2003 Shows
A monthly radio
magazine devoted to covering major issues in public health.
Produced and hosted by Dr. Marvin Malek, with Dr. Andy Coates, Dr. Gerald Zahavi, and Elaine Hills.
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Program
#35 (December 2003)
THE
HEALTH CARE SAFETY NET, PART ONE: THE FREE CLINICS IN THE
STATE OF VERMONT: ACHIEVEMENTS AND REMAINING CHALLENGES
IN PROVIDING HEALTH CARE FOR THE UNINSURED. [MP3].
{A
special Public Health Radio documentary}
Show
#35 is the first in a two part series on the health care
safety net in the United States. Unlike all the other developed
nations, the United States has allowed a large portions
of its population-about 44 million individuals, according
to the US Census-to go without health insurance. The high
prices of medical care make it difficult for these individuals
to seek care at most doctors offices and hospitals. A number
of institutions-all with varying degrees of public funding-are
specifically designed to address the health care needs of
the poor and uninsured. Taken together, these institutions
are referred to as the health care safety net.
One
key safety net institution is the 800 free clinics that
have sprouted up across the United States. Because Vermont
has only one community health center and no public hospitals,
its nine free clinics serve a uniquely important role. In
show #35 we interview free clinic volunteers, staff, and
patients to provide a special documentary edition of Public
Health Radio. Their experiences provide insights into the
achievements and limitations of the services that free clinics
are able to offer their patients.
Relevant
websites include the National Association of Free Clinics
http://www.nafclinics.org/ and the Vermont Coalition of
Clinics for the Uninsured http://www.vccu.net/. Other relevant
websites are listed under Show #36.
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Program
#34 (November 2003)
INCINERATION
OF PLASTIC, RUBBER, AND MUNICIPAL AND MEDICAL WASTE: PUBLIC
HEALTH IMPACT, AND THE AVAILABILITY OF ALTERNATIVES TO INCINERATION.
[MP3].
This
show explores the public health impacts of incineration.
We look at the incineration of rubber and tire fragments,
of municipal waste, and also of medical waste. Our guests
review the array of substances that exit the smokestacks
of incinerators, their impacts on human health. Finally,
we discuss some alternatives to incineration.
Our
guests are Paul Connett, Jorge Emmanuel, Peter Orris and
Neil Carman. Paul Connett is a Professor of Chemistry at
St. Lawrence University in Canton, NY. His research has
focused on the interactions of heavy metals and dioxins
with biological systems, and the physical chemistry of waste
incineration. Jorge Emmanuel is a chemical engineer, specializing
in medical waste management. He is currently one of two
lead consultants to the World Health Organization on a project
to reduce medical waste incineration in developing countries.
Neil Carman is a biologist who worked for many years at
the Texas Air Control Board, the primary agency which investigates
and regulates air pollution in the state of Texas. Dr. Carman
currently serves as Senior Scientist at the Lone Star Chapter
of the Sierra Club. Peter Orris, MD MPH is a medical doctor
specializing in Occupational Medicine, and Professor of
Environmental and Occupational Health at the University
of Illinois at Chicago.
The
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, a branch
of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, collects
and disseminates scientific information about the health
effects of industrial and residential chemicals and other
substances which have toxic potential. The website is:
http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/. Health Care Without Harm
is an international organization which disseminates information
about the public health impacts of the incineration of medical
waste. Website is: http://www.noharm.org/medicalWaste/issue.
The Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives promotes
alternative technologies to municipal and medical incineration.
http://www.no-burn.org/
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Program
#33 (October 2003)
EMERGENCY
CONTRACEPTION: WHAT IS AVAILABLE FOR POST-COITAL CONTRACEPTION
& WHY SO FEW WOMEN ARE TAKING ADVANTAGE OF IT. [MP3].
Heather
Boonstra and James Trussell join us to discuss Emergency
Contraception. Emergency Contraception is a medication that
is taken within three days after intercourse when there
was a suspected failure of contraception. Despite its track
record of minimal side effects, and about 88% effectiveness
at preventing pregnancy, emergency contraception has received
virtually no publicity in the US, and little more than 10%
of women of reproductive age are familiar with it. Most
experts estimate that half of the 1,000,000 abortions that
occur in the US each year would be prevented if knowledge
of emergency contraception were widespread, and the medication
were readily available at all pharmacies.
Heather Boonstra is a Senior Policy Associate at
the The Alan Guttmacher Institute. http://www.guttmacher.org
She earned a Masters Degree in Religion and Medical Ethics
from Yale University, and has worked as a consultant in
international population and family planning with the Center
for International Health and Information.
James Trussell is Professor of Economics and Public Affairs
and Director of the Office of Population Research at Princeton
University. He is the author or co-author of nearly 200
scientific publications, primarily in the areas of reproductive
health and demographic methodology, and emergency contraception
has been one important research focus. He maintains an emergency
contraception website (not-2-late.com) and designed and
launched a toll-free emergency contraception hotline (1-888-NOT-2-LATE).
FEMALE
SEXUAL DYSFUNCTION: THE CREATION OF A DIAGNOSIS FOR THE
SAKE OF DRUG INDUSTRY PROFITABILITY
Pharmaceutical companies have been scrambling to find a
female equivalent of Viagra, the enormously profitable blockbuster
drug that has revolutionized the treatment of erectile dysfunction
in men. However, thus far, the drug industry has not only
failed to identify a single medicine that effectively improves
female sexual response, but Leonore Tiefer, guest on this
edition of Public Health Radio asserts that Female Sexual
Dysfunction does not even meet any of the usual criteria
of a disease syndrome. Further information can be obtained
at http://www.fsd-alert.org
Leonore Tiefer, PhD is a sex therapist and an expert
in the field of female sexual dysfunction. She serves as
a Clinical Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry
and Behavioral Sciences at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
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Program
#32 (September 2003) TERRORISM
AND PUBLIC HEALTH. [MP3].
Barry Levy
and Victor Sidel discuss their recently released book,
Terrorism and Public Health (Oxford University Press, New
York, http://www.oup-usa.com
). During the interview, we review the chronology of events
that faced the New York City Dept of Health after the terrorist
attacks, the anthrax scares that followed, and address the
importance of public health in the defense against terrorism.
Barry
Levy MD MPH practices in the field of occupational and environmental
health, and is on the faculty of Tufts University School
of Medicine.
Victor Sidel MD is Distinguished University Professor at
Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Both are founding members
of the IPPNW, the organization that won the 1985 Nobel Peace
Prize, and both are past Presidents of the American Public
Health Association.
TWO
YEARS AFTER 9/11: PUBLIC HEALTH AND THE DEFENSE AGAINST
TERRORIST ATTACK
Public Health Radio host Marvin Malek reviews the Bush administration's
approach to terrorism two years after the 9/11 terrorist
attacks. Liabilities of an "offensive" approach
to terrorism are highlighted, as is the relative neglect
of defensive assets, such as the public health sector. |
Program
#31 (August 2003) THE
PHYSICIANS' PROPOSAL FOR A NATIONAL HEALTH PROGRAM. [MP3].
MAIN SEGMENT: A CONVERSATION WITH GARRY DENNIS, QUENTIN
YOUNG, AND RON ANDERSON ABOUT THE PHYSICIAN'S PROPOSAL FOR
A NATIONAL HEALTH PROGRAM.
To promote the cause of universal health care, a prestigious
group of physicians developed a proposal for a universal health
care system that patterns itself on the systems in Canada,
Australia, and other developed countries. It was published
in the Journal of the American Medical Association,
the most widely circulated medical journal in the US. The
proposal was endorsed by nearly 10,000 physicians. The physicians
propose a tax financed system, in which health insurance funds
in each state would pay for all needed medical care. Because
all citizens, and virtually all medical care would be paid
for out by these state insurance funds, the private health
insurance companies would become obsolete if the proposal
were enacted. The physicians estimate that despite generously
funding health services without deductibles or co-payments
for every US citizen, the system would not cost more than
we are currently spending on health care. Savings in the proposal
come from eliminating the massive administrative costs imposed
by the private health insurance system, by efficient regional
planning of health services, and by discounts obtained from
bulk purchasing of prescription drugs and other medical supplies.
The proposal is available on the web at physiciansproposal.org.
Garry Dennis is the Chief of the Division
of Neurosurgery at Howard University College of Medicine in
Washington, DC, and is a past President of the National Medical
Association. Quentin Young is a Clinical
Professor of Preventive Medicine at the University of Illinois
Medical Center, a Past President of the American Public Health
Association, and, for 10 years, has served as the National
Coordinator of the Physicians for a National Health Program,
an organization that has been in the forefront of the struggle
for universal health care. Ron Anderson is
President and Chief Executive Officer of Parkland Health and
Hospital System, in Dallas, TX, one of the largest public
hospitals in the country. |
Program
#30 (July 2003) Public
Health in Afghanistan, Part II / Judy Wilkenfeld Discusses
the Final Stage of the World Health Organization's International
Negotiation to Limit the Spread of Tobacco Addiction into
the Poorer Contries of the Global South. [MP3].
SEGMENT 1: PUBLIC
HEALTH CRISIS IN AFGHANISTAN: REPORT FROM THE FRONT LINE:
PART 2
Annalies Borrel and Peter Salama discuss the many elements
contributing to the crisis in public health in war-ravaged
Afghanistan. These include the drought and crop failure, high
rates of infectious diseases, poor access to reproductive
health services, and high rates of disability due to war injuries
and landmines. Drs. Salama and Borrel also discuss the development
efforts underway to address these public health issues. This
portion of the interview (Part 2) focuses especially on the
impacts of war and landmines, drugs and HIV, and the redevelopment
effort. Peter Salama, MD, serves in Afghanistan as the Chief
of Health and Nutrition for UNICEF Afghanistan. In that capacity,
he is resonsible for the design and implementation of UNICEF's
largest health and nutrition program. Annalies Borrel currently
serves as the Senior Food Security and Nutrition Adviser for
the Afghani Ministry of Health, and is also on the UNICEF
Afghanistan staff.
SEGMENT 2: COMPLETION AND ACCEPTANCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL
TOBACCO TREATY AT THE WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
Judy Wilkenfeld provides an update on the final rounds of
the treaty negotiation to limit the spread of tobacco addiction
into the poor countries of the Global South. The treaty negotiation,
known as the "Framework Convention on Tobacco Control", was
convened by the World Health Organization. She comments on
the likelihood of ratification in the US, and the probable
overall impact of the treaty. Judy Wilkenfeld leads the activities
of the Center for Tobacco Free Kids' to monitor, publicize,
and strengthen the tobacco control treaty. |
Program
#29 (June 2003) Public
Health in Afghanistan, Part I / Maine's Drug Prescription
Program / Commentary on Maine and the World Health Organization
[MP3] [MP3].
SEGMENT 1: PUBLIC HEALTH CRISIS IN AFGHANISTAN: REPORT
FROM THE FRONT LINE (PART 1)
Annalies Borrel and Peter Salama discuss the many elements
contributing to the public health crisis in war-ravaged Afghanistan.
These include drought and crop failure, high rates of infectious
diseases, poor access to reproductive health services, and
high rates of disability due to war injuries and landmines.
Drs. Salama and Borrel also discuss the development efforts
underway to address these public health issues. This portion
of the interview (Part 1) focuses provides an historical context
for the current crisis, and describes agriculture and malnutrition,
and problems in maternal and child health in Afghanistan.
Peter Salama, MD, serves in Afghanistan as the Chief of Health
and Nutrition for UNICEF Afghanistan. In that capacity, he
is responsible for the design and implementation of UNICEF's
largest health and nutrition program. Annalies Borrel currently
serves as the Senior Food Security and Nutrition Adviser for
the Afghani Ministry of Health, and is also on the UNICEF
Afghanistan staff.
SEGMENT 2: MAINE Rx: THE RATIONALE AND HISTORY OF
THE STATE OF MAINE'S EFFORT TO REDUCE PRESCRIPTION DRUG PRICES
Kevin Concannon discusses the mechanism used in the Maine
Rx law, passed in May, 2000, and provides some of its history.
After prolonged appeals and legal challenges by the drug industry,
Maine Rx Law was upheld by a 6 - 3 vote in the US Supreme
Court in May, 2003. Mr. Concannon provides the context in
Maine: A poor state with strong connections to Canada, in
which thousands of citizens cannot afford the medicines their
doctors are prescribing. There was strong public support for
an activist administration to develop a program to lower prescription
drug prices for the 330,000 residents of Maine who have no
form of prescription drug insurance coverage. Kevin Concannon
was the Commissioner of the Department of Human Services in
the state of Maine from 1995 through February, 2003. He led
the Maine Rx initiative for the state government in Maine.
He currently serves as the Director of the Iowa Department
of Human Services.
COMMENTARY: TWO PUBLIC HEALTH ACHIEVEMENTS DURING
MAY, 2003
Public Health Radio host Marvin Malek discusses the patience
and persistence needed to achieve two important milestones
which occurred during the previous month: The victory in the
US Supreme Court of the Maine prescription drug program, and
the victory at the World Health Organization of tobacco control
advocates in achieving a strong treaty agreement to limit
the spread of tobacco addiction into the poor countries of
the Global South. |
Program
#28 (May 2003)
International
Trade Negotiations in Health Services / Military Health
Programs in the US [MP3].
Main
Interview: PROGRESS OF THE WTO NEGOTIATIONS TO REDUCE
BARRIERS TO TRADE IN HEALTH SERVICES & IMPACTS OF FREER
INTERNATIONAL TRADE ON HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS.
Debra Lipson discusses the progress of negotiations convened
by the World Trade Organization to reduce barriers to international
trade in health services, and factors that influence the
trade negotiators. She also looks at a variety of impacts
of reduced trade barriers on availability of health insurance
and health care services, especially in less developed countries.
Debra Lipson worked at the World Health Organization until
2001. A key responsibility she held was to evaluate the
impacts of international trade on health care systems. She
is currently Deputy Director of the Better Jobs Better Care
Program at the Institute for the Future of Aging Services.
Commentary:
SUPPORTING OUR TROOPS: CURRENT STATUS OF MILITARY HEALTH
PROGRAMS IN THE UNITED STATES.
Public Health Radio host Marvin Malek discusses the crisis
facing the Veterans Administration system as well as Tricare,
the health insurance program which provides health insurance
for 8 million military families and retirees. He also explores
some impacts of recent policy changes in the Department
of Veterans Affairs and in the Tricare program.
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Program
#27 (April 2003)
NICOTINE
REPLACEMENT SYSTEMS IN VERMONT / MEDICAID REFORM / URANIUM
IN VERMONT WATERS [MP3].
Main
Interview: THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION PROPOSAL TO REFORM
THE MEDICAID PROGRAM
Dennis Smith and Leighton Ku discuss the Bush administration's
proposal to reform the Medicaid program. Currently, the
federal government provides matching funding to supplement
state Medicaid spending. President Bush has proposed to
replace this with a block grant funding structure. Critics
are concerned that the proposal eliminates the incentive
the states currently have to broaden Medicaid coverage,
and also that the administration has not responded to the
widespread state budget crises and increase in the uninsured
population brought on by the current economic slowdown.
Dennis Smith is the Director of the Center for Medicaid
and State Health Programs at the Department of Health and
Human Services, appointed by President Bush in July, 2001.
Leighton Ku is a Senior Policy Analyst at the Center for
Budget and Policy Priorities.
Segment
2 : THE PRESENCE OF NATURALLY OCCURRING RADIOACTIVE
ELEMENTS IN DRINKING WATER
Larry Becker discusses the recent finding of elevated levels
of naturally occurring uranium in the drinking water of
Marshfield, VT. The discussion includes the distribution
and stability of radioactive isotopes in drinking water,
and availability of testing.
Larry Becker is the Vermont State Geologist and directs
the Vermont Geological Survey.
Segment 3 :GOVERNMENT SUBSIDY OF NICOTINE
REPLACEMENT SYSTEMS
Karen Garbarino discusses the use of nicotine replacement
systems in quitting tobacco smoking, and recently enacted
programs in Vermont and New York City to subsidize the cost
of nicotine replacement patches and gum products. |
Program
#26 (March 2003): ORAL
HEALTH IN AMERICA: A PUBLIC HEALTH OUTLOOK ON DENTISTRY AND
ORAL HEALTH IN THE US [MP3]. Interviews:
Alice Horowitz and Myron Allukian provide a public health
outlook on the magnitude of oral health problems in the United
States. They highlight major advancements, such as water flouridation
and dental sealants. They also discuss the gaping disparities
in dental care experienced by the poor and near-poor in the
US, and available solutions, as well as obstacles to progress
in oral health Myron Allukian is the Director of Oral Health
for the Boston Public Health Commission. Dr. Allukian is a
past president of the American Public Health Association (APHA),
only the second dentist to have achieved that honor. Alice
Horowitz is the Senior Scientist for Health Policy Analysis
and Development at the National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial
Health.
Commentary:
PRESIDENT BUSH'S PROPOSAL TO INCREASE FUNDING FOR THE INTERNATIONAL
HIV EPIDEMIC: OPPORTUNITIES AND OBSTACLES
Paul Zeitz discusses President Bush's proposal to triple US
funding directed toward the HIV epidemic in the Global South.
Zeitz points out the positive impact of the president's willingness
to highlight the HIV epidemic, but the disappointment brought
about by the backloading of funding, and the president's preference
to distance the US from the UN Fund for HIV, Tuberculosis
and Malaria in his funding proposal.
Dr. Paul Zeitz is the Executive Director of the Global AIDS
Alliance, an alliance of organizations working to control
the HIV epidemic across the globe. |
Program
#25 (February 2003): GE
Work Stoppage and Health Care & Medicalization of Menopause
[MP3]. Interviews:
1) THE GE WORK STOPPAGE AND THE FUTURE ROLE OF ORGANIZED LABOR
IN THE MOVEMENT FOR UNIVERSAL HEALTH CARE IN THE US
James Weldon discusses the GE work stoppage as an example
of the increasing attention health insurance has received
in contract negotiations. He discusses the evolving attitude
of organized labor toward the movement for national health
insurance.
James Weldon is the Business Manager of Local 728 of the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, building trades workers
in Southeastern Florida.
2) THE MEDICALIZATION OF MENOPAUSE AND THE FINDINGS OF THE
WOMEN'S HEALTH INITIATIVE
Amy Allina discusses the recent findings of the Women's Health
Initiative, a major NIH-funded study which demonstrated that
combined estrogen-progestin therapy increases long-term health
risks in previously healthy women. She analyzes the reasons
why the study's findings surprised many physicians, and the
role of the pharmaceutical industry in influencing the prescribing
behavior of physicians and women's understanding of how best
to traverse the menopausal period in the healthiest possible
way. Amy Allina is the Program and Policy Director of the
National Women's Health Network, a research and advocacy organization
that focuses on women's health. She is co-author of The
Truth about Hormone Replacement Therapy: How to Break Free
from the Medical Myths of Menopause. Commentary:
POLITICIZING OF APPOINTMENTS TO FEDERAL SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY
PANELS: THE CASE OF PHARMACEUTICALS OF SIGNIFICANCE TO WOMEN'S
HEALTH
Amy Allina provides an opinion piece on the importance of
maintaining basic qualifications for appointees to scientific
advisory panels. As a case study, she uses a recent Bush administration
appointee to the Food and Drug Administration advisory panel
on drugs of significance to women's reproductive health. |
Program
#24 (January 2003):
Public
Health and Privatizing Ghana's Water Supply [MP3].
Interview:
ACCESS TO SAFE WATER IN GHANA: THE IMPACT OF WORLD BANK
POLICIES. Ellen Shaffer and Joseph Brenner discuss the proposal
advanced by the World Bank to privatize Ghana's urban water
supply. Implications for availability of safe water and
sanitation are discussed. The rationale and implications
of World Bank and IMF structural adjustment programs on
the public health is also addressed.
Ellen Shaffer is an Assistant Professor of Clinical Pharmacy
at the University of California at San Francisco, and Co-Director
of the Center for Policy Analysis on Trade and Health.
Joseph Brenner works in the labor movement in the San Francisco
Bay region, and is Co-Director of the Center for Policy
Analysis on Trade and Health. Both guests participated in
a fact-finding mission to Ghana on the privatization of
Ghana's water supply which took place in Spring, 2002.
Commentary: PRESIDENT BUSH'S ECONOMIC STIMULUS
PROPOSAL AND ITS IMPACT ON PUBLIC HEALTH. Public Health
Radio host Marvin Malek analyzes the president's proposed
economic stimulus package and evaluates its impact on public
health. |
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