Sunday, October 28, 2012

A Reflection on MEDLIFE by Kate Spencer


This past week, Jenn and I met with a national organization called MEDLIFE, thinking that many of their missions might be similar to GlobeMed. This was set up through the sociology department and we thought it might be a useful tool.

            While MEDLIFE is a very reputable organization and does have very outcomes with their work, Jenn and I both left feeling very happy we work with GlobeMed. MEDLIFE does a lot of medical brigade trips and tries to use ground staff and engage in other community projects in the areas they visit, all of which are great initiatives that should be applauded. But I still left so satisfied with GlobeMed.

            Health issues in developing countries and even in developed ones frequently have preventable causes. Why are TB, malaria, diphtheria, and other infectious disease less prevalent in the US? What makes developing countries more susceptible?

            One major reason is poverty in relation to standards of living. Living without clean drinking water, in close quarters without proper sanitation, living without a toilet and without adequate nutrition and often without access to immediate and preventative healthcare are all aspects of poverty in these developing countries. All of these factors contribute to poor health and high rates of infectious disease. How can we hope to rid of these diseases that have such devastating effects?

            The answer that many organizations have is to treat health problems. GlobeMed’s partner organizations’ however, are always looking to prevent at the grassroots level. Prevention is most key in this sense. By eradicating poverty and increase living standards we are decreasing the risk for all of the diseases that are national epidemics in the countries all the chapters work with.

            The NGO I worked with this summer’s main goal was to eradicate rural poverty in India. They did this through a 5 pillar system: job creation, citizen and women empowerment initiatives, education, health programs and the environment. There is no better way to eradicate poverty than by attacking it at different angles. While many of the NGOs our chapters’ work with focus on health, they are still looking at the root of poverty. In many ways, this is simple: eradicate poverty and improve health conditions.

            So how can we do this? One of the major things that struck me with the NGO I worked with and with a lot different GlobeMed chapters it the commitment to sustainability. There is no way we can eradicate poverty by simple donations- this is not sustainable. We need to empower those living in poverty by creating jobs, giving loans instead of just money, making sure affordable health care and education is available to all and not just to those that can afford it. For example, constructing toilets is a great thing in terms of improving health and living conditions. But just giving a person a western toilet in a donation fashion will go to waste. If, instead, we give them a loan to construct their own toilet, they are not only more involved, but they are also more likely to use and take care of it.

            While medical treatment, brigades and free care are also vital to improving health, we will never get to the root of health problems in the developing world unless we get to eradicating poverty and improving conditions. The grassroots organizations GlobeMed works with are doing just that. That is why I am so happy to be a part of this great organization truly making a difference in the world we live in.

Monday, September 3, 2012

Reflecting on the Importance of Global Health Equity by Jenn Perugini


“But the poor person does not exist as an inescapable fact of destiny. His or her existence is not politically neutral, and it is not ethically innocent. The poor are a by-product of the system in which we live and for which we are responsible. They are marginalized by our social and cultural world. They are the oppressed, exploited proletariat, robbed of the fruit of their labor and despoiled of their humanity. Hence the poverty of the poor is not a call to generous relief action, but a demand that we go and build a different social order.”
--Gustavo Gutierrez

       So I found this quote quite randomly while just wasting time on the internet one day. However, although it might have been found in a haphazard manner, its message is anything but. I think that this message is inexplicable linked to some of the founding principles of GlobeMed and to what it is we truly stand for. What’s our mission statement again? GlobeMed aims to strengthen the movement for global health equity by empowering students and communities to work together to improve the health of the impoverished around the world. GlobeMed is absolutely committed to working to help propagate global health equity all over the world.

       Personally, I really agree with the statement that this quote is pushing; namely that the extreme poverty and inequalities that exist in this world are not necessitated by this Earth. At least for where things stand right now (and this certainly could change in the future due to dwindling resources and a global population which is growing exponentially) we do have enough resourced to “go around”. But that’s just the problem. They don’t go around. They stay centralized in countries that have been able to establish themselves as the economic and political dictators of the world. The world doesn’t have to exist this way, yet it does. And this is why I believe that the work that GlobeMed is doing with regard to global health equity is so imperative (as our social change initiative related to global equity!).

      But who cares what only I think! What’s your initial response to this Gutierrez quote? (Also, did you know that Gustavo Gutierrez is connected to Notre Dame Theology!?). Small world. Seriously. 

Friday, August 17, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Final Reflections by Wyn Sullivan

Something I struggled with a lot this summer was the enormous magnitude and amount of problem that exist in our world. Not only in global health, but relating to poverty and inequality as well. I had finished Mountains Beyond Mountains at the very beginning of summer before I left for South Africa. Today I picked it back up for the first time since to glance through the pages and review what I had highlighted. I was amazed at how much I could relate the problems in Haiti to those I had seen in South Africa. It reminded me that issues with global health are truly universal; as Jenna mentioned in her post we sometimes forget that similar problems exist even in the United States. I feel that a lot of people choose to ignore these problems because its easier not to recognize and deny them rather than confront.

As I said, I was overwhelmed with the problems I saw in South Africa. Their government is a corrupt mess, the school system a joke, and the healthcare disfunctional. For example, we took two HIV positive children to the clinic to get their blood drawn. Despite appointments, we waited outside in the windy rain for 3 hours. When the nurse practitioner (one doctor comes once a week on Thursdays) took the childrens' blood, not only was she gloveless, but she also simply wiped up spurted blood with a kleenex off the ground. And this is in the most "developed" country in Africa. How do you fix problems like these in countries that we are so unfamiliar with? Especially in areas where cultural myths tell HIV positive men that if they rape a virgin they will no longer be positive? Or where people won't be tested for HIV because of the social stigma?

But there's hope. Lou Nanni told me once to focus on people rather than the big issues. Paul Farmer is a great example of this being done. He did not go into Haiti wanting establish an entire hospital, but started going from person to person. By looking at individuals, listening, and aiding with their problems, progress can be made. I think that we can all agree Paul Farmer is wonderful and has done great work in Haiti. There are obviously still a lot of areas in the world with inadequate healthcare. We need more Paul Farmers. Organizations such as Globemed give me hope that more Paul Farmers are on their way. As Globemed focuses on grassroots work, the different partnerships really listen and work with the individuals solving problems on a situational basis. I believe that this approach will work, and the example that people such as Paul Farmer set keeps me from getting caught up in the pessimism that will otherwise take over when looking at some of these global issues.

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 25-Afterword Reflection by Rachel Chisausky

As I reread these chapters, I was struck by the theme of finding spots of joy in even the darkest situations. Serena sums it up pretty well when she says “you gotta rejoice a little along the way,” even while they were trying to fix the broken down ambulance. Farmer too finds joy in the little things—his fish pond, the walk and visit with Alcante— in the midst of working in an unjustly deprived and dismal environment. He says that he learned to stop getting angry when he transitioned from the US—a world where a major problem is having excess—to poor and needy Haiti; he learned to change the anger into a sense of hope for a dream of equality. I think this is a good lesson for all of us. When we get angry or despairing about the place we are in, be it stressful classes or the MCAT, or a broader sense of anger about the injustices and waste in our world, we too need to find the little things that bring us joy. Though by comparison to those living in Haiti, we have life pretty good, there are still things that can get us down. The best thing we can do is focus on the things that lift us up, and channel that energy  into fixing whatever it is that makes us upset or angry. I was also struck by Farmer’s comments regarding the cost of the Medevac flight; when talking about other ways the $20,000 could have been spent, he points out that even a young doctor often makes about 5 times what the flight cost was—why not talk about other ways that money could be spent? Farmer has a very acute awareness of the disparity in the world, and it seems that he looks at everything through that lens. That raises several questions for us, now and in our futures. When living in a place like Notre Dame, where poverty is not a sight that many of us see every day, I hope that we keep the stories from Mountains Beyond Mountains in the back of our minds; when we appreciate the nice things around us, I hope that we also recognize what that money could have done. (For instance, I hope that the sight of a sprinkler system calls to mind those can’t even afford clean drinking water.) I hope that we carry this awareness into our futures too; With several of us probably planning on going into the medical field, and all of us coming out of a good school, there’s a good chance some of us will be making a substantial salary. If we find ourselves in that position, I hope that we all remember those struggling simply to survive, and find a balance with our lives. Although it is important to live a life that will make you happy, I hope that we all work in our own ways to promote the cause of global health, and the greater cause of social justice—be it like Farmer working in the field, Tom White financing, or Kidder raising awareness of the disparity and potential for change in the world. I think Kidder’s final quote, the comparison of the sound of drums to the sound of ‘so many heart beating through a single stethoscope,’ accurately sums up the philosophy that ‘the only real nation is humanity,’ and I hope we carry that philosophy with us forever.  

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 21-24 Reflection by Mike Diaz


The first time I read Mountains Beyond Mountains there was one particular line in the book that made a serious impact on me and is a major reason I wanted to write this reflection. It came when Paul Farmer was describing why he respected Dr. Pérez of Cuba as much as he does. Dr. Farmer says, “He believes in social justice medicine” (207). The reason this struck me is because I believe this description fits Farmer as well as it does Dr. Pérez. In one sentence, this is the essence of Farmer and I believe that if more people could be defined this way there would be far less health inequality in the world. I think this is a profound complement to Dr. Pérez and I certainly hope to be summarized this way some day.
These four chapters to me are some of the most important of the book because they truly show the sacrifices Farmer makes to pursue his “preferential option for the poor” while at the same time highlighting how he does it his own way. I think one of the most important lines to take away from the book comes from Jim Kim when he says, “Paul is a model of what should be done. He’s not a model for how it has to be done” (244). We cannot all be Paul Farmer, however, we can hold similar values and priorities and work in our own way to fight for them.
These chapters describe the intense travel that Farmer has to undergo to juggle the various project’s PIH has taken on and it is difficult not to be overwhelmed just imagining having to take trips like this. The thing that makes Farmer so special, in my opinion, is that his heart is always in Haiti and he is longing to return there. This is the engine that keeps his wheels turning and this seems like one of the key messages of the book. Find a cause you believe in, but more importantly find something you love to push you through the most difficult times. For Farmer this is Haiti and his clinical work, and, as he says to Kidder on page 237, he would be nothing without this. This part of the book highlights how large PIH has become and how that has forced it to evolve, but at its core it is still the organization the Farmer and Ophelia Dahl started so many years back.
Finding something as motivating as Farmer’s work in Haiti may be an impossible goal, but I believe that search is the most important part of being young. This is the best time for us to search out and try to discover what can empower us to accomplish feats as amazing as what Paul Farmer has achieved. This book to me shows just how much is possible when someone truly loves their work and believes in the good one person can create.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 17-20 Reflection by Morgan Benson


Purpose. Young people especially have been attracted to Mountains Beyond Mountains because of the genuine and intense sense of purpose Paul Farmer displays for his work.

Our generation is more socially, environmentally, and politically conscious than ever. We want to know where our food comes from. We want to use recycled products. We find artists that produce independent music. It’s a little simplistic, but I believe all of these little choices are rooted in our desire for authenticity in our lives in a largely profit-driven culture. Many in our generation instead show a motivation to dedicate their lives to work that is purpose-driven.

Paul Farmer and his colleagues have built an organization with a uniquely purpose-driven character. In this section of the book, we see some of the sacrifices Paul Farmer has made for his work. We see him living a hectic life of constant travel and work to build up their MDR-TB program in Peru. We see him in the hospital because of his refusal to address his own health symptoms before they became too severe. We see him struggling with living a life of continually seeing sickness and death. Referring to the health conditions in Haiti, he once says, “Sometimes I get so f*ing sick of it, babies dying….” But amidst all of these trials, we learn more about his spirit.

Ophelia Dahl tells us how Paul has never been depressed. I think the man just has too much faith in what his work can accomplish. He sees what PIH can do amidst all of the challenges and becoming depressed just doesn’t make sense in some way to him.

We also learn more about Jim Kim and his path to PIH. After taking on a few different causes and becoming somewhat disillusioned, he meets Paul Farmer and finds a real passion for health and social justice, eventually co-founding PIH. Among others, his skills in making drugs affordable to treat the poor become extremely valuable. He has since become the President of the World Bank, and judging by this portrait and Farmer’s belief that “you won’t betray the poor” working in policy, he will continue to use his skills well there.

Just like Jim Kim long ago, many people have been inspired by the PIH’s mission of social justice and a preferential option for the poor. This section of the book takes us further into how Farmer and Kim use their sense of purpose to work incredibly hard with their individual skills to expand PIH’s care. GlobeMed was similarly founded with the goal to work for the health of the poor around the world, and I am proud to see this passion and sense of purpose in my fellow GlobeMed’ers at Notre Dame.

By learning from these two men and the founding of Partners in Health, we further our own understanding of global health and social justice and prepare better for our next year of GlobeMed. Does anyone agree? How does a sense of purpose relate to your desire to become involved in GlobeMed? Do you see this in yourself or our generation?

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 13-16 Reflection by Jenna Gill-Wiehl


Throughout the first half of my internship with Partners In Health, I have had the amazing opportunity to speak with and learn from some amazing people. Re-reading chapters 13-16 reminded me of some of the wisdom they imparted, and I wanted to share it with you all here.
The first lesson is that those interested in “global” health can sometimes forget that the United States is part of that global community, and that there are very real and difficult problems regarding access to care within our own nation. For instance, the book points out that “in Boston’s Mission Hill neighborhood, right next to the Brigham [and incidentally close to where I am living this summer], for instance, infant mortality is higher than in Cuba.” Boston’s PACT program works with clinics in Boston and the US to strengthen a model of accompaniment and care provision for the sick and vulnerable.
We must not forget about the poor and the sick in our own community, even if poverty is often “relative” in the United States. People occasionally look at communities with absolute poverty around the world and comment that those people are much worse off than people who are relatively poor in the US. The Executive Director of the Equal Justice Initiative and PIH Board Member, Brian Stevenson,  challenged the PIH interns to think of how hard it must be to be poor in the wealthiest nation in the world. Absolute poverty is of course devastating and an enormous issue. But too often, I believe, people (myself included) often look past the suffering in our own communities.
At a meeting today with PIH’s Boston based program, the Prevention and Access to Care and Treatment (PACT) program, we discussed some barriers to care within Boston, a city where nearly everyone has health insurance and that is home to some of the best medical facilities in the world (Massachusetts General Hospital, the Brigham and Women’s Hospital, etc.). Some of these barriers to care include poverty, homelessness, racism, abuse, language and literacy. The PACT program uses Community Health Workers to empower their patients and accompany them to care. As GlobeMedders, we must remember that our global health community includes the United States and as Paul Farmer would say, "the only real nation is humanity." When we say health is a human right we mean that health is a human right for everyone, everywhere, and we must take the necessary steps to make this belief a reality by learning about the different issues and advocating for the poor, the sick and the vulnerable both in the US and abroad. 

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 9-12 Reflection by Julia McSorley


By this point in the book, I think it’s safe to say that we have all seen how amazing of a human being Paul Farmer is.  As I am continuously astonished with the turn of each page, I can’t help but wonder how he is able to continually give all that he is over to others. The extent to which he dedicates himself is truly inspiring. There is one phrase that keeps coming to mind as I reflect on this. To quote the New Radicals, “You only get what you give.”  Paul Farmer is an extreme example of what it means to fully give your self over to others. With his credentials he could have easily been living a life that many dream of, in a mansion on the beach with a Ferrari parked in the driveway. But instead of choosing these luxuries, Farmer continues to work in harsh, frustrating, and dangerous conditions as he strives to aid the Haitians. He doesn’t do it for fame or fortune; rather he does it because it is the right thing to do.
This internal drive is necessary to have in order to make a difference in a world with so much suffering and injustice, and I believe this drive can be rooted in one’s faith. Farmer’s experiences with global health had confirmed his beliefs. Even after being exposed to the horrors of disease across the world, Farmer claims, “ there was still a place to look for God, and that was in the suffering of the poor.” Although there are many different kinds, having faith is something that people of all backgrounds and all levels in life can share, which in my mind is truly amazing. This commonality reminds us that although we are all different and although we all come from different places, we are all here together in this world and it is our duty to help others.
This seems to be a cliché moral that we have been told since we were children. It is even shown in the University of Notre Dame’s mission statement as it states the goal, “To create a sense of human solidarity and concern for the common good that will bear fruit as learning becomes service to justice.” Its prominence is because of its importance. If we on this planet cannot look out for our fellow man, than what is the point? At the risk of getting to cheesy on you all I will say, you must empty yourself in order to feel full. By helping others we receive the greatest reward there is and that is something that cannot be shown by a mansion or a Ferrari, but rather something that is felt in our hearts. This is the reason I believe Paul Farmer lives the way he does, because he understands the importance of living for others.

Monday, July 9, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 6-7 Reflection by Kinzie Schulz

           To understand a person I think you really have to look at how they grew up. Paul’s father was a man of ideas and constantly moved his family around to suit his new “business endeavors”. It was one idea after another, and although most of them seemed to blow up in their face, “no one ever got seriously injured”. One of the more disastrous plans came after Paul’s father up and bought a boat one day and decided they were all going to make their money living on the ocean while selling fish for a living (in retrospect, it might have been helpful if he knew a thing or two about navigation or really anything about fishing). The boat ended up being disposed of in the only manner appropriate, a “Viking funeral”. While things never really turned out as planned, I respect Paul’s father for trying, for never doing anything “half-ass”, and for not being afraid to take risks. In that way Paul is a lot like his father. He takes risks everyday in doing what he does and most people I think would say it isn’t worth it. He barely gets to see his family because he is traveling so much of the time and he is basically broke because any money he makes goes right into helping his cause.
His dedication to each patient is amazing and is shown in the way he acts, speaks, and how lives his life constantly making sacrifices for others. Seriously I wish I could be him. If one’s goal is to be a doctor they should aim to emulate the essence of Paul Farmer, honest dedication to each patient. If you’re going do your job, do it right. He cares so much that things are done right that he walked six hours in the heat to make sure his patient was coming in for his TB treatment. His response to how ridiculous that may have seemed was “…but you can never invest too much in making sure this stuff works”. I’m not surprised some of his patients think he is a god. After reading this book I almost agree!
The book doesn’t just challenge its reader just to help others, to risk more, or to be more dedicated in one’s endeavors, it also sheds light on the undeniable connection between the health and happiness of its citizens and the stability or corruption of its government. The dictators in Haiti have long been controlled by the interest of the US government who don’t always have the Haitian’s best interest in mind. Kidder tells us how Paul is very passionate about the dam that was built. The people were made to believe this dam was a gift when in reality it was made to help agriculture down stream and ruined the lives of many who lived up stream. The quality of life of many Haitians was diminished by this project, yet nothing was done about it. The rulers in Haiti are often dictators who use “donations” to help the wealthy stay wealthy and to make sure those in power stay in power. It seems outrageous but that’s the way the world is. Too some, these issues may be overwhelming and disheartening. How can we solve this big of a problem just one patient at a time? How can we effect change in the government? Helping one patient at a time may seem like an arduous process that won’t even make a dent in healing the amount of people suffering or in poverty. In this case thought we are dealing with people, people who have families and hopes and dreams and the effects of truly helping one person, no short cuts taken, cannot be measured.

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 5-8 Reflection by Jessica Puricelli


Have you ever had one of those moments where you are listening to a song and it seems to fit in exactly with what you are going through? Come on, you know what I’m talking about…. When the lyrics are spot on with how you are feeling and the beat is just right – before you know it, all the drivers around you are staring in your car because you are getting really into it, belting the song as loud as you possibly can, both hands gripped to the steering wheel….

This is exactly how I felt reading chapters 5-8 of Mountains Beyond Mountains. Recently, I have really been trying to find my vocation. No small task for a 20 year old! How in the world are we supposed to decide right now what we want to be doing for the rest of our lives? When I read the first sentence of Chapter 5 – “It was impossible to spend any time with Farmer and not wonder how he happened to choose this life” (48). – I thought to myself, Here it is! Finally some answers to how I should choose my direction!

Here’s what I learned about Paul Farmer when he was about my age: (1) “….he didn’t get straight A’s his first semester of college” (55) (extremely encouraging J), (2) there was a period when “to some of the family, it seemed that [he] might be making that customary American right of passage and turning his back on them” (55),  and (3) he craved his family’s, especially his father’s, approval (56). These all seemed to me to be pretty regular experiences for college kids. There had to be something more! Then I found it--the teachings and ideas of Rudolph Virchow, Gustavo Gutierrez’s liberation theology, Haiti’s history (which reminded him of Lord of the Rings), Latin American culture--Paul Farmer was receptive to the things that caught his attention, and when he found these things, he explored them to the fullest! He capitalized on these things that interested and excited him and based his whole life on them. My first thought was “Wow, that’s risky!” But why should it be? After all, it only makes sense that whatever we do in life, it be founded in things that excite us!

I felt that Farmer’s sympathy when he said, “I’d like to be able to say that when I was young I lived in a trailer park, picked fruit with Haitians, got interested in migrant farmworkers, and went to Latin America. All true, but not the truth. We’re asked to have tidy biographies that are coherent. Everyone does that. But the fact is, a perfectly discrepant version has the same ending” (54). As a college student, I feel all kinds of pressures about figuring out what it is that I want to do, but maybe I should work toward removing myself from these pressures. Maybe instead of worrying so much about planning my future, I should relish in the fact that I don’t know what is coming next. I should focus on figuring out what it is that I love, and run with it. It worked for Paul Farmer, why shouldn’t it work for anyone else? Passion and a good work ethic – seems like a recipe for success to me!

      On a completely unrelated note, I do want to point out a quote from Chapter 6 that really caught my eye: “He’d imagined something different—a hospital at least partly devoted to training Haitians to treat Haitians” (65). I love this notion of teaching the people so they can help themselves. I feel like so often when it comes to global health, there is such a focus on what we can do to alleviate discrepancies that we become transformed into heroes. Last time I checked, though, I didn’t have any super powers. We are all human. Catholic Social Teaching distinguishes between working for a people and working with a people. When approaching issues of global health, I strongly believe it can only be approached through the latter thinking. That is one of the most incredible thing about GlobeMed for me—it does not involve dropping off a duffle bag full of medicine or making a mission trip that offers only temporary improvement, but rather, it is principled in forming a relationship, which mandates the attitude that we are working with our partner.

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Mountains Beyond Mountains Chs 1-4 Reflection by Jenna Gill-Wiehl


I remember the first time I heard about “Mountains Beyond Mountains”. Another doctor in my mother’s oncology office had given it to her to read. And my mom told me it was the story of a doctor who had started a clinic in Haiti while attending medical school and a non-profit and really was making a difference. So I picked it up one day (probably out of sheer boredom), and began to read. I could never have predicted the profound difference that this book would make on my life—how I see the world, the classes I’m taking in college, my extra curricular activities, why I’m spending the summer (without air conditioning) in Boston and what I want to do with the rest of my life.

It is obvious from the first four chapters that this is not just a story about a doctor and a non-profit. Rather, it is a commentary on our world today, on our society, what we value and how we treat other people—and the movement that’s taking a stand against an injustice. And I think Paul Farmer sums it up perfectly when he says, “the idea that some lives matter less is the root of all that’s wrong with the world.” In the first four chapters, we meet Dr. Paul Farmer through the eyes of Tracy Kidder. And we meet patients in Boston and Haiti with the same diseases but very different situations. And we think about a world where “we can spend sixty-eight thousand dollars per TB patient in New York City, but if you start giving watches or radios to patients here [in Haiti], suddenly the international health community jumps on you for creating nonsustainable projects.” I found myself agreeing with Dr. Farmer when he exclaims in the book, “if a patient says, I really need a Bible or nail clippers, well, for God’s sake!”

This book is also challenging. It challenges our society and asks hard questions. I understand Tracy Kidder (the author and narrator) when he acknowledges that he avoided Paul Farmer for five years because Paul made him uncomfortable, because Paul’s “way would be hard to share, because it implied such an extreme definition of a term like ‘doing one’s best’”. What are your initial impressions after reading the first couple chapters? Has the book raised any points you never thought about before? What does it meant to “do your best”? Do we have a moral obligation to do anything? 

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Summer Reading


This year, our summer reading book is “Mountains Beyond Mountains: The Quest of Dr. Paul Farmer, a Man who would Cure the World” by Tracy Kidder. We hope you all enjoy the book, and check back here every week for a reflection on every couple of chapters. Feel free to add comments, and hopefully these reflections will kick off discussions when we get back to campus in the Fall! Have a wonderful rest of the summer! 

Welcome!!

Welcome to GlobeMed at Notre Dame's Blog! GlobeMed is a network of students that partner with grassroots organizations to improve the health of the impoverished and the vulnerable around the world.  The Notre Dame chapter partners with the Promotion for Education and Development Association (PEDA), based in Vientiane, Laos. Our mission is to support PEDA in their efforts to combat malaria, tuberculosis and poor nutrition in rural Laos, while also learning about issues in global health with a social justice lens--and having a blast while doing so!! Join us in our mission to make the world a healthier and more equitable place! Join the movement. Be the change.