Why We Should All Be Advocates for Global Health: Reimagining “Global Surgery”

By Kerigo Odada, Lawyer and PhD researcher at the University of Pretoria, Centre for Human Rights

From left: Maya Jakobsson, Arsen Muhumuza, Ulrick Sidney, Ruben Ayala, Desmond Jumbam, Atenas Bustamante, Camilo Arenas, Simon Pierre Carolina Franco, Patrick Maison, Fleur Rahatasoa, Abdo Husen, Kerigo Odada, Lalatiana Andriamanarivo, Irene Dzirasa, Jean Cédric Kouam, Vera Kum, Serena Cruz, Aditi Lalbahadur, Sophia Wancke and Stephanie Musho.
The inaugural cohort of Operation Smile’s Global Surgery Advocacy Fellowship participated in the in-person training at the University of Global Health Equity campus in Butaro, Rwanda. The session gathered fellows, mentors and facilitators and provided participants with advocacy opportunities to write op-eds, pitch ideas, and develop and implement their advocacy projects for addressing needs in their communities.

Access to surgical care is still limited, with an estimated five billion people worldwide lacking essential surgical services.

Cognizant of this urgent need to integrate advocacy in surgical, obstetric, trauma and anesthesia (SOTA), Operation Smile, in partnership with Nkafu Policy Institute and the University of Global Health Equity, has established the Global Surgery Advocacy Fellowship (GSAF).

In Rwanda, the University of Global Health Equity and Nkafu Policy Institute partnered with Operation Smile for the Global Surgery Advocacy Fellowship training.
The Global Surgery Advocacy Fellowship empowers local leaders to become skilled and passionate advocates for surgical and anesthesia care.

Integrating advocacy into global surgery is essential to improving access to surgical care, addressing health disparities and promoting social justice.

By ensuring that all individuals have access to essential surgical services, we can help reduce suffering, improve health outcomes and promote a more equitable and just world.

Mentees above: Simon Pierre, Carolina Franco, Patrick Maison, Fleur Rahatasoa and Abdo Husen. Mentors below: Camilo Arenas, Lalatiana Andriamanarivo, Aditi Lalbahadur, Kerigo Odada and Stephanie Musho.
From Feb. 20 to 24, fellows, mentors and facilitators participated in an in-person training at the University of Global Health Equity campus in Butaro, Rwanda.
The University of Global Health Equity and the Nkafu Policy Institute serve as Operation Smile’s invaluable partners in global surgery and global health.
The University of Global Health Equity and the Nkafu Policy Institute serve as Operation Smile’s invaluable partners in global surgery and global health.

--

--

Through our expertise in treating cleft lip and cleft palate, we create solutions that deliver safe surgery to people where it’s needed most. operationsmile.org

Get the Medium app

A button that says 'Download on the App Store', and if clicked it will lead you to the iOS App store
A button that says 'Get it on, Google Play', and if clicked it will lead you to the Google Play store
Operation Smile

Through our expertise in treating cleft lip and cleft palate, we create solutions that deliver safe surgery to people where it’s needed most. operationsmile.org