The next talk in the 2010-2011 STEP Lecture Series will be given by Prof. Richard Garfield on Thursday, November 11th at 6:30pm Pakistan Standard Time. Prof. Garfield is the Henrik H. Bendixen Clinical Professor of International Nursing at the Columbia University‘s Mailman School of Public Health.
The talk will be streamed live and a brief Q&A session will follow the talk. Undergraduate and graduate students inwfp survey report all disciplines and especially those enrolled in public health related programs, people involved with flood-relief efforts, and government and non-government organizations interested in flood-relief are strongly encouraged to attend.
Title: Determining Humanitarian Needs after Pakistan Floods
Where: Air University, AKU, FAST-NU Islamabad, IBA-Karachi, IMS Peshawar, and LUMS.
When: November 11th, 2010, 6:30-7:30pm Pakistan Standard Time (8:30-9:30am EDT).
Slides, WFP report, Video of the talk
Abstract:
The worst flooding in Pakistan’s history has left over 2,000 people dead and an estimated 15 to 20 million displaced, according to the United Nations – a total that exceeds the combined number of people displaced by the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the 2005 Kashmir earthquake and the 2010 earthquake in Haiti. During the last two weeks in August, Prof. Richard Garfield, the Henrik H. Bendixen Professor of Clinical International Nursing and Clinical Population and Family Health, helped coordinate the analysis of field surveys in four of the most severely affected provinces in Pakistan to determine short and long term needs for health, water and sanitation, nutrition, agriculture, livelihoods, shelter, and issues affecting women. This ‘combined needs assessment’ is an effort by the international community to jointly set priorities. The data is being used by the U.N. and other organizations. The project involved teams of researchers who fanned out across the country to interview flood victims in 380 locations in the provinces of Gilgit Baltistan, Punjab, Sindh, and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa. Researchers spoke to refugees living in camps, damaged homes, and spontaneous settlements. From start to finish, the entire process in Pakistan took 20 days. Preliminary results were presented in Pakistan to U.N. Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Valerie Amos, on her second day on the job.
Dr. Garfield previously took part in a similar effort in Myanmar and is evaluating a similar survey process done earlier this year in Haiti for the U.S. Centers for Disease Control.
Bio:
Richard Garfield, DrPH is the Henrik H. Bendixen Clinical Professor of International Nursing and the Director of the PAHO/WHO Collaborating Center in Advanced Practice Nursing. He received a doctorate from Columbia University School of Public Health. Dr. Garfield is a public health/community health nurse with expertise in epidemiology and international health. His research interests include community health promotion among minorities, the effects of wars on civilian populations, and the impact of economic embargoes on health and well- being. Dr. Garfield chairs the human rights committee of the American Public Health Association.
Help us connect your university!
Acknowledgments: Special thanks to Higher Education Commission of Pakistan (HEC) for facilitating the video broadcast of this talk.


Bio: Walter Bender is technologist and researcher who has made important contributions in the field of electronic publishing, media, and technology for learning. Bender is on leave as a Senior Research Scientist at the MIT Media Lab which he led as executive director between 2000 and 2006. More recently, Bender served as president of One Laptop per Child for Software and Content where he coordinated the development of software and content including the Sugar interface for the XO-1 Children’s Machine computer. After leaving OLPC in 2008, Bender founded Sugar Labs to continue development of Sugar.

The third talk of the
Aristeidis Karalis is a founder of 


With one ophthalmologist per over 100,000 people in India, there is a critical need to improve the utilization of eye doctors. In this talk, we discuss our work in deploying a long distance wireless network that enables high quality video-based telemedicine between rural eye clinics and centrally located doctors at the 