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[post_content] => Jeremiah Chikovore is a Founder of SSHIFTB. He is Senior Research Specialist at the Human Sciences Research Council, in South Africa. Jeremiah is trained in Sociology and Public Health, and his work applies social science approaches to a range of health issues using a complexity and intersectionality lens. His areas of expertise include qualitative methods, masculinity and gender, healthcare access and care-seeking, TB and HIV, stigma, and youth and young people. He has worked in Zimbabwe, and more recently Malawi and South Africa.
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[post_content] => Amrita Daftary is Assistant Professor at the School of Global Health and Dahdaleh Institute of Global Health Research at York University. She applies social science methods and frameworks to study TB stigma and treatment adherence, particularly in the contexts of TB-HIV co-morbidity and drug resistant TB. She contributes to the design and evaluation of complex interventions in South Africa and India where her work helps to inform equity and person oriented approaches to TB care. She is also involved in several global activities.
Amrita holds adjunct appointments at the Centre for the AIDS Programme of Research in South Africa at University of KwaZulu-Natal and Dalla Lana School of Public Health at University of Toronto. She also works closely with a number of public health, multilateral, community organizations and TB advocacy groups.
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[post_content] => Nora Engel is a Founder of SSHIFTB. She is Associate Professor at Maastricht University’s Department of Health, Ethics, and Society. She applies methods and conceptual tools from Science and Technology Studies, medical sociology, anthropology, and innovation studies to study innovations and technological change for global health and sustainable development. She has a particular interest in how new technologies and interventions for global health challenges (such as tuberculosis) are being envisioned, developed, implemented and evaluated.
Her research is mostly in the field of tuberculosis, HIV, malaria, and (point-of-care) diagnostics, among others on innovation in TB control and policy, challenges to point of care testing, user perspectives of diagnostic technologies and testing programs, evaluation of mobile health solutions and innovation processes of point-of-care diagnostics for TB and HIV. She has conducted extensive empirical fieldwork in India and South Africa as well as in the global health policy arena and has led and supervised research in other African and Asian countries as well.
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[post_content] => Sachin Atre is a medical anthropologist and has 20 years of experience in public health research. Since November 2015, he serves as the Research Coordinator for the study “Impact of Diabetes on TB Treatment Outcomes”, funded by National Institutes of Health (NIH), USA. The study is in collaboration with Johns Hopkins University USA, BJ Medical College Pune and Dr. D.Y. Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre, Pune, India. He played a key role in setting up a new clinical study site at Dr. D.Y. Patil Medical College, Hospital and Research Centre and currently coordinates activities there.
Dr. Atre has received his PhD from the University of Pune and his doctoral research work was focused on understanding biosocial determinants of drug-resistant TB among patients in urban and rural areas of Maharashtra. During Sept. 2013-Sept. 2014, he was awarded with Fulbright-Nehru Post doc Fellowship at the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine at Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, Boston USA. The work at Harvard was focused on addressing policy needs for multidrug-resistant TB management and control in India. The policy paper based on this work has been listed among the most influential articles recommended by Springer-Nature group journal editors. After returning from Harvard, Dr. Atre served as an independent technical consultant for the Global TB Program of the World Health Organization, Geneva during 2014-15. The work involved a literature review and documentation of mandatory TB notification policies and practices among high, medium and low TB incidence countries especially to point out challenges in high TB incidence countries and to provide a guidance on how those can be tackled. This work was published in the European Respiratory Journal in December 2016. Dr. Atre also serves as an academic collaborator for Global Burden of Disease (GBD) initiative led by Prof. Chris Murray.
Before moving to Harvard on Fulbright fellowship, Dr. Atre had worked with the Foundation for Research in Community Health (FRCH) in Pune for 12 years. His work encompassed a wide range of areas such as tuberculosis, diabetes, access to medicines, leprosy, family planning etc. which have cross-cutting interests of social sciences and public health. He also served for a short duration for two consulting firms one at New Delhi and other in Pune.
Dr. Atre had presented his work at international conferences and/meetings in 15 countries for most of which he received Travel grants. He serves as an invited reviewer for reputed journals such as WHO Bulletin, The Lancet Global Health, PLoS One, International Journal of TB and Lung Disease and BMC Public Health etc. Till date he has over 60 peer-reviewed publications (many as a lead author) in international journals with over 9000 citations.
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[post_content] => Philipp is an infectious diseases specialist with a Masters in Clinical Epidemiology with more than 15 years of clinical and public health experience in the management of TB/HIV programs. He currently works at the Burnet Institute where he is the co-Head of the Tuberculosis Elimination and Implementation Science working group, and leads projects supporting field testing of novel TB diagnostic tests, improved models of care for active case finding and TB preventive treatment. He is a member of the Zero TB Initiative Yogyakarta which is scaling up an effective Search-Treat-Prevent model of care in 2 districts in Indonesia. He has supported program implementation and research in a range of settings in Africa, Central Asia, South East Asia and the Pacific. He is a member of the World Health Organisation rGLC for the Programmatic Management of Drug Resistant TB (WPRO region).
Philipp’s research focuses on in improving diagnosis and treatment of drug resistant TB including supporting setting up a trial site in Port Moresby as part of the Truenat diagnostic validation study, being a member of the Steering committee for the MSF sponsored PRACTECAL MDR-TB randomised controlled trial, and leading a study into extrapulmonary TB in PNG. The Zero TB Initiative Yogyakarta Team is currently conducting qualitative research on gender related barriers and facilitators to accessing TB services including active case finding and preventive therapy. With the Papua New Guinea Institute of Medical Research, Philipp is collaborating on qualitative research into community understanding of TB in 3 provinces in PNG.
[post_title] => Philipp du Cros
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[post_content] => Yuliya Chorna currently works as a freelance global health consultant with the focus on TB in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, particularly on the aspects of strengthening multi-and-intersectoral collaboration to address bio-psychosocial needs of people and communities affected by tuberculosis. From 2014 and till now, she has been actively involved in policy planning, program design and capacity-building for civil society and disease affected-communities to make sure their voices impact decisions on how effective TB care should look like. Her most recent job (end of the position from August 2020) was of an Executive Director of TB Europe Coalition, an advocacy network which is active in Western and Eastern Europe, as well as Central Asia which aims to ensure civil society is driving the TB response.
Yuliya serves on the regional and global taskforces and committees, such as Civil Society Task Force hosted by WHO Global TB Program; Developing Country NGO Delegation to the Board of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria; Regional Collaborating Committee on Accelerated Response to Tuberculosis, HIV and Viral Hepatitis (RCC-THV) and Technical Advisory Group on Tuberculosis (TAG-TB) at WHO/Europe.
Yuliya comes from social work background and that perspective drives her passion for social justice, advocacy for health equity and end of stigma towards people and communities affected by TB.
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[post_content] => Mike Frick is one of the co-directors of the Treatment Action Group tuberculosis program. Mike leads the following areas of TAG’s TB portfolio: 1) advocacy to support universal access to TB prevention, including research to develop new TB vaccines and preventive therapies; 2) research to track global funding for TB research and development (published in TAG’s signature annual report Tuberculosis Research Funding Trends); and 3) work to define and apply the human right to enjoy the benefits of scientific progress to advance TB research and access.
Mike holds a BA in international studies from Kenyon College and an MSc in global health and population from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. In 2009, he was a Fulbright Fellow at Kunming Medical College in Yunnan, China. Born in Oklahoma, he currently lives in Brooklyn, New York and is an enthusiastic cook and fire escape gardener.
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[post_content] => Andrew McDowell is an assistant professor in the Department of Anthropology at Tulane University. He has a Ph.D. in sociocultural anthropology from Harvard University. His research interests focus on care, contagion, pharmaceuticals, diagnosis, and inequality in North and Western Indian social worlds entangled with tuberculosis. His current book project Breath, contagion, and caste: The intimate poetics of tuberculosis in India takes up the problem of spread. A study of rural Indian families muddling through overlapping atmospheres of airborne infectious disease, growing consumptive aspirations, and caste contagion, it theorizes life touched by spreading, uncultivated affects.
In a second project McDowell considers global health’s role in TB’s dynamic local biologies. Tracing globalized treatment and diagnosis interventions in India, this research examines the human and microbial impact of global health initiatives that aim to manage patients’ access to technologies and medicines, standardize medical practice in Mumbai’s TB clinics, and guide TB-related expertise and knowledge production across India.
His work has appeared in Medical Anthropology Quarterly, Ethos, and The Lancet among other venues. A forthcoming piece in Biosocieties, “Dr. Zahir’s Dilemma: Money and Morals in India’s Private Medical Networks” examines for-profit care in Mumbai’s sprawling northern expanses.
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[post_modified] => 2021-04-09 09:23:28
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[post_content] => Ellen M.H. Mitchell, PhD is a Public Health Fellow in the unit of Mycobacterial and Neglected Tropical Diseases led by Professor Epco Hasker at the Institute of Tropical Medicine (ITM) in Antwerp since October 2019. Prior to that, she worked at KNCV TB Foundation for ten years. Ellen started out squarely in the Social Sciences frame studying ethnography and politics of public health during her training at Oberlin (’91) and Tulane (‘95, ‘01) and as a Fulbright in Ecuador (’98). Over time she has gravitated toward a version of social epidemiology that mixes tools and hybrid strategies for solving TB problems. Ellen is happiest working in multidisciplinary, multi-country teams to tackle questions about TB risk – not only who and where, but why and what are we doing about it. This has led her to dig into TB stigma, active case-finding, TB mortality measurement, gender, and invite some re-thinking of TB orthodoxies. She has a thing for shiny new ideas, tools, and methods.
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[post_modified] => 2021-03-29 14:41:19
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[post_content] => For almost three decades Jintana has been involved in TB and TB/HIV social science, health system, and operational research in Thailand as well as international training in Japan. Her research and teaching interests include social interventions to enhance access to TB diagnosis, prevention and care, gender equality, stigma reduction, and qualitative research. She served as a member of WHO-TB/HIV working group and WHO/TDR disease reference group. Her role was to bridge sciences and community to end TB.
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[post_content] => Jeremiah Chikovore is a Founder of SSHIFTB. He is Senior Research Specialist at the Human Sciences Research Council, in South Africa. Jeremiah is trained in Sociology and Public Health, and his work applies social science approaches to a range of health issues using a complexity and intersectionality lens. His areas of expertise include qualitative methods, masculinity and gender, healthcare access and care-seeking, TB and HIV, stigma, and youth and young people. He has worked in Zimbabwe, and more recently Malawi and South Africa.
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[is_author] =>
[is_category] =>
[is_tag] =>
[is_tax] =>
[is_search] =>
[is_feed] =>
[is_comment_feed] =>
[is_trackback] =>
[is_home] =>
[is_privacy_policy] =>
[is_404] =>
[is_embed] =>
[is_paged] =>
[is_admin] =>
[is_attachment] =>
[is_singular] =>
[is_robots] =>
[is_favicon] =>
[is_posts_page] =>
[is_post_type_archive] => 1
[query_vars_hash:WP_Query:private] => bf1709b4ce7c0d55f249a705a64976ad
[query_vars_changed:WP_Query:private] => 1
[thumbnails_cached] =>
[stopwords:WP_Query:private] =>
[compat_fields:WP_Query:private] => Array
(
[0] => query_vars_hash
[1] => query_vars_changed
)
[compat_methods:WP_Query:private] => Array
(
[0] => init_query_flags
[1] => parse_tax_query
)
)