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International conference - AFRICA’S NEGLECTED EPIDEMIC PDF Print E-mail

IIAS fellow Dr Ama de-Graft Aikins is co-organising a conference for the British Academy, Royal Society and Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences on the theme 'Africa's Neglected Epidemic: Multidisciplinary Research, Intervention and Policy for Chronic Diseases, on 16th & 17th February 2009 at the British Council (Accra). DetailsProgramme Schedule.

 

AFRICA’S NEGLECTED EPIDEMIC
Multidisciplinary Research, Intervention and Policy for Chronic Diseases
An international conference organised by the British Academy, Royal Society and the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences

 
 
 A photo of a typical traditional health provider
 
Africa faces a neglected epidemic of chronic diseases. In countries like Ghana, Cameroon and Nigeria, stroke, hypertension, diabetes and cancers cause a significant number of medical admissions and deaths. This conference brings together researchers, healthcare providers, policymakers and donors from Africa, UK and Europe to discuss research, practice and policy on Africa's chronic disease burden.

Africa faces a neglected epidemic of chronic diseases. In countries like Ghana, Cameroon and Nigeria, chronic conditions such as stroke, hypertension, diabetes and cancers cause a significant number of medical admissions and deaths. Experts recognize that a problem exists and attribute it to an interaction of factors including medical, psychological, socio-cultural, economic, structural and geopolitical. There is a consensus that successful interventions have to be ‘multi-faceted’ and ‘multi-institutional’. However, research, practice and policy responses remain inadequate.  

In 2006, the British Academy awarded a UK-Africa Partnership grant to Dr Ama de-Graft Aikins from the University of Cambridge, and Dr Daniel Arhinful, from Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, to develop a programme of collaborative research on the subject of Africa’s ‘neglected epidemic’: Developing a multidisciplinary research and intervention model for chronic disease. Given the success of their project, and its strong interdisciplinary approach, it was felt to form the ideal basis for a larger conference to be jointly organized by the British Academy, Royal Society and Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences. 

This conference brings together researchers, healthcare providers, policymakers, donors and other stakeholders from Africa, UK and Europe to discuss Africa’s chronic disease burden. Topics include: the history of public health in Africa, current trends in public health policy, prospects for achieving the health MDGs in Africa, developing interdisciplinary interventions for chronic diseases, the nutrition transition in Africa, the inter-relationship between communicable and non-communicable diseases, scientific and lay aspects of traditional medicine, and building capacity in the health sciences. It is hoped that the conference might be able to bring fresh insights to the ongoing debate, and to the formulation of a new set of recommendations.

Speakers include:
Dr Edward Addai (The Global Fund, Geneva)
Professor Marian Addy (Anglican University College/GAAS)
Dr Charles Agyemang (University of Amsterdam)
Professor Pascale Allotey (Brunel University)
Dr Paul Amuna (University of Greenwich)
Dr Marius de Jong (Royal Netherlands Embassy/DFID)
Dr Anthony Seddoh (WHO-Afro)
Professor Nigel Unwin (University of Newcastle)
Professor Megan Vaughan (University of Cambridge/The British Academy)
Professor Sir Magdi Yacoub (Keynote Speaker, Imperial College/Royal Society)

The organizers gratefully acknowledge the support of The British Council, Accra and the LSE’s Institute of Social Psychology for this event.
 
 
In support of the conference