIH is taking on an epidemic that has been widely described as "incurable" and that threatens to reverse recent progress in combatting HIV/AIDS – extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis or XDR-TB.

Socios En Salud steps up training and advocacy in the fight against MDR-TB
Socios En Salud, long recognized as a leader for innovating community-based treatment for MDR-TB and for training other health professionals how to do it, has redoubled training activities, sending teams to Haiti and Africa and hosting nurses from Latin America.

PIH's Russia project receives praise and funds for work with MDR-TB
PIH's project in Russia has recently received visits and expressions of renewed support and funding for its work with MDR-TB from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria, the Eli Lilly and Co. Foundation and Bill Gates of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

Film producer donates share of DVD sales to PIH
In the independently produced action movie "The Minx," a modern-day Robin Hood steals from the rich and gives to the poor. During the first six weeks that the movie is available on DVD, the producers of "The Minx" are giving to the poor in real life by donating $1 of every sale to PIH.

On-line edition of PIH's HIV manual invites exchange of ideas and experience
PIH has launched a new, interactive edition of The PIH Guide to the Community-Based Treatment of HIV in Resource-Poor Settings. "The new website allows visitors to share insights about the manual and experiences in the field, to ask questions of each other, and to foster a community of care," explained PIH Medical Director Joia Mukherjee. The manual is the first module of a warehouse of PIH tools, resources and guidelines for global health delivery to be known as the "Partners In Health Model On-Line."

PIH launches new project in Malawi
Add a third African country to the list of places where PIH is working to provide comprehensive, community-based health care in the face of devastating epidemics of AIDS, infant and maternal mortality, and poverty. In January, PIH launched its newest project, located in Neno, Malawi – an impoverished rural area in one of Africa’s poorest and most densely populated countries, with an HIV infection rate among adults of more than 14 percent.

Google funds students to write code for PIH's medical record system
This summer, students around the world have the opportunity to participate in an exciting collaboration between OpenMRS and Google, Inc., to help develop an open-source medical record system that improves the care of patients with HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria. More than 100 students applied for up to 10 positions working with PIH by the March 24 deadline.

Arcade Fire sparks support for PIH
The Arcade Fire is making a name for itself, not only as one of Canada’s hottest bands but as advocates and fundraisers for global health equity. The Montreal-based band has pledged to donate $1, £1 or €1 of every ticket sold on their upcoming tour of Europe and North America to Partners In Health.

"One day, one party, one cause" – Stanford Dance Marathon raises $150,000 for PIH
They could have danced all night. And they did. More than 900 students at Stanford University joined together in early February to stage a 24-hour dance marathon that raised more than $150,000 for Partners In Health.

ACTION ALERT – PIH calls for U.S. funding to train and retain health care workers in Africa
Partners In Health has been hard at work with colleagues at other organizations and in Congress to get a piece of legislation introduced that addresses the catastrophic shortage of health care workers in Africa. Now the drafting is over, the bill has been filed, and it is time to pitch in to get it passed.

2006 overviewPIH looks back on 2006 – another year of rapid growth and major gains
For PIH and our partner organizations, 2006 was a year of daunting challenges and striking achievements. For the second consecutive year, we launched a new project, this time in Lesotho. We also strengthened and expanded our operations in countries where we have been working for many years. We constructed and inaugurated new facilities in Peru, Haiti and Rwanda. We substantially increased the numbers of patients we serve and initiated major new programs to serve them better.

IHSJ takes on hunger and health
The Institute for Health and Social Justice (IHSJ) – PIH's research, education and advocacy arm – has launched a campaign to galvanize knowledge, awareness, and action to combat pandemic coinfections of hunger, malnutrition and disease. The campaign kicked off with a seminar series in Boston, starting on Thursday, March 8, with world renowned expert Dr. Nevin Scrimshaw.

Serving school lunches in HaitiTreating hunger in Haiti with food
Thanks to the dedicated efforts of Zanmi Lasante’s child nutrition program, more than 17,000 children at 28 schools in central Haiti receive piping hot lunches every day—free of charge. "Since we began giving daily meals, my students hardly ever miss a day and their academic performance has improved dramatically," one teacher says.

PAM Warehouse

Rwinkwavu operating room offers emergency obstetrics
After months of construction, training, and procuring equipment and supplies, the operating room at Rwinkwavu Hospital in Rwanda is open for business. Being able to provide obstetrical surgery could save hundreds of lives in an area where maternal mortality rates are high and transportation to hospitals in other districts is not readily available.

Profile: Haitian AIDS patient delivers treatment and truth
More than 13 years ago, Denizard Wilson was diagnosed with AIDS. Soon he was too sick to continue working in Port-au-Prince, too poor to afford medical care, fearful that time was running out. Then he moved back to his hometown in the Central Plateau and went to PIH for treatment. “Since I have been with PIH, I have never been sick again," he says today.

2005/2006

PIH launches "Sputnik" to combat MDR-TB in Siberia
Partners In Health Russia marked a major milestone in November with the launch of "Sputnik," a new health promotion program using community health workers to improve care for patients living with multidrug-resistant tuberculosis in Tomsk, Siberia.

FACE AIDS - Student activists aim to raise $1 million for PIH
October 2006 -- Founded in 2005 by a committed group of Stanford University students, the non-profit organization FACE AIDS has now spread to more than 85 campuses across the country. By late September, the campaign had raised more than $250,000 towards its target of $1 million to fight AIDS in Africa by supporting the work of Partners In Health.

PIH fields a strong presence at international TB meeting
Partners In Health representatives from four continents traveled to Paris, France for the 37th World Conference of the International Union Against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, held from October 31 through November 4, 2006. PIH affiliates from Peru, Russia, Rwanda, and Boston presented their experience integrating community-based care for tuberculosis and HIV and using innovative technologies to test for drug resistance and manage patients' medical records.

Next stop: Lesotho
PIH launches new project in southern Africa

July 2006 -- Barely a year after establishing our first project on the African continent in Rwanda, Partners In Health has started its second in Lesotho, a small, mountainous nation of two million people located entirely within the borders of South Africa.

Into Africa – Haitian doctor Jonas Rigodon brings his skills and the PIH/ZL model to Lesotho
July 2006 -- With the launch of a new project in Lesotho, Partners In Health is bringing to remote mountain villages in southern Africa the model of community-based care for HIV/AIDS pioneered in Haiti by PIH/Zanmi Lasante. Among those bringing it are some of Zanmi Lasante's most experienced and dedicated staff.

Partners In Health teams up with the World Food Program to distribute food in Haiti
July 2006 -- Partners In Health's Haitian partner organization, Zanmi Lasante (ZL) broke new ground in providing comprehensive health care for HIV patients on June 5 with the launch of a major food distribution program.

PACT youth program expands summer activities
July 2006 -- PIH's Boston-based PACT project has received a $15,000 grant from the Boston Foundation as part of a collaborative effort to expand summer activities for at-risk youth and arrest an alarming rise in violence around the city.

PIH mourns a leader in the fight for health and social justice in Haiti
June 2006 -- Jean Gabriel Fils, known widely and affectionately as Ti Jean, died on May 28 in Central Haiti, where he had lived all his life.

Cyclists complete cross-country journey to support global health equity and PIH
June 2006 -- They left San Francisco on bicycles at the beginning of April. 50 days, 3,700 miles, 12 states, 16 cities, and nearly $130,000 of fundraising later, the 21 participants in the "Ride for World Health" pedaled into Washington, DC, their legs weary, their journey finally over but the memories -- and emotions -- running strong.

New guidelines and goals for treating MDR-TB announced.
June 2006 -- New guidelines for treating multi-drug resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) were announced at a gathering of TB experts in Atlanta on May 10.

Yes Riders hit the road for humanitarian aid.
June 2006 -- A team of young people mounted their bicycles in Seattle on June 1 and embarked on a "transcontinental ride for humanitarian aid" scheduled to finish up in Boston at the end of July.

Partners In Health mourns Dr. Lee Jong-wook, Director-General of WHO.
May 2006 -- The global health community lost a visionary leader and Partners In Health lost a valued friend on May 22 with the death of Dr. Lee Jong-wook, Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO).

Russian doctors receive comprehensive training in MDR-TB
April 2006 -- Doctors from all 26 territories in Siberia and the Far East of Russia received comprehensive training in detection, prevention and treatment of multidrug-resistant TB through a 10-day program held in Novosibirsk in late March.

PIH's web-based medical records system earns headlines and awards
January 2006 -- Hamish Fraser, PIH's Director of Informatics and Telemedicine, has earned a new title – "do-gooder." Fraser was one of a half-dozen people singled out by Red Herring magazine in early January for a cover story featuring "Six Who’ve Applied Tech to a Good Cause."

Jim Kim returns to DSMHI and PIH
January 2006 -- Jim Kim is back. Jim, who teamed up with Paul Farmer to found Partners In Health in 1987, returned in mid-December after almost three years at the World Health Organization (WHO), where he served first as Senior Advisor to the Director-General on HIV/AIDS and then as head of the HIV/AIDS Department.

Hurricane Stan: Tragedy does not strike equally
October 2005 -- Since October 5, 2005, we have been following the tragedy unfolding in the PIH supported project in Chiapas, Mexico in the wake of Hurricane Stan.

Hilton Humanitarian Prize Goes to Partners In Health, Innovative Pioneer
September 2005 -- Partners In Health, an innovative health care leader for poor societies, will receive the 2005 Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize of $1.5 million, the world’s largest prize. It is awarded annually by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation to an organization that is significantly alleviating human suffering.

From Gonaïves to New Orleans: Reflections on the Gulf Coast Tragedy
September 2005 -- Images of Gulf Coast residents killed or left homeless by Hurricane Katrina in early September came as a shock to many Americans, who are unaccustomed to seeing such stark misery within their country, the most affluent and powerful in the world.

 

 


RECOMMENDED READING

A focus on maternal mortality
A series of recent features in the New York Times focused on maternal health—and the lack thereof—in some of the poorest communities in the world.

Also check out a Washington Post op-ed by PIH co-founders Paul Farmer and Ophelia Dahl on maternal mortality.

PIH co-founder named new president of Dartmouth College
PIH co-founder Jim Yong Kim was recently announced as the 17th president of Dartmouth College. "Jim is going to galvanize the movement for health equity," said fellow PIH co-founder Paul Farmer to the Boston Globe. "To have a physician teacher at the head of a university will seize the imaginations of young Americans and help build this wonderful movement around global poverty issues. Part of me feels like we're not so much losing Jim as gaining Dartmouth." Find out more.

Leading the fight against HIV/AIDS
The President's Emergency Plan For AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) was a visionary step to commit an unprecedented level of resources for HIV prevention and care in the world's poorest and most heavily AIDS-burdened countries. That commitment must continue, writes PIH Medical Director Joia Mukherjee in a recent op-ed published in the Boston Globe.

Yes Haiti Can
PIH co-founder Paul Farmer and Brian Concannon, Jr., of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti recently published an op-ed in the Boston Globe on how the U.S. can reverse decades of destructive policies to help transform Haiti from one of the world's poorest countries into a stronger, more prosperous nation. Read the article.

Socios En Salud featured on CNN as a model for TB care
Socios En Salud on CNNCNN International's new monthly medical show Vital Signs focused on PIH's partners in Peru as an example of success in combating drug-resistant tuberculosis.

Running towards new life
A patient in PIH's Right to Health Care program was recently featured in the Boston Herald. The article profiled Claudine, a Rwandan orphan who lost her family to a genocide and her leg in a battle with bone cancer. Read the inspiring story about her bright future, including the possibility of soon running on a new prosthetic leg.

Can Obama fix health care?
PIH Co-founder Paul Farmer recently blogged on The Daily Beast about universal health care for the U.S. and his hopes for the incoming Obama administration. Read his post.

Film documents devastation and rebuilding after hurricanes

A short film by BZ Films brings to light the issues in Haiti brought on by four storms that devastated the small, impoverished country. In the wake of the horrible floods, Partners In Health and the people of Haiti work to find hope and rebuild destroyed communities.  Watch the film.

Paul Farmer on the chief barriers to health equity
PIH co-founder Paul Farmer recently wrote an article in The Rotarian to address the lack of access to effective prevention and care--a primary barrier to health equity across the globe.

Paul Farmer addresses the desperate situation left in the wake of recent hurricanes in Haiti
PIH co-founder Paul Farmer was recently featured in a number or news outlets, including:

RFK Center and ZL release documents proving US action to block loans to Haiti
The RFK Memorial Center for Human Rights and Zanmi Lasante have released internal U.S. Treasury Department documents exposing politically motivated interventions to stop dispersal of $146 million in live-saving loans for Haiti. The documents can be downloaded from the RFK Center web site.

PIH Medical Director featured in the Boston Globe
As an 8-year-old, Joia Mukherjee's family took her to visit India. "She saw the squalid conditions of poverty. She saw kids her own age dying in the street. She saw people with leprosy. And she was outraged," writes BIlly Baker of the Boston Globe in a recent profile piece of PIH's Medical Director. Read more about what makes this PIH leader tick.

Washington Post publishes
op-ed on maternal mortality
by Paul Farmer and Ophelia Dahl
" 'Obscene' is still the word that comes to mind when we think of maternal mortality," PIH co-founders Paul Farmer and Ophelia Dahl wrote in an op-ed article published on Mother's Day in the Washington Post. The article outlines steps that must be taken to end the obscenity of more than half a million preventable deaths in childbirth each year.

Health and Human Rights—Online!
The Health and Human Rights journal is now available as an on-line, open-access publication. While carrying on the journal’s long tradition of critical scholarship, the new format provides a vibrant forum for discussion, and will allow anyone with an internet connection access to the full text of the journal, thus expanding the community of both readers and contributors. PIH co-founder Paul Farmer assumed editorship of the journal in 2007. You can view the journal here.

PIH weighs in on the food crisis in Haiti
PIH Medical Director Joia Mukherjee and PIH Advocacy Director Donna Barry penned an op-ed featured in the May 5 issue of the Boston Globe. The piece focuses on the reasons why the situation has become so serious, and the actions that need to be taken to bring long-term relief to millions. In addition, Dr. Mukherjee also spoke about the food crisis on NPR's On Point. Listen to or download a podcast of the program.

Haitian boy's plight touches New England residents
Born into poverty in rural Haiti with a hole in his skull and a deadly cyst in his brain, little Dumanel's future seemed grim. That is, until he met PIH and doctors from the Children's Hospital in Boston. Read this inspiring story.

Soon after the Boston Globe featured Dumanel's story, other New England residents responded to help Dumanel's family out of crushing poverty. Read more.

Moving Mountains in Rwanda
The front page of the Boston Globe on April 13 featured a long article about the work of PIH and our partners in Rwanda. The article follows the development of a project that has transformed a derelict hospital with not a single doctor, no running water or electricity, and only a trickle of patients into a bustling network of hospitals, health centers and community health workers that serves more than half a million people and has helped villages torn apart by a horrific genocide come together to uproot poverty and disease. PIH co-founder Paul Farmer helps tell the story.

Paul Farmer interviewed on Democracy Now!
PIH co-founder Paul Farmer was recently interviewed by Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!  The hour-long program touched on Dr. Farmer's work, background, and the challenges of pursuing healthcare with a social justice perspective. Watch, listen and read a transcript of the interview.

Mountains Beyond Mountains moves more than mountains
The book Mountains Beyond Mountains by Tracy Kidder has inspired many to take up the cause of social justice and health care, according to a recent article in the San Francisco Chronicle. The article explores the enduring popularity and influence of Kidder's account of PIH's early days in Haiti, quoting from PIH Executive Director Ophelia Dahl and from readers who have taken on projects ranging from an income-generation program for HIV patients in Africa to a children's hospital in Cambodia. Read the full article.

Heroes of HIV: Fighting an epidemic in Haiti
An article on Paul Farmer and Zanmi Lasante's work to help impoverished AIDS/HIV patients was recently published in the Palm Beach Post as part of a special multi-media series on AIDS in the Caribbean.

Paul Farmer and Jim Kim contribute to UNICEF report
PIH co-founders Paul Farmer and Jim Yong Kim provided a commentary on "Human rights, community-based health care and child survival" for the latest edition of UNICEF's flagship publication – The State of the World's Children 2008. This year's 160-page report focuses on child survival, providing detailed information on conditions that cause the deaths of nearly 10 million children each year, and highlighting progress made through community-based partnerships to improve health care, nutrition and access to clean water and sanitation.

UNICEF reports on Haiti visit
A helicopter touched down in Cange on January 6, as Ann Veneman, the Executive Director of UNICEF, made Zanmi Lasante (ZL) one of the main stops on her first visit to Haiti. Veneman and other UNICEF officials toured the facilities and met with the leadership of ZL. UNICEF has supported ZL's programs in maternal health and prevention of mother to child transmission of HIV. After the visit, UNICEF published two articles and video reports: one article describes Veneman's visit and links to a video that includes a short interview with PIH's David Walton; the other focuses on ZL's work with women and children and includes video of Dr. Roland Désiré and accompagnateur Benis Elisicar Plaisir.

America's Best Leaders: Jim Yong Kim pens article for U.S. News & World Report
PIH co-founder Jim Yong Kim recently authored an article for the "Best Leaders" issue of U.S. News & World Report. The piece focuses on global health giant William Foege, who was instrumental in the irradication of Small Pox, and in supplying the world's children with vaccinations. Kim himself was featured in the 2005 Best Leaders issue, along with Paul Farmer.

"Inaction on TB threat verges on crime against humanity"
The sluggish international response to the resurgent threat of drug-resistant tuberculosis is a global health scandal of nearly criminal proportions, said Stephen Lewis, Paul Farmer, and other global health experts at a recent press conference. An article from the Canadian Press details this shocking neglect on the part of the developed world.

"Which single intervention would do the most to improve the health of those living on less than $1 per day?"
"Hire community health workers to serve them," answered Paul Farmer in a recent article. Over 200 experts from around the world were asked this question by PLOS Medicine, as part of a global theme issue on poverty and human development. Over 200 journals from around the world recently published issues on the same theme.

Dedication saves lives:
NEED Magazine reports on the work of Socios En Salud
NEED Magazine, whose motto is "we are not out to save the world, but to tell the stories of those who are, published a 14-page feature on the work of PIH's partner organization, Socios En Salud, in combatting drug-resistant tuberculosis in Peru.

The British press and the death of 80 Haitian refugees
On the night of May 4, 80 Haitian refugees drowned in shark-infested waters after their boat was rammed and then forced back out to sea by the Coast Guard of the Turks and Caicos Islands, a British overseas territory. An article on Haitianalysis.com recounts the horrifying incident and the equally horrifying failure to report on what happened and hold those responsible to account.

Wrong Number:
"Is it cost-effective to treat the world's poor?"
In a powerful article published on slate.com, pediatric cardiologist Darshak Sanghavi dismantles the "unscientific" and "recklessly applied" economic logic for rationing health care based on "QALYs" (Quality Adjusted Life Years) and lauds "groups like Partners in Health [who] take a radically different approach. They start with a goal—simply to save people with AIDS, and damn the QALYs—and invent ways to make it affordable."

"Basotho battle death in the mountains": story and photos highlight PIH work in Lesotho
Bobete patients waiting
"With her baby tightly wrapped up in a traditional Basotho blanket, it's hard to keep up with Maneela. During the two-hour walk to her village, it is difficult to believe she is living with a deadly disease. Her care is part of the holistic approach of Partners in Health, an organisation that works with members of the community to provide treatment for general medical conditions as well as more complicated diseases such as TB and HIV/AIDS." An article and photos published by the Mail & Guardian in South Africa highlighted the work of PIH's project in Lesotho.

onPhilanthropy reports on talk by Paul Farmer
In a recent talk at the NYU Reynolds Program in Social Entrepreneurship, PIH co-founder Paul Farmer addressed three key issues: cost-effectiveness, vertical versus lateral funding, and the role of universities in international health and development efforts.

If we fail to act
In an article for Notre Dame Magazine, Paul Farmer writes about our moral obligation to those in need and about the radical values necessary to promote basic human rights.

COPYRIGHT © 2006 PARTNERS IN HEALTH. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Legal Terms of Use / Privacy Policy