International Healthcare and Women: Women in Sustainable Humanitarian Outreach
Humanitarian aid offers human, technological, and financial resources to vulnerable people throughout the world. As healthcare providers, we strive to not only provide quality medical care, but also to establish sustainable programs through our global outreach endeavors. Equipped with the proper resources, women have the power to help families and entire communities. Women are at the heart of many community-based efforts to improve basic education, prevent the spread of disease, and increase access to medical care. This miniseminar focuses on the role of women in the international community as otolaryngologists, educators, community leaders, and patients. Panelists will discuss the challenges, both locally and abroad, facing women in promoting and administering outreach in developing nations. The importance of empowering women around the world by providing support through resources and education will be explored. Successful outreach missions and partnership programs will be presented to highlight the significance of establishing lasting access to healthcare through education. Panelists will relate their experiences from disparate areas of the world: the Middle East, Haiti, Africa, India, and Central America. Schedule • Introduction by AAO-HNS President J. Regan Thomas, MD. • Sonya Malekzadeh, MD, and Gregory W. Randolph, MD, will moderate the session, which includes four panelists: • Gayle E. Woodson, MD, will highlight her work on humanitarian missions in the Middle East, including how to be taken seriously overseas as a female doctor. • Marie-Maud Nazon, MD, of Haiti, will discuss pre- and post-earthquake considerations, and how local doctors interact with U.N./U.S. healthcare workers after the terrible natural disasters. • Susan R. Cordes, MD, will speak about linking ongoing educational missions between U.S. and foreign medical schools. • Sujana S. Chandrasekhar, MD, will address the particular needs and hardships of women patients in the developing world. Learning Objectives 1. Comprehend the challenges of women physicians providing sustainable humanitarian aid. 2. Appreciate what it means to be a woman patient in a developing country. 3. Understand the relationship between a U.S. program and a developing country educational program. Sponsored by the Women in Otolaryngology Section and the International Steering Committee
Humanitarian aid offers human, technological, and financial resources to vulnerable people throughout the world. As healthcare providers, we strive to not only provide quality medical care, but also to establish sustainable programs through our global outreach endeavors.
Equipped with the proper resources, women have the power to help families and entire communities. Women are at the heart of many community-based efforts to improve basic education, prevent the spread of disease, and increase access to medical care.
This miniseminar focuses on the role of women in the international community as otolaryngologists, educators, community leaders, and patients. Panelists will discuss the challenges, both locally and abroad, facing women in promoting and administering outreach in developing nations. The importance of empowering women around the world by providing support through resources and education will be explored.
Successful outreach missions and partnership programs will be presented to highlight the significance of establishing lasting access to healthcare through education. Panelists will relate their experiences from disparate areas of the world: the Middle East, Haiti, Africa, India, and Central America.
Schedule
• | Introduction by AAO-HNS President J. Regan Thomas, MD. | ||||||||
• | Sonya Malekzadeh, MD, and Gregory W. Randolph, MD, will moderate the session, which includes four panelists:
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Learning Objectives
1. | Comprehend the challenges of women physicians providing sustainable humanitarian aid. |
2. | Appreciate what it means to be a woman patient in a developing country. |
3. | Understand the relationship between a U.S. program and a developing country educational program. |
Sponsored by the Women in Otolaryngology Section and the International Steering Committee