It was a great weekend in Virginia Beach, and not just because of the unusually beautiful October beach weather! At the Physicians for Peace Gala Reception this Saturday, ONE received the annual Charles E. Horton Humanitarian Award for Global Health for our grassroots efforts to fight extreme poverty and preventable disease. ONE is especially honored to receive this award from one of our strongest allies in the fight against global poverty, Physicians for Peace, a Norfolk-based non-profit that has been training health care professionals and finding sustainable ways to heal and save countless lives throughout the developing world for two decades. The award serves as a living legacy to their founder, the late Dr. Charles E. Horton, an internationally acclaimed and recognized humanitarian.
Sheila Nix, ONE’s US Executive Director, accepted the award on behalf of all of the outstanding ONE members who raise awareness and engage their elected officials on issues of global poverty as advocates for the world’s poorest people.
The first ever Horton award recipient, Dr. Jeffery Sachs, recorded a special message for the event to congratulate ONE:
We would especially like to thank General Ron Sconyers and the PFP team for this great honor and a wonderful event this Saturday. Look forward to posting about future collaborations with Physicians for Peace!
This Saturday, ONE will receive a special award from Virginia-based partner organization Physicians for Peace, for our grassroots efforts to fight extreme poverty and preventable disease. Dedicated to the ideal that health care in the developing world can be best improved by providing training and education to health care professionals, Physicians for Peace has touched the lives of people in more than fifty countries around the world. ONE is proud to partner with a service organization that is engaged in such crucial and meaningful work.
We’d also like to thank the people who made this award possible: ONE members like you. In choosing ONE as the recipient of the Charles E. Horton Humanitarian Award for Global Health, Physicians for Peace honors the efforts of all ONE members for raising awareness, taking action and serving as advocates for the world’s poorest people.
The Physicians for Peace Gala Reception will take place this Saturday, 3 Oct 2009 at 6:30pm at Convention Center in VA Beach. You can find more information here.
ONE is proud to be partners in the fight against extreme poverty and preventable disease with Physicians for Peace (PFP), an organization that has educated health care providers throughout the developing world for two decades. Now in its 20th anniversary year, PFP will honor ONE as the recipient of the third annual Charles E. Horton Humanitarian Award for Global Health.
This award is bestowed in honor of the late Physicians for Peace founder, Charles E. Horton, M.D. Horton, an internationally recognized humanitarian, founded Physicians for Peace in 1989. Through Horton’s leadership, the organization has touched the lives of thousands of patients and doctors in more than 50 countries around the world. Past recipients include Senator Bill Frist, former co-chair of ONE Vote ’08, and Professor Jeffery Sachs.
ONE’s U.S. Executive Director Sheila Nix said, “ONE is deeply honored to receive the Charles E. Horton Humanitarian Award for Global Health, an award whose namesake continues to inspire action and hope in the fight against global poverty and disease. Today, effective advocacy is more important than ever in supporting results-driven efforts that fight poverty, combat preventable disease, put children in school and create economic opportunity for the world’s poor. As exemplified by organizations like Physicians for Peace, huge advances against disease and poverty are being made every day thanks to smart programs and strong local leadership in developing countries. We are humbled to join the ranks of former award recipients Senator Bill Frist and Professor Jeffrey Sachs, and we thank Physicians for Peace for this honor.”
The award will be presented during Physicians for Peace’s Celebrate the Nations Gala Reception on October 3, 2009 in Virginia Beach, Va. Stay tuned for more information about the Gala and our ongoing partnership with PFP!
On Friday evening I had the great fortune of attending a Physicians for Peace’s dinner in Virginia Beach where I learned more about the incredible work that our partners are doing in Eritrea. The Eritrean Ministry of Health, The George Washington University Medical Center (GWUMC) and Physicians for Peace have come together in the “Partnership for Eritrea” to bring the first post-graduate medical training programs to this Horn of Africa country. This remarkable collaboration is addressing the desperate need for healthcare providers in a country where there are only five physicians for every 100,000 people.
Among the honored guests was the Honorable Ghirmai Ghebremariam, Ambassador of the State of Eritrea to the United States. Dr. Jim Scott, Dean, GWUMC and Dr. Ellen K. Hamburger of the Children’s National Medical Center spoke of the pediatric and surgery residency program and Dr. Judy Sondheimer provided a testimonial about her personal experience as visiting faculty in Eritrea. Their presentations were truly inspired and the success of the Partnership could very well become a model for reducing “brain drain” throughout the continent. Learn more here.
I just returned from a trip to Mali with five courageous American women. We witnessed the needless suffering so many women experience because they fight to survive on less than $1US a day. Not only do they live in deplorable conditions, but often, no one really pays much attention to their health needs—sometimes, not even themselves.
But there are real glimmers of hope.
My trip was with Physicians for Peace, which sends countless medical volunteers like me to take their teaching skills to some of the most desperate and impoverished places in the world. Sometimes they deal with diseases unheard of in developed countries– none more devastating and debilitating than obstetric fistula, the result of prolonged obstructed labor.
This sinister condition, affecting millions of womn– most in Sub-Saharan Africa—is, as Dr. Ouattara says a “barometer of maternal health. When fistula decreases, maternal health is improving.” Fistula is a frequent reminder of failed health care systems, gender inequity and the pervasive insidiousness of poverty and the toll it takes on women.
When you look into the eyes of a young teen girl like I did, who has experienced her second miscarriage after suffering harrowing labor, you can’t help but be forever changed. Unfortunately, there are hundreds of thousands of little girls just like her. We owe it to them to do more. A woman’s right to health should not depend upon where she lives!
Some ONE volunteers and I just returned from an amazing forum in Norfolk, VA! We heard from some incredible panelists on collaborative, sustainable health care in the developing world at the Physicians for Peace Global Health Forum 2009 at Norfolk State University. Global health expert and humanitarian Dr. Paul Farmer gave the keynote address. Dr. Farmer is founding director of Partners in Health, an organization that works with poor communities worldwide to fight extreme poverty and preventable disease. He was glad to receive another ONE band from his “ONE peeps”, as he put it, and smiled for a picture with ONE volunteers and Brig. General Ron Sconyers, President and CEO of Physicians for Peace (left). General Sconyers has partnered with ONE before as a panelist in the ONE Town Hall discussion at Old Dominion University last month.
There is a lot of exciting advocacy work happening in southeastern Virginia where groups like Operation Smile and ONE partners Operation Blessing International and Physicians for Peace are headquartered – learn more and get involved today!
The Old Dominion University community gathered on Global Health Day yesterday to host their congressman, Glenn Nye of Virginia’s 2nd district at a ONE Town Hall on global poverty and American foreign policy. There were no empty seats to be had in the Board of Visitors room as guests from outside the campus community also joined the students and faculty for this important panel discussion. It seems passion about fighting global poverty knows no limits of age or background in the 2nd district – a trend we see with ONE members all over the country who truly come from all walks of life. Graduate and undergraduate students, fraternity brothers and Model United Nations award-winners all came together to bring this event to campus!
ODU President John R. Broderick kicked off the event with a warm welcome to Congressman Nye, the panelists and guests. The Congressman began by saying that he owed his interest in international humanitarian issues to the organization represented by his fellow distinguished panelist, Brigadier General Ron Sconyers, President and CEO of Physicians for Peace (physiciansforpeace.org). Rep. Nye first traveled abroad with his father on Physicians for Peace missions and saw firsthand global health challenges in the developing world. General Sconyers, acknowledging the flaws in our own American system, emphasized the dramatic discrepancy between health care in United States and health care in poor countries. He also pointed out that medicine can heal across language, religious, and cultural barriers. Congressman Nye shared his experiences from his days with the State Department and the United States Agency for International Development. Both the General and the Congressman said that development aid is not only a moral imperative, but in the interest of national security for the United States. General Sconyers learned from diplomacy as a doctor that it is difficult to hate someone who saves your son or daughter’s life.
The students asked the panel how they could take action to fight extreme poverty and preventable disease. International Studies graduate student and ONE member John Applebaugh, who represented ODU students on the panel, eloquently encouraged his peers to stay informed and involved in these issues by becoming an advocate. He pointed to his advocacy work with ONE and cited one.org as an excellent resource to learn more about the issues and how to take action.
Matthew Bartlett, ONE Senior Manager for Field Development and Training, reminded the audience that we could only have success by reaching across the aisle to work together on issues that are not Republican or Democrat, but human. Congressman Nye applauded Matthew and ONE for finding common ground for bipartisan champions of increased and better aid to fight HIV/AIDS, malaria, TB. He committed to continued efforts to collaborate with members of both parties on these issues.
Congressman Nye’s staff told us that he insisted on finding time in his schedule while in district to participate in this panel on the ODU campus after having interacted with ONE members in his district on several different occasions. This panel discussion was the first of its kind for ONE and a direct result of efforts by ONE volunteers to reach out to their congressman and engage him in these issues. A little advocacy goes a long way – keep up the good work and continue to keep fighting for the world’s poorest people at the forefront of the discussion! We thank Congressman Nye and his staff for making it a priority to have this important dialogue with his constituents during his very busy time in district – and we look forward to other congressmen following his example and hosting similar town halls in their home districts! GO ONE VA!
Right now, some of the world's biggest oil companies are fighting to keep some of their deals with foreign governments secret. Let's tell big oil we won't be bullied.
Cuts to poverty-fighting programs won't balance the budget, but they will set back progress on Canada's development priorities and risk jeopardizing existing investments.
2011 marks 30 years since the first cases of AIDS were documented. Take a closer look at the specific, achievable goals we must hit by 2015 to make this year the beginning of the end of AIDS.