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MMB joined Children’s National Health System President and CEO Kurt Newman M.D. to make an announcement related to the new Children’s National Research and Innovation Campus on the former Walter Reed Army Medical Center site in Ward 4.

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

Zum sechsten Mal findet die erfolgreiche Reihe von Veranstaltungen mit Angehörigen von Pflege- und diesen verwandten Berufen statt. Die Veranstaltungsreihe, die politische Äußerung mit künstlerischer Darbietung verbindet möchte auf die katastrophale Situation der Pflege in Deutschland aufmerksam machen.

Veranstaltungsort ist das Kulturhaus Alte Feuerwache in Berlin Friedrichshain. Dieses war nahezu ausverkauft.

Das Konzept ist an das des Poetry Slams angelegt. Alle Auftretenden haben rund zehn Minuten Zeit für ihren Slam. Jedoch gibt es keinen Wettbewerb, das gemeinsame wird betont, es findet kein Wettkampf statt.

Der Abend beginnt mit Yvonne Falckners Auftritt als dementer Vampir und der damit ergebenen Überleitung zu Florian Eichhorn, Autor des gleichnamigen Buches. Mit seinem Slam "Nur mal kurz - ein kurzer Einblick in den Pflege-Alltag" gibt er einen humorvollen Einblick in Nöte des Pflegepersonals.

Ihm folgt Stefan Schulz, der mit seinem Slam "Drinnen ist draußen" das schwierige Thema Forensik und den Umgang mit strafunmündigen Tätern im Alltag kraftvoll und emotional darstellt.

Annett Metzenthins Slam "Make Pflege not war" wirft einen Blick auf die Pflege durch Angehörige und ist ein Aufruf zum Miteinander, anstatt des Gegeneinanders mit professioneller Pflege.

Die erste Halbzeit des CareSlams endet mit der Sängerin Elisabeth Schwarz und ihren Lied "Kind. Mutter. Mensch.", welches das Leben eines alten Menschens im Heim gefühlvoll thematisiert.

Auftakt der zweiten Hälfte ist Jörg Richert von KARUNA mit zwei ehemaligen Straßenkindern. Jörg Richert tritt in seinem Slam ""Suchen tut mich keiner..." Straßenkinder in Deutschland" für ein Umdenken im Umgang mit den Betroffenen ein und vor allem dafür, dass diese vermehrt einbezogen werden. Michi und Chris tragen zudem Gedichte von ehemaligen Straßenkindern vor.

Der nächste Slam berührt das Tabuthema Tod und den Umgang mit Kindern, die tot geboren sind oder in kürzester Zeit sterben werden. Der Fotograf Kai Gebel fotografiert zusammen mit einem Netzwerk von rund 600 weiteren Fotografen in Deutschland und Österreich diese "Sternenkinder" und verschafft somit den Eltern die Möglichkeit einer bleibenden Erinnerung. "Vom ersten und letzten Bild" handelt sein Slam.

Mit den STUBI Cops Franziska Behrenbeck, Claudia Fröhlich und Lena Herbrandt betritt der Nachwuchs in Form von Studentinnen die Bühne und stellt ihren Slam "Die Reise ins Unbekannte" vor.

Ihnen folgt Roger Konrad der auf den Pflegeaktionstag am 12. Mai 2017 hinweist.

Den Abschluss des CareSlams bildet ein zweiter Auftritt von Elisabeth Schwarz mit ihrem Lied "Zeitlos".

Danach betreten nochmal alle Beteiligten die Bühne.

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

Matthew Maada Moiba, the in charge and a state-enrolled community health nurse (SECHN), outside his community health post in Juba Mi Room, Freetown, Sierra Leone on March 29, 2017. (Photo by Joshua Yospyn for JSI)

Partners of the regional Amazon Malaria Initiative help ensure those at risk have access to diagnosis and treatment of this neglected vector-borne disease

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

An infant lies in her mother's lap at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

Margaret Fofanah, a nurse at the Sussex maternal and child health post (MCHP) in Western Area Rural, Freetown, Sierra Leone on March 30, 2017. (Photo by Joshua Yospyn for JSI)

Tesfu Negasa (left), Zonal HMIS Office, looks at a Master Family Index (MFI) while health team members explain how they maintain health information at a Chancho Buba Health Post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

Mbalu Kamara, Officer in Charge (OIC) and Maternal and Child Health (MCH) Aid, stands for a portrait at Magbafth Maternal and Child Health Post (MCHP) in Tonkolili District, Sierra Leone on April 5, 2017. (Photo by Joshua Yospyn for JSI)

Zum vierten Mal stehen in Berlin Friedrichshain in der "Alten Feuerwache" Pflegekräfte auf der Bühne, um in einem dem Poetry- bzw. ScienceSlam entlehnten Konzept über ihre Alltagssituationen und den Pflegenotstand in Deutschland zu berichten.

Den Beginn macht Achim Reichert, Altenpfleger, Lehrer für Pflegeberufe und Musiker mit seinem Slam: „Von Höcksken auf Stöcksken oder vom Konzept zum Gesetz“. Es folgt Corinna Seegert, examinierte Krankenschwester und stellvertretende Pflegedienstleitung mit ihrer musikalischen Einlage „I want get my disinfection“, zu der sie sich die Organisatorin Yvonne Falckner mit auf die Bühne holt. Die junge Esma Özdemir, Gesundheits- und Krankenpflegerin beeindruckt alle Anwesenden mit ihrer emotionalen und eindrücklichen „Eine Hommage an die Pflege“. Die Mitbegründerin und Organisatorin Yvonne Falckner gibt darauffolgend einen Überblick über das Wesen und die Entstehung des CareSlams. Katja Krebs, Künstlerin und freie Dozentin lässt die Puppen tanzen bzw. sprechen mit ihrem Slam: „Handpuppeneinsatz in der Demenzbetreuung".

Für die musikalische Begleitung dieser Veranstaltung sorgen die "Steinlandpiraten".

Schirmherr der Veranstaltungsreihe ist Prof. Dr. rer. cur. Michael Bossle. Im Bild: Steinlandpiraten.

Tesfu Negasa (left), Zonal HMIS Office, looks at health cards from tickler file boxes as health team members explain how they maintain health information,at a Chancho Buba Health Post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

These images are from my PAHO/WHO deployment to Jamaica, supporting EMT coordination and health service recovery after Hurricane Melissa. They capture a small part of the field reality—sites visited, partners engaged, and the teams working steadily to restore access to care.

 

Photos are shared with respect for privacy and dignity, with no identifiable patient details.

WHO/Europe officials in discussion with a participant from Kazakhstan during a break.

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

Simpson Gmunu, a State-Enrolled Community Health Nurse (SECHN), holds his daughter outside the Gbanti Community Health Post (CHP) on April 3, 2017 in Bombali District, Sierra Leone. (Photo by Joshua Yospyn for JSI)

The health team explains how they maintain information to Tesfu Negasa (left), Zonal HMIS Officer, at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

 

Participants at one of the sessions of the policy dialogue meeting in Astana, Kazakhstan in June 2012.

Participants from Kazakhstan at one of the sessions of the policy dialogue meeting.

Lemma Gutema (left), HMIS expert from JSI, and Tesfu Negasa (second left)), Zonal HMIS Office, stand with health team members at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

Offset framing, fill flash, exposing for the windows. In this sort of situation, I can try to expose for the interior more, to get more of the details of the pillars and people, but then the windows end up getting blown out and flaring into the heads of the subjects in front of me. It's usually something I have to keep deciding about as the sun goes down and the light changes.

Pointing to a tickler file box, a health extension worker explains how they maintain health information to Tesfu Negasa (left), Zonal HMIS Office, at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

During a regular growth monitoring visit, a health extension worker takes an infant's body temperature at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

While a woman waits with her infant, health extension workers record patient information in the IMNCI register and on a health card at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

Tesfu Negasa (left), Zonal HMIS Office, and health team members discuss the Master Family Index (MFI) in relation to HMIS at a Chancho Buba health post in Oromia Region, Ethiopia.

 

John Snow, Inc. (JSI) works with the Federal Ministry of Health (FMOH) on a variety of health system strengthening interventions. These include training and capacity building for health extension workers, developing and implementing strategies to administer immunizations and HIV testing services and treatment, and improving service delivery. JSI’s work supports the long-term development of primary health care in Ethiopia at all levels to improve the health of people across the country.

 

Health Management Information System (HMIS) uses health information to improve service delivery within specific administrative areas and contributes to the creation of an enabling environment that supports a culture of information use at health center and woreda levels, and contributes towards improvement in decision making for better health services management.

 

Photo by Shahzad Noorani

These images are from my PAHO/WHO deployment to Jamaica, supporting EMT coordination and health service recovery after Hurricane Melissa. They capture a small part of the field reality—sites visited, partners engaged, and the teams working steadily to restore access to care.

 

Photos are shared with respect for privacy and dignity, with no identifiable patient details.

With a 55-second gap on the Pro 1/2/3 Women's field...

The 2016 edition of our annual Sick or Treat Charity Ball was held on October 28 at Doltone House, Hyde Park in Sydney!

 

It was a spectacular night and a fantastic end to our wonderful Sick or Treat campaign which ran all of October! Every year in Australia there are over 42,000 diagnoses of rare or less common cancers and around 24,000 deaths, but with your help we can change this and make sure people fighting rare cancers have access to the drugs and treatment they need.

 

You can find out more about the work that Sick or Treat supports at www.rarecancers.org.au and make a donation yourself here: www.sickortreat.org.au/donations

Mbalu Kamara, Officer in Charge (OIC) and MCH Aid, drinks water from the well while Hassan Koroma, Deputy Chairman of the Facility Management Committee (FMC), pumps outside the Magbafth MCHP in Tonkolili District, Sierra Leone on April 5, 2017. (Photo by Joshua Yospyn for JSI)

In Berlin Friedrichshain findet der zweite "Care Slam" von Pflegekräften statt. Moderiert von Yvonne Falckner und Prof. Dr. rer. cur. Michael Bossle traten bei der Veranstaltung nach dem Vorbild der Poetry Slams insgesamt fünf Pflegefachkräfte auf, um sowohl fachlich, als auch persönlich und menschlich aus ihrem Alltag der Pflegearbeit in Deutschland zu berichten. Das Themenspektrum reichte dabei von der "Pflege als Teamaufgabe" von Michael Thomsen über selbstkritische Töne zur Ausbeutung von Pflegekräften durch Claudia Hanke bis zu den Erfahrungen von Marika Lazar in Verbänden und der Politik. Kerstin Vietze nahm zum sog. Helfersyndrom Stellung und Diana Leisering berichtet von ihrer Arbeit mit geistig und körperbehinderten Menschen.

Die musikalische Begleitung kan von der Inklusionsband "Handiclapped Band".

Hintergrund der Veranstaltungsreihe ist die katastrophale situation in der deutschen Pflege und den unmenschlichen Arbeitsbedingungen der Pflegekräfte.

Pro Men heading toward Fountain Square

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