Translate page with Google

Pulitzer Center Update April 4, 2019

Resources for World Health Day 2019

Author:
Media file: live-the-way-you-want.jpg
English

A documentary by Carl Gierstorfer follows one community’s fight for survival against Ebola through...

Image by Carl Gierstorfer. Bong County, Liberia, Winter 2014/2015.
Image by Carl Gierstorfer. Bong County, Liberia, Winter 2014/2015.

April 7 is World Health Day, focusing this year on universal health coverage. If you want to help students understand the health crises facing their communities and the world as a whole, we have resources for you. Here are our top 5 global health lessons for World Health Day 2019:

Image by Carl Gierstorfer. 2015.
Image by Carl Gierstorfer. 2015.

1. Reporting on Epidemics

Students explore how health topics are presented in the news media and go behind the scenes of two Pulitzer Center reporting projects on Ebola and HIV/AIDS.

Screen shot from the July 11, 2016
Screen shot from the July 11, 2016 "Ending AIDS" PBS NewsHour broadcast

2. Ending Epidemics: Strategies for Preventing the Spread of Infectious Diseases

Students learn about the concept of epidemiology and how it is used to control or prevent the spread of infectious diseases through a hands-on simulation game and other activities.

Image by Sean Gallagher. India, 2013.
Image by Sean Gallagher. India, 2013.

3. Toxic Business: Pollution, Industry, and Health in India

Students learn about tannery and e-waste pollution in India and how it impacts people's health, as well as how Americans are connected to the crisis through consumer goods.

Transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of the Zika virus. Image by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Transmission electron micrograph (TEM) of the Zika virus. Image by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

4. Outwitting Nature's Greatest Killer: Mosquitoes and Disease

Half a million people die from malaria annually. What do we do? Students use information from a multimedia story to debate strategies for preventing mosquito-borne diseases.

Image by Makenzie Huber. Dominican Republic, 2016.
Image by Makenzie Huber. Dominican Republic, 2016.

5. Cooking Up Pollution: The Health Crisis of Open Fires and Leaky Stoves

Students learn about health problems from solid fuel cooking and resultant indoor pollution, alternative cooking methods that could help, and obstacles to implementing change.

SECTIONS
Media file: cohen.jpg
English

Project

Ending AIDS

An on-the-ground look at efforts in Africa and the United States to end the HIV/AIDS epidemic.

Image by Sean Gallagher. India, 2013.
English

Pollution in India is a hidden problem with catastrophic consequences affecting rural and urban...

Mahal, an orangutan who was rejected by his mother at a Colorado zoo, at the Milwaukee County Zoo. Image by Mark Hoffman for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. United States, 2017.
English

The closer the contact the greater the risk humans and animals will pass devastating diseases to...

author #1 image author #2 image
Multiple Authors
TBD
English

Nearly half the people on earth use open fires to cook their food and heat their homes, and the...

author #1 image author #2 image
Multiple Authors

RELATED TOPICS

yellow halftone illustration of an elephant

Topic

Environment and Climate Change

Environment and Climate Change
teal halftone illustration of a hand holding a pride flag

Topic

LGBTQ+ Rights

LGBTQ+ Rights
navy halftone illustration of a female doctor with her arms crossed

Topic

Health Inequities

Health Inequities
Three women grouped together: an elderly woman smiling, a transwoman with her arms folded, and a woman holding her headscarf with a baby strapped to her back.

Topic

Gender Equality

Gender Equality
navy halftone illustration of a boy carrying two heavy buckets

Topic

Water and Sanitation

Water and Sanitation
navy halftone illustration of a group of pharmaceutical pills

Topic

Outbreaks and Epidemics

Outbreaks and Epidemics