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  • Jonny Meldrum 11:01 am on August 3, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Charley Peal has been the Medsin national exchange… 

    Charley Peal has been the Medsin national exchange officer for the last 18 months and this is her 3rd and final IFMSA General Assembly. Here, she blogs on her experiences so far, her expectations and goals.

    I wasn’t expecting to attend another GA, but, having seen the candidature and the marketing for AM2011 Denmark in Montreal last August, I was very excited to be able to attend the actual event.  Paul and I have put a lot of time and effort into re-structuring the exchange system in the UK, and it’s a privilege to attend the GA, our final GA, to represent the UK once again in the SCOPE sessions as NEOs.

     

    Paul and I have been the National Exchange Officers (NEOs) in the UK for about 18months now. We facilitate the newly named Medsin Exchanges, which are 4week professional exchanges, offered to medical students at the Universities of Leicester, Nottingham, Barts & The London, St Georges, Peninsula and Southampton, which are part of the scheme. This year we have sent nearly 60 students on an exchange, and received 60 students from over 30 countries. With a view to making the exchange programme more sustainable and desirable by more medical schools, Paul and I have worked really hard to standardise the process and the programme to aid the future NEOs and LEOs.

     

    So we have now arrived and spent our first night in Copenhagen, for my third, and Paul’s fourth GA. We attended our Standing Committee on Professional Exchange (SCOPE) session this morning, where we facilitated our first Small Working Group (SWG) session on Global Health Education and Exchanges. This is following on from a SWG which we ran in Jakarta at MM2011 and SWGs which were run by Maria from Catalonia at Sub-Regional Training (SRT) Weekends in Istanbul and Budapest this summer. Global Health is a really pertinent issue within SCOPE, and a topic that we are keen to encourage all our outgoing and incoming students to develop and interest in, be it through integrating GHE into the social programme for the incoming students or the academic quality logbook for the outgoing students.

     

    In addition to our SCOPE duties, the theme for the GA is incredible – Health and the Future. Today we attended a theme event called The Perfect Man – a 3 part session hosted by various professors, philosophers and members of The Danish Council of Ethics. It was a thought-provoking session, discussing prenatal diagnosis; physical, mechanical and pharmaceutical enhancement; and the search for the perfect man.

     

    As day 2 draws to a close, I’m extremely grateful to be here for the 60th IFMSA GA – the UK delegation is awesome and so supportive to all other delegates, the theme is very interesting and relevant, and of course, I’m really happy to see my friends from previous GAs. I’m looking forward to getting stuck in with SWGs, trainings and theme events over the next few days and enjoying my last GA to the max.

     

    Charley Peal




     

     
  • Jonny Meldrum 6:42 pm on August 2, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Medsin gets creative with lego 

     
  • Jonny Meldrum 6:34 pm on August 2, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Human Rights preGA Workshop 

    Jamie Yeats, Medsin Sheffield branch president, reports on his experiences on the pre General Assembly ‘Human Rights and Peace’ workshop.

     

    Imagine this: I am sat in a group of 5 people, we have never met before and can barely pronounce each others names. We all represent different countries and even cover 4 continents. Students from Egypt, Peru, Japan, Tunisia and myself, sat there very pleased I’m able to speak in my first language. The Egyptian is very confident, the Peruvian very passionate, the Japanese reserved and the Tunisian keeps energetically wanting to teach us all her local dances. We are very different people.  We come from very different backgrounds but I cant help thinking that this is incredible and this mix of people and opinions led to the most interesting discussion of my life.

     

    So what were we talking about? Well I attended the preGA session on Human Rights and Peace. A very broad topic that strongly focused on the rights of women, human trafficking and the right to health. Two Dutch ladies from the International Federation of Human Rights Organisation’s led this 3 day workshop and through a series of activities, energisers and discussions spelt out what human rights means in 2011. They gave some really motivating training which I would really recommend checking out online at http://www.ifhro-training-manual.org.

     

    Despite everyone’s differences (and a few culture clashes!) we were all united by the desire to change what is unjust, the people I have met and the stories I have heard have been so inspiring. If these are the Doctors of tomorrow.. the future looks bright.

     

    Jamie Yeats

    Sheffield University

     
  • Jonny Meldrum 5:21 pm on August 1, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Think Global Climate Change and Health Advocacy and… 

    Think Global: Climate Change and Health; Advocacy and Campaigning

    Coming to the end of our preGA workshop the inspiration and passion shared between the participants has been incredible. It’s easy to forget the extent of the campaigning network within the UK. With Medsin’s Healthy Planet project and wider networks, such as the UK Youth Climate Change Coalition, young people have real influence to effect environmental change. The training provided by Medsinners Danny Hutley and Elly Pilavachi in conjunction with trainers from Germany, Australia and Norway is intensely effective at changing attitudes and teaching the skills required to come back to the UK and become a part of the climate movement.

    However, where the Think Global workshop really comes into its own is in the diversity of the participants. I have spent three days getting to know individuals from China, Peru, Austria, South Korea, Spain, Taiwan and even farther afield. In many of these countries awareness of climate change is poor and campaigns are weak or nonexistent.

    Many participants devised action strategies to take back to their home countries, essentially planning to begin an entire youth movement from scratch. The ambition of the groups was truly inspiring. One group set a SMART target of training 50,000 students in China on how to campaign for climate change within 1 year. The collaboration and cooperation between individuals was particularly striking. Watching the Chinese, South Korean and Taiwanese delegates working together with flair and creativity provides a stark contrast to our global leaders.

    Right now I’m sitting at the first ever Open Conference session held by IFMSA. The model is based on TED, opening the floor for anyone to share their own story. Guo from China, another participant from the Think Global workshop, has just taken the stage to talk about climate change in his own town.

    Using the public narrative technique taught in the workshop, Guo frames his speech with a personal story, encapsulating the audience with imagery of his childhood spent running through lush green grass, so tall that he disappears under it. Guo goes on to say that now, in 2011, the Inner Mongolian grassland has turned to desert. Guo challenges the audience to care about climate change and to limit their carbon footprint during the General Assembly.

    For me, this speech epitomises the success of the workshop. The knowledge, skills and tools now available to us as a Think Global network can only lead to great things. It genuinely excites me when I consider what our group will achieve when we return to our own countries.

    This is what the IFMSA is really about: sharing skills and experience between medical students from every corner of the globe.

     
  • ellypilavachi 9:27 am on July 31, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    Medsin-UK arrives in Copenhagen – via 24 hour bus ride! 

    The IFMSA August Meeting and General Assembly starts tomorrow, but Medsin-UK have already been working hard in Copenhagen.

    Three delegates have come over from the UK via a 24 hour bus. Medsin-UK tries to reduce the carbon footprint of our involvement at IFMSA GAs by keeping our delegation size small. This year as the GA is in Europe we have asked our delegates to go overland to reduce our travel emissions, and about 2/3rds are doing so.

    Myself, Jonny Meldrum and Jamie Yeats have travelled by bus from London to do the preGA before the main meeting. Jonny and I have joined the Think Global Climate Change and Health workshop.

    We’re on the last day, and have learnt so much over the past two days. The aim of this workshop , as well to educate on climate change science, is also to provide participants with practical and useful skills that can be taken back to their National Member Organisations. We are really hoping that the participants will start up Climate Change and Health campaigns, such as Medsin’s Healthy Planet. There is also opportunities to be involved with the IFMSA’s international work such as attending the COP17 in Durban with the IFMSA delegation.

    These two days have been a combination of education on Climate Change, skills training and ideas sharing. We have been really fortunate to have had some great externals, including Diarmid Campbell-Lendrum from the Public Health and Environment department at the WHO, a lecturer from the School of Global Health in Copenhagen, and the Denmark 10:10 campaign.

    10:10 Denmark has worked with us to create a 10:10 checklist for how we as delegates can reduce our carbon emissions at conferences. It is really exciting as this is a practical and tangible campaign that we can use now at the GA to promote climate friendly action, and hopefully will get lots of other GA delegates signing up for 10:10, and using the checklist. We hope in the future we can present the campaign and the checklist to the plenary, and NMOs will be able to take the campaign back home.

     

    The checklist includes really useful, and simple advice such as “buy local food, try local beers and wine”, “keep your shower to less than 5 minutes”, and “take the stairs”. All easy to achieve goals considering how delicious Danish beer is, how cramped the showers are at the hotel, and we all need exercise as we spend all day sitting down!!

    It is also a worldwide campaign, that has online resources that all the delegates can access in their own countries.

    Today is about using the skills and education from the past two days to create SMART plans for CC and H campaigns and action. It has been incredible to hear medical students from all over the world expressing their concern about climate change, and how their desire to stop it has brought them to our workshop. Delegates are from a far a field at South Korea, Australia, Taiwan, Canada, Japan, Italy, China, Spain, France, Peru, New Zealand, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Ghana and so many more.

    The best point of the workshop so far for me has been training on Public Narrative; the use of story telling for campaigning, and hearing people’s stories. It is such a powerful tool, and perfect for conveying climate change messages, and encouraging action.

    The participants have been incredible, and the organisers have learnt so much more from them, that they have learnt from us, feeling reinvigorated enthusiasm to get more involved with Climate Change campaigning.

     

     
  • ellypilavachi 8:33 am on July 30, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    The IFMSA August Meeting is being hosted this… 

    The IFMSA August Meeting is being hosted this year in the beautiful city of Copenhagen – beautiful because of stunning lakes, architecture, the ridiculously tall, blonde and athletic natives, and most of all you can’t help but notice the wonderful energy of the city as everyone cycles and jogs.

    This year Medsin-UK’s delegation is made up of 13 wonderful medsinners who will be attending Standing Committees during the General Assembly:

    Elly Pilavachi – Delegation lead, Presidents’ Sessions

    Mike Kalmus Eliaz – GHE Coordinator, SC on Medical Education

    Alex Elliott-Green – Advocacy Coordinator, SC on Public Health

    Beth Hall – Activities Coordinator, SC on Public Health

    Paul Reid and Charley Peal – National Exchange Officers – SC on Professional Exchanges.

    Charlotte Hellmich – National Research Exchanges Representative – SC on Research Exchanges

    Jonny Meldrum – Comms Coordinator and NECSE rep – SC on Human Rights and Peace

    Karin Pursehouse – BMA rep – SCOME

    Maya Tickell-Painter – Healthy Planet rep – SCOPH

    Alice Cozens – SCOPH

    Ben Kerr Winter – SCORP

    Anya Gopfert – SC on Reproductive Health including HIV and AIDS

    Jamie Yeats – SCORA

    Earlier this month the team meet for training and planning the aims and objectives for AM2011. As well as teambuilding, and getting to know each other, the IFMSA was introduced, and feedback was given on previous meetings and how to move forward on the achievements of the past.

    Aiming to build on the work accomplished in Jakarta at the March Meeting the AM2011 decided on the following:

    TEAM AIMS AND OBJECTIVES

     EDUCATION

    Continue promoting GH education among other National Member Organisations

    • Do presentations in Standing Committees, Presidents’ sessions, and European Regional Meeting on GH
    • Run Small Working Groups on GHE in Standing Committees
    • Distribute GHE toolkit
    • Note GHE resources to put in our own GHE resources pack
    • Find out about education opportunities and bring them back to the UK.
    • Find information about Research Exchanges, and work out how to start up in the UK.
    ADVOCACY
    • Continuing promoting sustainable campaigning and advocacy.
    • Including presentations during Standing Committee sessions, Presidents’ sessions, European Regional Meeting.
    • Running Small Working Groups on Advocacy and Campaigning topics eg Grassroots Campaigning.
    • Promoting the work of the Task Force on External Relations including Advocacy and encouraging NMOs to vote for the recommendations of the Task Force and it’s two year plan.
    • Organise a relevant campaign stunts – eg Photo stunt
    • Coordination between NMOs on similar projects/ activities
    • Attend project fayre and Project Presentation sessions, and present Campaign activities
    • Support relevant policy statements
    • Distribute resources: Advocacy toolkit, and Using Your Voice.
    ACTION

    Medsin-UK activities present at AM2011:

    • PharmAware – (coordinator Beth)
    • Healthy Planet – (coordinator Maya)
    • EuWHO – (coordinator Paul)
    • Economic Governance for Health – (coordinators Beth and Mike)
    • Global Health Education – (coordinator Mike)
    Project Fayre and Presentations 
    Standing Committee Project Fair/Presentations
    Representation in Standing Committee Sessions
    General promotion of Activities, gathering contacts from interested NMOs.
    REPRESENTATION OF MEDSIN-UK
    • In all sessions delegates will representatives of Medsin and the network.
    • Delegates, using the information from the Training Day, and Medsin policies, they will be able to speak on behalf of Medsin.
    SUPPORT
    • Supporting each other
      • during Standing Committee sessions – through buddies
      • during NMO hour
      • Helping at project fayre, attending project presentations, supporting Elly during plenary sessions, helping the NEOs during the Exchange fayre.
      • Having breakfast and dinner together.
      • Working together, being supportive, motivating and enthusiastic about each others’ work!!
    NETWORKING AND BUILDING CONTACTS

    Through talking to as many people as possible, giving out business cards, collecting contact details, and being generally friendly and Medsin-UK-lovely.

    • Passing contact details onto the relevant persons.
    COMMUNICATIONS

    Communications lead – Jonny

    Jonny will help coordinate a communications strategy using online media tools to inform the media, and the network what we are doing, and ask for input.

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Medsin Website
    • Blog – wordpress
    • Collation of resources
      • Dropbox – photos, reports.
    POST-GA

    Wish to report on our work in Copenhagen

    • Presentation to local branch
    • National presentation/ workshops at GAs and Conferences
    • Newsletter
    • Evaluation and feedback

    We will be aiming to keep these posts going to keep the Medsin network informed – if you have any comments or questions please don’t hesitate to contact us!!

     
  • medsinatifmsa 11:45 pm on March 11, 2011 Permalink | Reply  

    YAY we’ve all arrived safe and sound Our… 

    YAY we’ve all arrived safe and sound!

    Our delegates are as follows:

    SCOPH (Standing Committee on Public Health): Alex Elliott-Green, Beth Hall, Katie Evans (Marrow), Jonathon Gaughran (Marrow)

    SCORA (Standing Committee on Reproductive Health and AIDs): Anya Gopfert, Hussein Mohamedbhai

    SCOME (Standing Committee on Medical Education): LJ Hughes, Mark Sherlock

    SCOPE: (Standing Committee on Professional Exchanges) Charley Peal, Alex Norway

    SCORP (Standing Committee on Human Rights and Peace): Charlie Grain

    Presidents’ Workshop: Elly Pillavachi

    With the entire Medsin-UK delegation now in Jakarta, spirits are high and everyone is feeling bright eyed and bushy tailed in anticipation of the unbelievably exciting 5 days that are to follow. We as a 12 member crew could not be more thrilled to be attending this year’s “Health Equity and Disparity (within MDGs)” themed General Assembly, where we hope to gain a deeper knowledge, exchange ideas with fellow students from over 70 countries and as a body of passionate medical students, move one step closer in becoming a generation of doctors that lead the way in global health.

    Last night’s opening ceremony ushered in what is to be a wonderful General Assembly, with a display of Indonesia’s cultural dances and music.7.30am of course came all too early, but our jetlagged grogginess was soon obliterated by the bubbling anticipation to attend our Standing Committees.

    SCOME (Standing Committee on Medical Education):

    With the celebration of MM11 Opening Ceremony eating well into the night, only a few hours sleep were snatched, but a delightful Indonesian breakfast well and truly compensated. Mark and I (LJ) trotted off to our first ever Standing Committee on Medical Education. Introductions to the group and a series of energizers kick started our SCOME experience and a brief overview of what was to come in the next few days was presented. In groups of 5 we discussed the role of students in medical education, commenting on the context and levels of involvement we as students should have in medical education, how we can keep motivated and the potential impact we aim to elicit on completion of our SCOME sessions.

    SCOPH (Standing Committee of Public Health)

    Today was a hugely exciting day, in the SCOPH session. The theme of the session may seem mundane at first glance developing a Strategy Plan for SCOPH. True, at first doesn’t sound that exciting however this was a great development with the standing committee and it is the first step to making their activities sustainable.

    After initial introduction and energizers, we worked on an issue map of the themes and this was led by the UK delegation facilitated by me, Alex Elliott-Green, who discussed sustainable campaigning and the other by Jonathan Gaughran on collaboration and support of activities. The other delegates had so many insightful comments and together we contributed the first steps to developing this strategic plan.

    We left the session motivated and enthused after meeting loads of amazing people and being introduced to new ideas and we are all looking forward to tomorrow in which we are all facilitating small working groups on 1) International Advocacy, 2) Pharmaware and 3) Sustainability in Activities. These small working groups feed directly into our objects.

    The social activity on schedule was an Indonesian Cultural Night, displaying any array of the impressive multicultural talents we have at this GA. We all let our hair down and celebrated the closure of day 1 with our new friends!

     
  • medsinatifmsa 7:57 pm on August 13, 2010 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: activism, advocacy, campaigning, global health, medicine, public health, students   

    The future of advocacy and positive change in the IFMSA? 

    The future of advocacy and positive change in the IFMSA

    Friday 13th August, 2010

    One week after the conference comes to a halt, Jonny writes of just some of the progressive choices made by IFMSA members at the August Meeting 2010 conference, and of the choices available to students around the world to mobilise behind a platform for global health advocacy.

    Few words can do justice to the experience of an IFMSA GA experience – exhilarating, exciting, challenging, an assault on all the senses, dynamic and empowering – this conference proved to be all this and more!

    As my fourth and possibly last GA though, I can see what I believe to be a new trend spreading across the global network of students: people are talking about it, they are anxiously debating it, many are excited about its prospects.

    What is this new thing?

    It’s called advocacy, and actually, well, it’s not new to the IFMSA at all.

    I want to share a story of how the IFMSA can and even arguably is spreading progressive practices around the world, and of how we now stand at a defining crossroads towards a new future in medical student activism.  It is a story of pressure, of collective engagement, and of how students in all countries can be armed with the tools and the motivation to fight for justice in global health.

    Before this year I was Campaigns Director for Medsin-UK, a role I relished in being able to support a range of campaign groups and actions around the UK.  I looked on with awe, as friends and others around me rose to a range of challenges and lobbied, marched and mobilised in a will to change health policies in the UK and abroad.

    When it came to the IFMSA however, I no longer felt as comfortable as I was campaigning back home.  Attitudes to advocacy ranged from a hesitation to become ‘political’ to an impression that it had no place in a health professional’s toolkit for improving patient or community health.  Then there was the layout of the General Assembly itself. With so many parallel sessions, committees, positions, events, promotion opportunities and more to tactically move between and delve into, how were we to have an influence amidst a whole variety of other people trying hard to promote their own cause?

    At various points, I struggled to see any way in to influence this great behemoth organisation of 1.2 million medical students.  Challenging such an inert body to change its policies seemed tough, and somewhat detached from my remit of delivering campaign actions to Medsin branches around the UK.

    In short, I wondered whether my input was making any difference.

    Now of course we have overcome this feeling of apathy before, right? How many of us have encountered a disempowered student in need of all the enthusiasm and solidarity our Medsin network can provide them?  So of course, I and others on our Campaigns Team did what we could, and put together some ideas for how we could champion Medsin-UK campaigns, and promote advocacy at all levels in the IFMSA.

    So on I went to my first IFMSA conference in Tunisia, the March Meeting 2009.  We travelled with the hope of promoting campaigns on climate change and health, strengthening health systems, and promoting water and sanitation for all.  Our energies were dispirited when we became embroiled in debates on pharmaceutical funding in the IFMSA, an issue Medsin has strong policy on yet not our core issue of the conference.  Our plans may have not been perfect, but we tried hard to promote other countries joining in calling for policy change in these and other areas.

    I was reminded this month at the GA in Canada of an intriguing story of my 1st GA, by a friend I met at the March Meeting in Tunisia that year.  His name is Unni Gopinathan, a medical student from Norway, who has in fact recently been elected as an IFMSA official for the next year.  Unni told a story of how he became involved in climate change campaigning, of how he and others walked up to a Medsin-UK stall and were confronted by this picture:

    Healthy Planet poster on show at March Meeting 2009 Project Fair. Credit: Mustafa Abbas, Healthy Planet Coordinator

    Unni and others were immediately taken aback, climate change, a health issue?  Sure enough, several prominent voices in the health and medical profession had given their backing to such a statement.  Having looked for a campaign issue for some time, several of the Norwegians returned home to plan out how they could mobilise behind this campaign in advance of the Copenhagen climate change meeting in December.

    Unni’s story, of how one encounter can yield a multiplication of actions, and of how a new campaign was created (“Klima=health” – only later did it dawn on me that “klima” means climate!) seemed to me to testify to the opportunities in global movements such as the IFMSA.  In only a space of weeks, the Norwegian medical student group was able to rally supporters through petitions, talks, and online campaigning, before they captured the attention of the Minister of Environmental and International Development himself and were given the opportunity to meet with him.

    Norwegian medical students meet Erik Solheim, Minister for Environmental and International Development, to discuss Climate Change and Health in advance of the COP15 UN Climate Change negotiations.

    The Norwegian Medical Student Association, in tandem with a whole range of other medical student groups, were pivotal in the IFMSA’s attendance and arguably step forward to engage with the UN Climate Change conference.  We were there as well, if any of you happen to remember reading our Medsin@COP highlights and experiences.  This story I feel is significant if we understand change can take a long time in coming, but when sold in a way that people can relate to can suddenly, dramatically and sometimes even immediately snowball to the extent that enthusiasm & passion for a new order are demanded.

    Medsin members mobilise in support of the IFMSA delegation at the UNFCCC COP15 conference, Copenhagen, December 2009.  Credit: James Chan.

    Reaching a consensus on an issue, or achieving unanimous support for a new direction in any organisation requires hard work, a vision for what that new direction can bring to the organisation, and a chartered course of how these dreams can be embedded in the organisation’s culture and system.  Medsin-UK has tirelessly campaigned for years for global health & campaigning to be available to students around the world, and has made great headway in supporting the vision of the IFMSA as a world-class platform in medical student representation, community development, and global health education & advocacy, and the fruits today are now self-evident.

    But something tells me a new fire and passion has been lit, and that IFMSA members have a new found appetite for advocacy in their own countries, all the way up to the global level by the IFMSA leadership.

    There were so many highlights for me personally at this GA in particular: watching as new countries stood to rapturous applause as they jubilantly thanked everyone for their acceptance into the IFMSA (Argentina particularly!), delivering a 3-day training workshop on climate change, health and advocacy and seeing over 20 students leave the workshop determined to use their voice for positive change, supporting a UK delegation of some of the country’s most inspired and inspiring student leaders in promoting Medsin-UK’s work, and supporting the work of others around the world throughout the GA, listening to Professor Ronald Labonte affirming the socioeconomic, political and underlying conditions that shape health, and of the need for physician advocates to engage with the political process to improve patient & community health in his key note speech one evening, listening to the new Executive Board of the IFMSA placing Policy and Advocacy at the centre of its strategic plan for the year after a series of discussions throughout this year, ABOVE ALL meeting so many people passionate about health improvement, determined to work hard and build connections with others around the world, and returning to their country with a new found enthusiasm for their activities.

    There are a whole host of things the IFMSA already does, and can with the right mix of passion and collective will improve in future.  In advocacy though, our medical student federation has proved it can rise to a challenge.  Out of an exhilarating week of discussion and debate, we have proved there to be both demand and support behind advocacy as a tool to improve health, and to shaping the education structures that train and graduate medical students.  The choice now facing our friends, compatriots and colleagues in now over 100 countries is how it can build on this enthusiasm, and transform the IFMSA into the world’s largest, most progressive network of students, representing all cultures and countries, ultimately making itself known to all as a champion for a fair, just and more healthy world.

    The world and students worldwide shall watch on with hope this year, as this once far-fetched dream will over the coming months I believe be made a reality.

    Jonny Currie

    Medsin-UK National Coordinator 2009/2010

     
  • medsinatifmsa 2:58 am on August 6, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Day 4: Party in the Plenary: Global Medical Students take on the world, their way! 

    Students sharing ideas and inspiration at the Projects Fair, where medical student organisations around the world display their local projects, many of which are community action projects promoting health and tackling health inequalities.

    What an incredible atmosphere – after days of candidate presentations, deliberations, and heavy campaigning from all sides, the doors to the Plenary room are locked, and 600 medical students from nearly 60 different countries party (as only medics know how) while the votes are counted for the Team of Officials of the IFMSA at the 59th General Assembly in Montreal, Quebec.

    The energy in this GA seems endless. Although officially we’re only 4 days in, to everyone here it’s more like a week: with workshops starting at 8.30, and plenaries running till 3am – then partying the rest of the night until the next day’s work begins – sleep is a distant memory. In this intense atmosphere, friendships that span the world are forged, and a new generation of medical students with a truly global perspective marches on towards a brighter future.

    Yesterday, despite a particularly sociable evening at the National Food and Drink Party the night before, contracts for nearly 10,000 research and clinical exchanges were signed by our tireless National Exchange Officers (NEO’s)  at the Contract Fair. Meanwhile, the Presidents of every National Member Organisation (NMO) met to debate all the changes to the by-laws and all the elections, which are now being voted even as I type. Other delegates met in the Standing Committees, which meet every morning to debate and work on the IFMSA’s core interests of Public Health, Human Rights & Peace, Reproductive Health (including AIDS), and Medical Education. Medsin-UK has spread its delegates across all six Standing Committees, and we’ve been actively inputting into all of these

    One of the most exciting things about bringing together so many excited minds together from all across the world in one place is the synergy of ideas that can spark whole movements. One example is Medsin-UK’s Global Health Education Project – a home-grown project which works to increase global health education in medical curricula throughout the country. Similar efforts are being made elsewhere, and at a Project Fair stall we held we were able to make connections with such projects in countries such as the Netherlands, Australia, and Canada. In time, we hope, a Global Health Education Network may grow out of this, spanning countries and continents, and allowing the sharing of ideas.

    Canada’s NMO, CFMS, already has been undertaking work on Pre-Elective Training – a key component of global health education, allowing medical electives overseas to be ethical, sustainable, and educational. The UK likewise has been making inroads in this area, such as the University of Dundee’s Medicine in Malawi Project. The natural step is to link these diverse projects up, saving on duplication of effort. CFMS have developed a national curriculum to be included in Pre-Elective Training, and are looking for other countries to share any guidelines they have already developed – with the hope of developing an internationally agreed set of learning objectives.

    But perhaps the most important benefit of these gatherings is to make the individual, personal connections, between like-minded students of different nationalities, races, and religions, united in a common goal of promoting health and fighting the perennial diseases that afflict mankind. The party atmosphere in the room could only happen at a student conference – and yet the subjects being debated are no less weighty than those of our more senior counterparts in other international organisations. The unique combination of youth, enthusiasm, energy, and passion provides an inspiration for all to whom the future of global health, faced as it is with failing Millenium Development Goals, catastrophic climate change, and global insecurity, seems at times overwhelming.

    The music stops, and the doors are closed – the results of the votes are about to be announced. The night is young, and the future starts tomorrow.

     
  • medsinatifmsa 3:35 am on August 5, 2010 Permalink | Reply  

    Day 3: exCHANGE THE WORLD amongst other things… 

    Today’s blog (admittedly, yesterday’s, but there ain’t much time when you’re fixing the world) comes from our very own Paul Reidy, National Exchange Officer for Medsin-UK.

    Day 3 of the IFMSA general assembly and the delegation is still going strong. Today sees the highlight of the general assembly for the Standing Committee on Professional Exchange (SCOPE) with the manic contract fair taking place, where the National Exchange Officers for each National Member Organisation (NMO) try and sign all 10,000 or so, of the exchange contracts for the following year. It was an amazing experience with so many countries wanting to sign contracts with the UK. It’s not an exaggeration to say that there is a tangible sense of grief amongst countries each time we have to say no to one of them!

    We ended up signing 63 contracts today with 23 NMOs, and we as well as most other countries, hope to increase this number dramatically for next year.

    *shameless plug* any Medsinner wanting to get exchanges started up at their medical school get in touch with Charley or myself at exchanges@medsin.org!

    Contract fair was followed by small working groups for the 6 Standing Committees, which is my case was working on the future vision of the SCOPE exchange programme. Had a really productive session working with Medsin’s partners in The Netherlands & Catalonia working out how to include global health at the heart of the exchange programme. Stay tuned on Thursday to see how the IFMSA responds…

    The evening session brought no rest with two Medsin projects ‘EuWHO’ and ‘Marrow’ in contention for the Rex Crossley prize, the award given to the best project within the IFMSA network. Ewan, on behalf of Marrow and myself on behalf of EuWHO, presented the projects to the 9 person jury and underwent some tough questioning. The UK has an envied reputation for excellent projects with Marrow winning the award on several prior occasions and other Medsin projects including ‘Crossing Borders’, under the direction of the lovely Jen, being among this year’s finalists. Fingers crossed for the results during Thursday’s closing ceremony.

    Not being a huge fan of sleep or having any deficit to catch up on at all…, we finished the evening backing up El Pres at the plenary (after a brief spot of socialising with the delegations resident journalist Ben Warner) which finished at the rather respectable hour of 3.10am. Factoring in a post plenary dance (I kid you not – think UN plus Eurovision!) bed  was reached at the rather early hour of 4am. Three and a half hours until it all starts again…

     
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