Health and Development

Focused on international development, global health and health policy, Doctors with Africa CUAMM’s magazine Health and Development is published in Italian and English. It views health as critical to sustainable development, and features articles on our work in the field and good practices learned as well as commentary by international experts.

An online edition of the magazine is also available. It includes further pieces on these topics in addition to the articles offered in the print edition.

5 February 2021

Foggia: the farthest corner of our own backyard

2024-04-09T19:05:37+02:005 February 2021|

Review • n. 81 December 2020

Foggia: the farthest corner of our own backyard

Text by / Lucia Raho

There is great need for help in the Apulia region’s "ghettos", where migrants with precarious jobs live in conditions of terrible poverty.After working in this remote corner of “our own backyard” since 2015, CUAMM has expanded its presence during the Covid-19 crisis to guarantee basic healthcare and necessities.

5 February 2021

Cuamm’s response to Covid-19 in Italy

2024-04-09T19:06:15+02:005 February 2021|

Cuamm’s response to Covid-19 in Italy • n. 81 December 2020

Cuamm’s response to Covid-19 in Italy

Text by / Andrea Atzori

Thanks to our experience in sub-Saharan Africa, CUAMM has been able to intervene not only there but also in Italy in response to the Covid-19 crisis. Underscoring the imperative of acting in unison during a pandemic, our integrated project trains health workers and junior doctors and provides support to hospitals and the most vulnerable segments of the population.

5 February 2021

Mozambique: moving beyond crisis

2024-04-09T19:07:04+02:005 February 2021|

Mozambique: moving beyond crisis • n. 81 December 2020

Mozambique: moving beyond crisis

Text by / Giovanna De Meneghi

It’s not enough to respond to emergencies; a long-term perspective is necessary in our work, with the design of interventions in partnership with local people and organizations to tackle actual needs while also promoting a sense of community and resilience. In Mozambique CUAMM carries out targeted pandemic-related projects alongside non-crisis-related initiatives to support the most vulnerable

5 February 2021

Under the radar: Covid-19’s societal impact

2024-04-09T19:07:47+02:005 February 2021|

Under the radar: Covid-19’s societal impact • n. 81 December 2020

Under the radar: Covid-19’s societal impact

Text by / Edoardo Occa

Nine months since the first cases of Covid-19 were reported in Africa, the impact of the crisis in Mozambique can be gauged not only in terms of health but also social phenomena such as child marriage, violence and demand for traditional healers. Rising poverty is producing “under-the-radar” reactions that imperil both health and development.

5 February 2021

Reorganizing health services in Sierra Leone

2024-04-09T19:27:35+02:005 February 2021|

Reorganizing health services in Sierra Leone • n. 81 December 2020

Reorganizing health services in Sierra Leone

Text by / Claudia Caracciolo

Our experience organizing health services and preparing communities during Ebola has played a vital role in our handling of the Covid-19 pandemic. Even so, the current crisis has led to a drop in the number of assisted deliveries and a rise in maternal mortality in the facilities we manage here. CUAMM’s work continues, based as always on our longstanding principles

5 February 2021

Nome-based care: tackling tuberculosis in Uganda

2024-04-09T19:28:16+02:005 February 2021|

Experiences from the field • n. 81 December 2020

Nome-based care: tackling tuberculosis in Uganda

Text by / Simone Cadorin

Based on a swift assessment of the heightened risk of patient abandonment of TB treatment during Uganda’s lockdown, we implemented an intervention to provide the population with a monitoring service and home-based care, and had an unexpected success in times of Covid-19: a rise in completed treatments and lower drop-out rates

5 February 2021

Pandemic complications: the case of Wolisso

2024-04-09T19:28:59+02:005 February 2021|

Experiences from the field • n. 81 December 2020

Pandemic complications: the case of Wolisso

Text by / Fabio Manenti

The Covid-19 pandemic is taking a devastating toll even in countries that have managed to mitigate its direct impact, such as Ethiopia. Despite a relatively low death rate, the country has seen dire consequences vis-à-vis hospital admissions for in-patient visits, hospitalization and deliveries; and the drop in payment for services has brought grave financial consequences for health facilities.

5 February 2021

The asymmetrical impact of the pandemic in Uganda

2024-04-09T19:30:40+02:005 February 2021|

Forum • n. 81 December 2020

The asymmetrical impact of the pandemic in Uganda

Text by / Text by Maria Nannini

Covid-19 is having asymmetrical impacts on different population groups, thereby magnifying already existing disparities. Here is some information on the initial results of a World Bank analysis: first data in Uganda confirm inequities in access both to essential goods and services and to educational services.

5 February 2021

Pandemic within a pandemic

2024-04-09T19:31:20+02:005 February 2021|

Forum • n. 81 December 2020

Pandemic within a pandemic

Text by / Chiara Di Benedetto interviews Flavia Bustreo

Alongside figures on case counts, overwhelmed intensive care units and an-ever growing death toll, we’re now also beginning to see data on the indirect impact of the Covid-19 emergency – a pandemic within a pandemic where women and children are both the first to stop using health care and the hardest-hit by the social and economic repercussions of the crisis.

5 February 2021

Black lives matter

2024-04-09T19:31:57+02:005 February 2021|

Dialogue • n. 81 December 2020

Black lives matter

Text by / don Gavino Maciocco

Covid-19 is a global health emergency that calls for a global solution. A veritable storm, it has intensified health inequalities and affected the most disadvantaged and marginalized social groups around the world, including Italy, underscoring the fact that no community is safe unless all communities are protected.