10 episodes

Anthony Costello's Conversation at The Social Edge offers in depth conversation about big ideas and solutions for our health, wealth and sustainable future. If you’re interested in medicine, public health, nutrition or the environment this blog is for you. Or if you want to know more about the politics and economics of health and sustainable development. I shall give you evidence, discussion and the tools you need for your own success.

Anthony Costello's Conversation At the Social Edge Anthony Costello

    • Science

Anthony Costello's Conversation at The Social Edge offers in depth conversation about big ideas and solutions for our health, wealth and sustainable future. If you’re interested in medicine, public health, nutrition or the environment this blog is for you. Or if you want to know more about the politics and economics of health and sustainable development. I shall give you evidence, discussion and the tools you need for your own success.

    Lesley Regan on women leaders, reproductive rights and childbirth.

    Lesley Regan on women leaders, reproductive rights and childbirth.

    A podcast interview with Professor Lesley Regan, President of the Royal College of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.




    President of RCOG, Lesley Regan



    In this podcast I chat with Lesley about what brought her into medicine and women’s health, her thoughts on women in leadership and breaking through the glass ceiling, and her fight to ensure all women receive their reproductive rights and safer childbirth.




    Before the interview I talk briefly about the current Ebola outbreak in the Congo and mention a Figure showing its geographical spread. Here it is up to the first week of July 2019.




    img data-attachment-id="1111" data-permalink="http://www.anthonycostello.net/podcast/lesley-regan-on-women-in-leadership-reproductive-rights-and-safer-childbirth/ebola-spread-july-2019/" data-orig-file="https://i1.wp.com/www.anthonycostello.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Ebola-spread-July-2019.png?fit=660%2C413" data-orig-size="660,413" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="Ebola spread July 2019" data-image-description="" data-medium-file="https://i1.wp.com/www.anthonycostello.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Ebola-spread-July-2019.png?fit=300%2C188" data-large-file="https://i1.wp.com/www.anthonycostello.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/Ebola-spread-July-2019.png?fit=660%2C413" src="https://i1.wp.co

    • 1 hr 2 min
    Food systems: a conversation with David Nabarro

    Food systems: a conversation with David Nabarro

    Former Assistant UN Secretary General and winner of the 2018 World Food Prize







    My latest podcast conversation with David Nabarro about food systems, food company regulation and the challenges for 2.5 billion people who rely upon small farming for their livelihoods.




    You might like to look at some recent reports which I refe

    • 34 min
    Reasons to be Cheerful: My Podcast with Ed Miliband and Geoff Lloyd

    Reasons to be Cheerful: My Podcast with Ed Miliband and Geoff Lloyd

    In which I joined Ed and Geoff, along with Julia Unwin and Dr Agnelo Fernandes, to chat about humanity, kindness and sympathy groups in public services.

    On Cannabis, and Health Systems for Women and Children with Rajani Ved and Tanya Doherty

    On Cannabis, and Health Systems for Women and Children with Rajani Ved and Tanya Doherty

    My thoughts on Cannabis drawn from a new review by Michael Bloomfield and colleagues:

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0163725818301906?via%3Dihub

    Bloomfield et al. The neuropsychopharmacology of cannabis: A review of human imaging studies.
    And two interviews with Rajani Ved (Advisor, Community Processes and Primary Health Care, at the National Health Systems Resource Center, which provides technical support to the Government of India’s National Health Mission) and Tanya Doherty (professor, South African Medical Research Council) about health systems for women and children in low income settings linked to papers in the recent BMJ Series, especially one that they both authored on

    Doherty et al. “The role of district health teams for child health strategies”
    https://www.bmj.com/content/362/bmj.k2823

    img data-attachment-id="1048" data-permalink="http://www.anthonycostello.net/podcast/on-cannabis-and-health-systems-for-women-and-children-with-rajani-ved-and-tanya-doherty/rajani-r-ved/" data-orig-file="https://i1.wp.com/www.anthonycostello.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/11/Rajani-R.-Ved.jpg?fit=166%2C166" data-orig-size="166,166" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"0","credit":"","camera":"","caption":"","created_timestamp":"0","copyright":"","focal_length":"0","iso":"0","shutter_speed":"0","title":"","orientation":"0"}" data-image-title="Rajani-R.-Ved" data-image-

    • 40 min
    Future Directions for Child Health Part 1. Mike Merson and Theresa Diaz

    Future Directions for Child Health Part 1. Mike Merson and Theresa Diaz

    News Update Topics

    Yemen conflict; Spain’s donation to UNRWA; Leptospirosis in India, UK child poverty; the WHO Global Exercise Report

    Interviews on the latest BMJ Series on the WHO UNICEF Strategic Review of Child Health

    https://www.bmj.com/child-health

    1. Mike Merson

    Wolfgang Joklik Professor of Global Health and Vice President and Vice Provost for Global Affairs at Duke University. He joined the Duke faculty in November 2006 as the founding director of the Duke Global Health Institute and served in that role through 2017. In addition, Dr. Merson was Vice Chancellor for Duke-National University of Singapore (NUS) Affairs until 2017.

    In 1978, he joined the World Health Organization (WHO) as a Medical Officer in the Diarrheal Diseases Control Program. He served as Director of that Program from January 1980 until May 1990. In August 1987, he was also appointed Director of the WHO Acute Respiratory Infections Control Program. In May 1990, he was appointed as Director of the WHO Global Program on AIDS. This Program was operational worldwide and responsible for mobilizing and coordinating the global response to the AIDS pandemic.

    2. Theresa Diaz

    Public health physician, trained at Columbia University, Coordinator Epidemiology and Monitoring and Evaluation Team, MCA, WHO. Formerly with CDC Atlanta and UNICEF.

    • 48 min
    How to be a social activist for health: an interview with David Sanders

    How to be a social activist for health: an interview with David Sanders

     



     

    David Sanders, an internationally renowned paediatrician and public health researcher, has spent fifty years involved in struggles for health in Zimbabwe, the UK and South Africa. David has always been passionate about participatory socialist democracy as a way to improve health and reduce inequality. In this wide-ranging one hour interview he offers analysis of the causes of the causes of inequality and poor health, and guidance to young social and health activists about how to tackle contemporary challenges for health, the environment, gender and inequality.

    In the UK, as a political emigre from Rhodesia, he trained in paediatrics and became a Founder member of the Medical Association against Private Practice. At St Thomas’s hospital in London he learnt much “about the British Class system”. At the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine he became an advocate for the Alma Ata Declaration on primary health care and was influenced by the writings of the Marxist doctor Vicente Navarro.

    Returning to Zimbabwe for twelve years, 1980-1992, he was active for Zapu and Zanu PF, took a post as health adviser for Oxfam, and then as lecturer in the medical school. Over time he became disillusioned with the Mugabe regime, especially after the Matabeleland massacres.

    Since 1992, through his pioneering work at the University of the Western Cape in Cape Town, and in the People’s Health Movement, he has been a leading critic of structural adjustment, neoliberal economics and the causes of social and economic inequality which underpin poor health. His research and books have highlighted the links between social and political injustice as the root cause of maternal and child ill-health.

    One lesser known fact about David is that he is a passionate and expert fly fisherman. For many years he went fly-fishing in the UK with the jazz singer, author and raconteur, George Melly.

    img data-attachment-id="1002" data-permalink="http://www.anthonycostello.net/podcast/how-to-be-a-social-activist-for-health-an-interview-with-david-sanders/img_4485/" data-orig-file="https://i2.wp.com/www.anthonycostello.net/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/IMG_4485.jpg?fit=480%2C640" data-orig-size="480,640" data-comments-opened="1" data-image-meta="{"aperture":"1.8","credit":"","camera":"iPhone X","caption":"","created_timestam

    • 1 hr 8 min

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