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Utano Public Health Chats

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Content provided by Fiona Gambanga. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Fiona Gambanga or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
A podcast where people get to learn more about public health work in Africa and how to navigate their public health careers. Each episode features an in depth interview with a public health practitioner and/or researcher from an African country and/or working in African countries in public health. Conversation is about how they ended up working in public health, what they do at a high level in their current work, what they love about their field and career path and what words of wisdom they would like to share with the audience.
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20 episodes

Artwork

Utano Public Health Chats

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Manage series 3350643
Content provided by Fiona Gambanga. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Fiona Gambanga or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
A podcast where people get to learn more about public health work in Africa and how to navigate their public health careers. Each episode features an in depth interview with a public health practitioner and/or researcher from an African country and/or working in African countries in public health. Conversation is about how they ended up working in public health, what they do at a high level in their current work, what they love about their field and career path and what words of wisdom they would like to share with the audience.
  continue reading

20 episodes

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In this episode we talk with Dr. Nii Lante Heward-Mills from Ghana. Dr. Nii Lante is the Country Director for Viamo in Liberia and Ghana. His background is in Public Health-Health Promotion and has worked extensively with Health Services and Ministries of Health in Ghana and Nigeria. We discussed: How Nii started out his career training as an Optometrist then how he ended up choosing to specialize in Health Promotion What motivated Nii to choose a career in Public health promotion and what experiences influenced this What does Nii do now and what does a day in his life look like? Key projects Nii has worked on , and the outcomes and the impact they have had in Ghana and beyond Nii's favorite and least favorite things about working in in digital health and ICT4D space What does Public health mean to Nii? Challenges around working in Public health and development Acknowledgements…
 
"In this episode we talk with Mr. Emmanuel Nsengiyumva from Rwanda. Emmanuel is an experienced leader, and development professional with 10+ years working in the health and social protection sector with INGOs experience supporting governments in a wide spectrum of development issues from systems strengthening to community programming. We discussed: Emmanuel's introduction and the journey of he started his career in public health What things were critical for Emmanuel to develop to the professional he is todayWhat does Emmanuel do now 10 years into his career?What Emmanuel enjoys most about his work nowWhy did Emmanuel choose to stay in this field?What does Public health mean to Emmanuel?Challenges around working in Public health and development Word to the wise "…
 
In this episode we hear from Mrs. Soline Mugeni from Rwanda. Mrs. Mugeni holds a BSc in Microbiology and an MSc. in Community Health.She has 10+ years experience working in the health sector with INGOs and supporting governments in multiple areas such as community health, human resources for health, health financing, and most recently immunization. She is passionate about serving communities and making an impact.…
 
Check out our conversation with Dr. Nkechi Olalere , the Special Advisor on Health Economics to the Honorable Minister of Health and Sanitation in Sierra Leone on her career journey.Dr. Nkechi has over 17 years’ experience in health insurance implementation, spanning private, public and development sectors. She is also passionate about digital health, sustainability of country health systems and strategic purchasing, especially provider payment reforms, several of which she led, successfully, in the private health insurance space.She recently served as the Executive Director of Strategic Purchasing Africa Resource Center (SPARC) and the chair of Africa Union’s Tracker sub-committee tasked with developing indicators and measures of progress for ‘More Health for the Money’.She is the chair of the Rapid Cycle Monitoring sub-group of Global Financing Facility’s Results Advisory Group.…
 
In this episode we hear from Dr. Godfrey Musuka, an international Public and Evaluation Consultant, HIV/AIDS M&E and public health expert with over 25 years of experience. We talked about: Who is Dr Musuka? His background and how ended up working in public health. Countries and areas he has worked in Key career experiences that shaped his expertise How many years’ experience does he have in the field? What has changed and what has stayed the same? What does Dr. Musuka call himself? How did Dr Musuka end up studying Veterinary medicine? And how did he end up pivoting into public health more specifically? A run through of Dr. Musuka’s key career experiences, where they led him, and what he worked on Does he find that all his experiences and trainings have connected or intersected over time? Was One Health a thing back in the day? What was his approach for the different opportunities in his career? Did he plan it out? The importance of being open and being willing to try new projects and challenges (even if you fail!) What is Dr. Musuka working on now? -Highlights of current and recently completed projects Working with different stakeholders at different levels as your career grows What working with and in different countries looks like and key things to keep in mind to ensure success Different key people Dr. Musuka has worked with that have been influential and key in his growth and development Always reach out and ask questions so you can listen and learn The importance of relationships and having people who can hold you accountable Different people can help you in your career and that includes your family and your children Another BRTI guest on the show! Making the connection How many degrees does Dr Musuka have? The importance of continual learning and what that looks like for Dr Musuka Public health can have people from different areas and backgrounds in training and still eg Accountants and Economists How does Dr Musuka define Public Health? Public health as a broad, inclusive and evolving field Key challenges and issues that Dr Musuka has seen in the field with all his experiences Words of wisdom to young people out there regarding career success…
 
Who is Chrystal and what does she do? What led Chrystal to the work she does today? What Chrystal studied at the undergraduate level and how that led her to public health work Chrystal’s decision to pursue a Master of Public Health degree (MPH) and what she is focusing on in her program as she is pursuing it (Community Health) Why Chrystal chose to do the online option for her MPH degree A day in the life of Chrystal and her roles Dzidzo safepad initiative: what its about, what motivated it and what work goes into it Where funding and support for Dzidzo Safepad comes from Global Changemakers and their support for Dzidzo safepad-https://www.global-changemakers.net/ How long does each pad last? How they target and decide which schools to work with What Chrystal enjoys and loves about working on Dzidzo Safepad Chrystal’s role as a Her Voice ambassador through the Global Fund How Chrystal defines public health for herself Importance of equity and inclusivity in public health work and interventions Word to the wise- advice for young people and people looking to enter the field Resources and links: *https://twitter.com/dzidzo_safepad *https://www.instagram.com/dzidzo_safepad/ * The ecocash number for Dzidzo Safepad donations is +263 772935923…
 
In this episode our guest is Sandra Isano a Rwandan pharmacist, Lecturer, and Coordinator for Community Based Education in the Department of Community Health, and Social Medicine at the University of Global Health Equity with over 10 years of experience in the field. We talked about: Sandra’s background and the work she does now and where she works Where Sandra’s journey in public health started, and what she wanted to be when she was younger How working as a community pharmacist got her interested in patients beyond the treatment and medication they were coming to seek Her work as a fellow with Global Health Corps Rwanda’s High School pathway and where people choose to specialize Which one’s are the community pharmacies? How and why pharmacies serve as a first line of care and health service delivery How capacity building at pharmacies can be an additional solution in provided primary care How pharmacy, GHC fellowship and now her current work as a lecturer doing community community research all inspire and motivate her interests What her current work at UGHE looks like and includes Teaching, research and community service Highlights of some of Sandra’s research projects and outcomes from them Sandra’s PhD project, and what motivated her to study for a PhD a focus on teen mothers at refugee camps in Rwanda, and what questions and information she will be looking into Sandra’s favorite thing about working in public health How Sandra defines public health Sandra’s least favorite thing about working in public health Words of advice to those starting out in the public health field and their careers Love as a public health intervention and the social ecological model! https://ghcorps.org/ -Global Health Corps website https://ughe.org/ -University of Global Health Equity website https://ur.ac.rw/- University of Rwanda website…
 
In this episode we chat with Tatenda Diura, a humanitarian worker from Zimbabwe. We discuss: A brief introduction of her background, her current work and where she is based, and what she specializes in, in her work What is safeguarding and how long has she been doing this work? Her background and journey to public health , what she studied, her internship experience in Zimbabwe How she found out about public health and how she ended up doing her Masters degree in public health What influenced her career decisions at every juncture in her journey How she used resources available to her to search for jobs How she navigated the catch 22 of jobs requiring experience and experience being gotten through jobs and got her first job after her Master’s degree How she has leveraged changing organizations and roles to grow in her career The principle of do not harm and how it is the cornerstone of safeguarding work in humanitarian settings Examples of the kind of work she does in safeguarding Behavior Change Communication and how her sociology degree is now relevant in her work What a survivor centered approach in humanitarian work is and what that looks like The importance of understanding context in populations that we serve in public health How heavy humanitarian work can be at times What Tatenda’s likes the most about the work that she does What measures are in place in the humanitarian field to ensure that humanitarian workers maintain their mental, physical and emotional wellbeing Burnout in humanitarian work The risk of being desensitized doing the work and the importance of rest and unplugging between projects and assignments The importance of empathy and mot sympathy while doing work What keeps Tatenda going in the field, even with high turnover rates What does public health mean for Tatenda Vulnerable populations that Tatenda works with and how that is defined Words of wisdom How Tatenda has used LinkedIn to grow in her career…
 
In this episode we hear from Dr. Chido Dziva Chikwari, an Epidemiologist from Zimbabwe about her work and career journey in public health for the past 9 years. We talked about: Chido’s current roles and how long she has been doing health research work Chido’s background and career journey and how she ended up doing the work she does now How she ended up doing an Master’s degree in Epidemiology and what influenced her choices The importance of career guidance and the right vocabulary in career decision making What is an epidemiologist and what do they do?- With examples The things she likes about working in Epidemiology and research How she has used her skills to pivot to different program areas over the years Her research project on increasing access and uptake of HIV testing for children in Zimbabwe that she conducted as part of her PhD How the findings from her research work became relevant when COVID-19 broke out in 2019 How we are going to make a movie on Chido’s Doctoral research What are Chido’s top favorite reasons she likes about working in public health research The value and importance of having a good community of people to work with What public health means to Chido For the good of everybody What good for everyone includes and entails from access, universal health coverage, priority populations, COVID-19 global response The importance of meeting people where they are in public health interventions eg. COVID-19 vaccines and prevention Chido’s advice to young people and all people of all ages on career paths What Chido knows now about the field of public health that wishes she had known or understood earlier Public Health is a lot of work? Where is the money in Public health? Is there money in public health work? Career advice and tips are relevant throughout the lifecourse Things change, career pivots happen, life happens Check out https://www.thruzim.org/ for all the research work…
 
In this episode we hear from Joy Kamunyori, a digital health and project management professional from Kenya about her 14 year career assessing, developing and implementing public health IT systems in sub-Saharan African countries. We discussed: Joy’s background what she studied and how she ended working in public health How her passion for education and development and skillset landed her in a public health role that started of her career How she became interested in Computers and eventually chose to study computer science What she likes and drew her to coding and computer science How mentorship played a significant role in her career and choices at many junctures Her experience pursuing graduate studies in Computer Science What her work looks like now, in scale and range and the kinds of problems she supports solving How she considers herself an interpreter in her work in digital health and what that looks like How her roles have changed as her career has progressed in the field The relationship between Public health, education and development How Digital Health as a field and use of technology for health started, emerged and has now expanded to be integral in public health systems Challenges and key considerations for countries as they transition to having fully digital health information systems and how Joy has come across and been part of these conversations What are Joy’s favorite things about doing her work What public health means to Joy Joy’s advice to a younger self Top 3 skills she recommends to work on in the field…
 
In this episode we talked with Will Moyo an Bioengineer from Zimbabwe. Will is the Engineering Innovation Design Studio Manager for Rice 360 Institute for Global Health Technologies. We discussed: Will’s background and the kind of work she does now What is Bioengineering and what training she received to get there What motivated her to pursue a career in Bioengineering Invention education and how its used at the Design studios where she works What are Design Studios and training offered there What Will does on a day to day basis in her role The different kind of funders who support their work The need for support and investment in inventions, innovation and education for long term success “Funding people to fail” Challenges associated with innovation and global health technologies in an African context What is Will's favorite part of the work that she does The value of impactful work and seeing effort come to fruition What public health means to Will Everything is Public Health! Is Will Shuri from Black Panther??? The importance of medical devices and access in public health The Importance of investing in education for health so as to improve health outcomes The need to train engineers and technical workforce practically so they know how to work with biomedical equipment in the real world Other African countries where the model of design studios are currently being implemented Who makes a good Biomedical engineer? What it takes and good skills to have in the field The different kind of stakeholders Will and her students get to work with Regulation and standardization for medical device design and invention in African countries Challenges and frustrations from working in education and invention and innovative work in the global health technologies space How their program was able to generate income for themselves by being innovative at the beginning of the pandemic What does Will know now, that she wishes she knew earlier Words of Wisdom Resource plugs Tips of reaching out and getting opportunities in the field…
 
This episode we heard from Dr. Itumeleng Ntatamala, an Occupational Medicine Specialist and Senior Lecturer in the Occupational Medicine Division in the School of Public Health at University of Cape Town’s Faculty of Health Sciences. We talked about: Dr. Itumeleng’s background and his current roles What drew him to medicine, public health and then occupational health How his interests in clinical care influenced his interest to do public health work Defining occupational health and occupation medicine and how they sit under public health The aim of occupational health What occupational health looks like and the different types of workers and professionals who work in it Examples of the types of work dealt with in occupational health How he splits his time between clinical work, public health work, research and teaching The wide range of patients and medical issues that they see and the different work industries they work with in occupational medicine Where Dr. Itumeleng finds the most joy and fulfillment in his work The need for more people to be interested and work in Occupational health, in South Africa and beyond COVID and its impact on occupational health Different types of trainings that people can undergo to gain skills in and pivot to start working in occupational health Why there is not as many people going into the field and being aware that the field of occupational health exists as a career path in public health Challenges in limited opportunities for training in South Africa and in the region How he defines public health and what public health means to him Advice for anyone looking to go into medicine and/or public health Following your passion and taking it one step at a time Advice for those that might be interested specifically in pivoting into occupational health Skills that he has found the most useful Attending short courses in what you are interested Reading more about occupational health eg :International Labor Organization ILO https://www.ilo.org/global/lang--en/index.htm Health & Safety Executive(HSE) https://www.hse.gov.uk/ National Institute of Occupational Health SA (NIOH) https://www.nioh.ac.za/# and local National Occupational health bodies Areas that connect to occupational health eg psychology or social work or physiotherapy Can reach out about programs to him on Linked in or via email at for questions about the field and programs…
 
In this episode with Dorcas Kareithi a clinical trials statistician from Kenya currently based in the UK we discussed: Dorcas’s background and how her love for Math led her to study Applied Statistics What she calls herself Dorcas’s love for data, data puns and t shirts with them All the key steps she took to end up working in health with her skillset Difference between being a researcher and statistician What influenced her interest in health from family to books she read growing up How she ended up working in health after her Bachelor's degree and key steps she took to lead herself there Mentorship and the role it has played in her career Different types of mentors Highlights from her current and previous work What is her favorite thing about her work and working in public health What she likes the least about working in public health Ethics in public health research Inequalities in healthcare access The importance of government buy in and will to bridge research findings to policy and implementation Importance of documenting failures in research Her top 3 software recommendations Words of wisdom especially to people looking to have careers in statistics Her resource plugs: Young African Statisticians (YASA): https://twitter.com/africanyas Words that count: https://twitter.com/wordsafrica RLadies Nairobi: https://twitter.com/rladiesnairobi…
 
In this episode we talked with Siyabonga Ndwandwe, a computational health economist from Eswatini currently based in London about his to journey to working in Public health and what it has been like for him. In the episode we discussed: What is computational health economics and what that entails His background and motivation to study health economics and work in public health Using an economic framework, economics principles and tools, to understand health care system and answer and solve health related problems What type of health data is there, the different sources, who collects it and why? Privacy , security and the need for regulation of using health data in the world of Big Data Stakeholders in public health and how they are involved in the work The kinds of questions being answered in the field of health economics and in Siya’s work What a typical day, or typical week looks like in his current role Highlights of different roles and projects that Siya has done in the different roles and countries he has worked in What public health means to Siyabonga and how he defines it The Public Health Elephant! What he likes about Health Systems Research Siya’s favorite things about working in public health A little bit of ethics and philosophy of economics in health systems using COVID as an example Challenges that come with working with data depending on the context The difference between learning how to work and learning the work Word to the wise…
 
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