Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease
Volume 8, Issue 3 , Pages 180-183, May 2010

Developing an understanding between people: The key to global health

  • Alina Serafin

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCotswold Brow, Rodborough Common, Stroud, Gloucestershire GL5 5BX, UK. Tel.: +44 7855943155.

University College, London, UK

Received 31 December 2009; received in revised form 18 February 2010; accepted 23 February 2010. published online 24 March 2010.

Summary 

Global health and international health are prominent concepts within development issues today. Health is at the heart of many of the Millennium Development Goals, and the idea of a human right to health and health care has taken more hold in the forefronts of our minds.

In acknowledgement of the globalised and interdependent society in which we live, this reflective piece uses personal experiences of anthropology and travel throughout the author's medical education to illustrate the pressing need for a better understanding between health workers and local populations. Experiences in Ecuador, Peru, India and Nepal, highlight the plurality of medicine. They show how medical education in the UK forms only one part of medical knowledge, and in particular how clinical practice requires the appreciation of a wider context.

Within a multi-cultural society, it is essential that medical students learn new skills for the future. Teaching Anthropology and Sociology within the curriculum in the UK can educate students about how knowledge is created within a culture and to appreciate the diversity between cultures. Consideration of patients' backgrounds and beliefs allows health workers to develop relationships with the local population, which can be of invaluable use in making global health equality a reality.

Keywords: Global health, Travel, Medical education, Cultural understanding

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PII: S1477-8939(10)00031-1

doi:10.1016/j.tmaid.2010.02.005

Travel Medicine and Infectious Disease
Volume 8, Issue 3 , Pages 180-183, May 2010