Last night, GlobeMed welcomed a new group of global health crusaders, starting with a short informational meeting followed by our very first meeting of the year! A host of unfamiliar faces gathered for the first time, so our E-Board quickly got everyone accustomed to this new environment. Once introductions were finished, our GhU coordinators Jenn and Luke detailed various instances of poorly implemented charity work in disenfranchised areas, including playground fueled water pumps in Africa, the suggestion to save fat stacks of cash by moving all funding for AIDS patients to HIV prevention (and letting millions die in the process), and a failed attempt to administer justice through criminal trials following the Rwandan Genocide. Luke and Jenn kept silent on their opinions of these matters, leaving the discussion of why these experiments went wrong and how they could have been improved to the members. This prompted some fantastic exchanges and eventually led to the realization that simply shoehorning charity operations into far lands with no input from locals or understanding of their culture is a huge problem and a massive waste of the resources that these people need. That is exactly where we as a GlobeMed community comes in -- we hope to analyze aspects of cultures near and far in order to best utilize our strengths for the greatest good. Just like their GlobeMed ancestors who grew from social justice plebeians to warriors battling structural violence, our new members are already well on their way to becoming proponents of the fight against disparity. These lessons were immediately put to work -- just two hours after the meeting, we Skyped our friends at PEDA in Laos.
From all the smiling faces of GlobeMed, thanks for tuning in to our blog; we hope you are as excited for the new year as we are!