The COVID-19 pandemic has illuminated health disparities in Wisconsin and across the world. The challenges of equity and systemic racism have been magnified as protests at the death of George Floyd from police brutality ignited a movement for justice, locally and globally. Bringing together diverse campus, community and international voices—including UW faculty, health care providers, public health experts and policy makers—the University of Wisconsin-Madison Global Health Institute (GHI) is hosting a new webinar series, “COVID & Equity: What We’ve Learned; Where We Go From Here.”
The series begins July 23 and continues July 30, August 20 and August 27, moving from local to global challenges and lessons learned to planning for the future. The first three panel presentations will be from 9-10 a.m. Central Daylight time. Registration information for each session is below. Video links will be added as they are available.
Panelists come from Wisconsin and span the globe. They include Lisa Peyton Caire, CEO and founder of the Foundation for Black Women’s Wellness; Stewart Simonson, WHO Assistant Director General, and Heounohu Romello Hessou, clinical coordinator of Liberia’s National COVID-19 Isolation and Treatment Center. The moderators contribute experience in international and local public health, public policy and clinical medicine.
In each webinar, panelists will explore issues of health equity, what we have learned from the pandemic and how we can move toward a more equitable and sustainable future for all. The webinars will also lay the groundwork for a series of policy briefs to further conversation on these issues of critical importance.
“Equity and justice are core to addressing global health challenges,” says GHI Director Jonathan Patz. “The coronavirus pandemic and institutional racism highlight the complex and interconnected causes of inequity that we must address to move forward. With these seminars, the Institute draws on the strength of its network to shed light on health disparities and point the way toward a more equitable and sustainable future.”
Here’s a closer look at each panel:
July 23: “Improving Health Equity in Wisconsin” (Watch the video.) will examine poverty, race and health in the state’s communities impacted by inequities. Who’s at risk? Who receives care? How can we develop effective, equitable and sustainable partnerships and policies that respect communities and advance their well-being? Sheri Johnson, director of the UW-Madison Population Health Institute, moderates the panel that includes Lisa Peyton Caire, CEO and founder of Foundation for Black Women’s Wellness, Paula Tran Inzeo, director of the Mobilizing Action Toward Community Health (MATCH) program, and Lakita Maulson, a UW medical student, class of ’21, in the Wisconsin Academy for Rural Medicine from the Lac du Flambeau Ojibwe Nation.
July 30: “Institutions Respond: Ensuring Equitable Care” will explore how institutions, including the World Health Organization and World Bank, have responded to the pandemic (watch the video here). What policies have guided the response? How can institutional bias be addressed? Who will ensure care is available to all? Ambassador John E. Lange, senior fellow for Global Health Diplomacy at the United Nations Foundation, moderates the panel that includes Stewart Simonson, WHO assistant director general; Graham Harrison, senior science and technology specialist with the World Bank’s Africa Centers of Excellence (ACE) Impact Project, and Lori DiPrete Brown, associate director at the Global Health Institute. Register for the webinar here.
August 20: “Lessons from Abroad: From Ebola to COVID” will explore how countries in low- and middle-income countries have responded to the pandemic. This case study will look at how other countries can learn from the Liberian experience combating both Ebola and COVID-19. Panelists will focus on pandemic response, health systems development and health equity. GHI Associate Director Janis P. Tupesis, an emergency medicine physician who’s worked with WHO and the World Bank, moderates the session. Panelists include Mohammed Dunbar, a former Mandela Washington fellow and public health officer in Liberia; Heounohu Romello Hessou, clinical coordinator of Liberia’s National COVID-19 Isolation and Treatment Center, and Michelle Niescierenko, director of the Global Health Program and assistant professor of Pediatrics & Emergency Medicine, Harvard Medical School. Register for the webinar here.
August 27: “Moving Forward: Building a More Equitable World” will explore what we can do today to build greater equitable and sustainable health for all. Where are the opportunities for greater racial and social equity in environmental, economic and health policies? How can we build on the strengths of all stakeholders and ensure all voices are heard? Watch this page for more information. Dekila Chungyalpa, director of the Loka Initiative, moderates the session. Panelists include Wisconsin State Representative Shelia Stubbs, Milwaukee Health Commissioner Jeanette Kowalik and Ho-Chunk Elder Janet Rice. Register for the webinar here.