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How U.S. Medical Schools Are Training a Post-Pandemic Generation of Doctors

How U.S. Medical Schools Are Training a Post-Pandemic Generation of Doctors

In February 2019, the Kaiser Permanente health system announced a new kind of medical school. The school would be built “from the ground up” to prepare students for the complexities of the U.S. medical system. The curriculum would emphasize cultural competency, patient and provider well-being, and the elimination of socioeconomic disparities in the medical system. Students would see patients right away, and hands-on learning would replace many lectures. What’s more, the first five graduating classes would pay nothing to attend; Kaiser hoped this would attract a student body more diverse than the typical U.S. medical school.

“The school will help shape the future of medical education,” promised Kaiser CEO Bernard Tyson, who died unexpectedly, reportedly of a heart attack, about nine months after the announcement.

That future felt a good deal more urgent by the time the Kaiser Permanente Bernard J. Tyson School of Medicine opened its doors in Pasadena, Calif., in July. The COVID-19 pandemic had put a hold on almost every facet of “normal” life, and the medical system was scrambling to treat millions of patients with a new and terrifying disease, a disproportionate number of them Black and brown. The streets were filled with people protesting police brutality and racism, as a nation that had long overslept awoke to the disparities woven into almost every American institution. “Our country doesn’t just have a pandemic; it also has a renewed recognition of centuries of racism,” says Kaiser’s founding dean Dr. Mark Schuster. “We need to make sure that our students understand our history.”

Kaiser isn’t alone there, of course. Medical schools all over the world have had to adjust on the fly during the pandemic, in ways both practical and ideological. First, schools had to figure out how to remotely train students in skills taught hands-on before lockdowns. Then, in the U.S., schools were also forced to grapple with their roles in a health care system that often fails to keep Black and brown patients well. That meant learning how to produce doctors who could help chip away at those disparities moving forward. With no warning and no instruction manual, medical schools are figuring out how to train a generation of post-pandemic doctors for a world still taking shape.

The foundations of the American medical education system haven’t changed much for decades. The first two years are a mad rush to attend lectures and memorize as much information as humanly possible, since students usually take the first part of their medical licensing exam after their second year of school. In their third year, students start clinical rotations in hospitals, then spend most of their fourth trying to find a match for their next phase of training: medical residency.

The coronavirus pandemic upended all of that last spring. Classes could no longer happen in person, let alone in large lecture halls. Students couldn’t go to hospitals for training, since facilities needed to conserve resources and personal protective equipment. And travel restrictions made it difficult for fourth-year students to do “audition rotations” at hospitals where they hoped to complete residency. Fiona Chen, who was in her third year at Brown University’s Warren Alpert Medical School, went from spending around 40 hours a week in the clinic to watching one Zoom lecture a week and volunteering for a coronavirus information hotline. “We basically put a pause on our entire lives,” she says.

They couldn’t stay paused forever. Schools had no choice but to adapt, which, for many, opened the door to overdue changes—changes that are coming in handy with COVID-19 again surging and new lockdowns being enacted.

“A lot of the inertia and conventions of medicine are being broken down,” says Dr. William Jeffries, vice dean for medical education at the Geisinger Commonwealth School of Medicine in Pennsylvania. “Advances in medical education are now happening at light speed.”

Though some students returned to the classroom later in the year, step one last spring was bringing traditional classes online—a fairly easy task for most schools in the developed world, though less so for schools in places like Southeast Asia and Africa, where Internet access is spottier. In developed nations, at least, the shift enabled schools to look critically at the way they were teaching before the pandemic. Kaiser’s preexisting plan to teach students anatomy using virtual reality simulators, rather than cadavers, proved fortuitous. Imperial College London gave students access to a video library of old patient interviews and exams. At New York University’s Grossman School of Medicine, professors began prerecording their lectures so students could watch in advance and use class time for livelier discussion. “Lectures have been fading as a useful didactic model for 10 years, but we continue to use them,” says Dr. Steven Abramson, NYU’s vice dean for education, faculty and academic affairs. The pandemic may finally catalyze lasting change.

When third- and fourth-year students were yanked from hospitals last spring, many schools pivoted to telemedicine appointments. (This wasn’t unique to medical schools; remote visits surged across the health care system.) After the new academic year started this past summer, third-year students at Geisinger spent the first 10 weeks learning how to take patient assessments and develop treatment plans over Zoom. “When clinical care changes, medical student education follows,” says Dr. Alison Whelan, chief medical education officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC).

That required teaching students “webside” (as opposed to bedside) manner, to prepare them for a clinical practice likely to be far more virtual than that of their predecessors. “If you’re not shaking hands, how do you make that initial connection [with a patient]?” Whelan asks. Students have also been honing the skills needed to perform the behind-the-scenes work that goes into a telemedicine appointment—like how to handle patient privacy when a spouse wanders into the room, or what to do when a patient can’t figure out how to work the web platform, Whelan says.

Still, you can’t take an EKG or draw blood virtually. To continue teaching skills like these when students were sent home, Geisinger built an “e-ICU” that allows students to see what’s going on in hospital rooms, and remotely do the sort of trainee doctor work they’d have done in person before the pandemic. Through a webcam, they can ask resident doctors on duty to perform certain exams or tests, as if they’re actually at the patient’s bedside, and then get immediate feedback from the resident.

The model worked so well that Geisinger plans to continue the e-ICU and the school’s broader telemedicine training even as students return to regular clinical work, Jeffries says. Doctors who are digitally literate and comfortable using telemedicine could help expand access to care in the future, he says. Programs like the e-ICU could also help connect doctors in small community clinics with specialists who may not be available locally. “I come from a small town in the middle of nowhere. We don’t even have a post office,” says Dr. Cass Lippold, a critical-care fellow at Geisinger who oversaw the e-ICU program. “This will be great to help those people who don’t have access to a hospital.”

Programs like these could also improve doctors’ work-life balance. “If you’re a physician with a couple young kids at home, telemedicine has really opened an opportunity to work from home a couple days a week and still see patients,” says NYU’s Abramson. Jeffries notes that moving classes online could also make it easier for prospective doctors with physical or learning disabilities to participate, since they could tailor their environment to fit their needs.

Cruz Riley, a first-year student at Kaiser Permanente's new medical school, is photographed on campus in Pasadena, Calif., in November.

The shift to online learning was a logistical undertaking, but the harder work may be producing doctors who are better equipped to take on the systemic issues exposed by the pandemic, like race-based health disparities, uneven access to care and ballooning treatment costs.

At Kaiser Permanente, that preparation began before students even started classes last summer. The entire class was invited to a virtual check-in to discuss the racial-justice movement, and the conversation hasn’t stopped since, says 26-year-old first-year student Cruz Riley, who has a special interest in Black maternal health. “You would think [students] would be talking about what we watched on Netflix,” he says. “But [the students] are always talking about systematic inequality, and we are always bouncing ideas off each other.”

Even at a school that proudly states its dedication to diversity and has woven race and racism into its curriculum, the conversations haven’t been seamless. In December, Kaiser physician and medical school instructor Dr. Aysha Khoury, who is Black, went viral on Twitter when she posted that the school had suspended her from teaching in August after she led a frank, emotional discussion about racial disparities and bias in health care. Even after outcry from students and fellow physicians, Khoury says she has not been reinstated to her faculty position or told which policy the school thinks she violated. “I wish [administrators] understood that it is O.K. for Black people, people from marginalized groups, to share their stories,” Khoury says. “If we’re truly going to change health care … they have to create a way and space to move forward together.”

Representatives from Kaiser did not comment on details of the investigation but said the school values diversity and Khoury was not penalized for talking about her personal experiences or for discussing anti-racism in medicine—a topic spokespeople maintained is a cornerstone of Kaiser’s curriculum.

Kaiser also requires first-year students to take a class on mental health and overcoming stress, and to visit an on-campus psychologist three times during their first semester. Those services, available free of charge throughout their medical education, are part of a program Kaiser implemented to counter high rates of burnout and mental distress among medical students: studies estimate more than 25% worldwide show signs of depression, and about 10% of suicidal thinking. But it has also provided valuable support as students of color do the emotional labor of living through constant reminders of racism in America, says 25-year-old first-year student Emilia Zevallos-Roberts, who was born in Ecuador.

Courses on health disparities and racism in medicine aren’t new in the U.S., but they also haven’t been terribly effective. Racism is still a problem in medical schools, as well as the wider medical system. A 2020 study found that about 25% of students who identify as Black, Hispanic/Latinx or American Indian/Alaska Native experienced race-based discrimination during medical education. That doesn’t stop after graduation. “There were so many comments that I had to endure in my undergraduate years, in my medical school years,” Dr. Tsion Firew, an emergency-medicine physician at New York City’s Columbia University, who is Black, told TIME last summer. “When I walk into my hospital, it’s not [diverse] like New York City. The second you walk into the hospital, you are reminded that you’re not part of the majority.”

Medicine and medical education remain very white fields in America. In 2019, out of nearly 38,500 medical school professors in the U.S., 755 (2%) identified as Black, around 1,000 (2.6%) identified as Hispanic or Latino, and just 37 (0.01%) identified as American Indian or Alaska Native, according to AAMC data. More than 29,000, or 75%, identified as white. For context, about 60% of the total U.S. population identifies as white, while about 12% identify as Black, 18% as Hispanic, 5.6% as Asian and less than 1% as American Indian/Alaska Native, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey.

Given that dynamic, it’s not hard to understand why many schools haven’t historically done a good job teaching concepts like cultural competency (the ability to connect with and treat patients from all backgrounds) and social determinants of health (the myriad ways socioeconomic factors affect a person’s well-being). Many also fail to correct (and in some cases even perpetuate) racist and incorrect stereotypes about biological differences between Black and white patients. One 2016 study found that, out of about 400 medical students and residents surveyed in the U.S., half held false beliefs, such as that Black people have a higher pain tolerance or physically thicker skin than white people. If students are steeped in these incorrect stereotypes, rather than very real social determinants of health, they may contribute to a system of racially insensitive, and potentially harmful, medical care.

Many schools were already working to fix that before the pandemic, but mainstream conversations about inequality and racism have hastened the process. Chen, currently a fourth-year student at Brown, says she’s noticed that race and social factors now come up when discussing every patient case, whereas before they were often relegated to stand-alone lectures or lessons. Tian Mauer, a third-year student at Geisinger, has noticed the same thing. And for schools across the U.S., the AAMC has guidelines for teaching equity, diversity and inclusion in medicine. “COVID has really highlighted for some for whom it had not yet clicked that the social determinants of health are really critical,” Whelan says.

Of course, it will take more than a few lectures to address centuries-old disparities in medical care, particularly because systemic racism has so many tendrils. It’s not enough to train physicians on implicit bias and cultural sensitivity when Black and Hispanic Americans’ health suffers due to poverty and segregation built up over centuries—or when many people from these communities can’t afford to become doctors themselves, perpetuating cycles of mistrust in a heavily white medical system.

At most medical schools, the student body looks a lot like the faculty. Together, Black and Hispanic students made up less than 15% of the national medical student population during the 2019–2020 school year, AAMC data show. People who identified as American Indian/Alaska Native made up just 0.2%. Wealth disparities go a long way to explaining why: medical school tuition and fees can easily top $60,000 per year, and the average new doctor graduates with about $200,000 in debt, according to AAMC data.

Before the pandemic, a small but growing group of schools were trying out a way to fix that: offering free or heavily discounted tuition. NYU permanently waived its $55,000 annual tuition in 2018. Geisinger now offers free tuition for students who agree to practice within its health system. Kaiser’s free tuition offer will go to its first five graduating classes.

The pandemic may accelerate conversations about affordability, especially as financial stress stretches on. Dr. Steven Scheinman, the dean at Geisinger, says a stronger reliance on remote learning could push the school’s tuition down over time. NYU and about a dozen other U.S. medical schools are also part of a consortium studying how an accelerated medical school schedule—three years instead of four—affects learning, student finances and licensing and placement for new doctors. Cutting a year of school would get doctors out into the field faster, saving them a year of expenses. More than a dozen U.S. medical schools, including NYU and each of the four medical schools in Massachusetts, along with many in the U.K., like the University of Cambridge and Oxford University, allowed their students to graduate early last spring to help with pandemic response. In a worst-case scenario, the ongoing spike in cases and hospitalizations could necessitate something similar.The U.S. medical school system also has missed opportunities presented by COVID-19. For example, relatively few schools changed their admission requirements in ways that could have made life easier for applicants. To apply for most U.S. medical schools, students still had to take a $320 hours-long standardized exam called the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT). A grassroots group called Students for Ethical Admissions called on schools to waive that requirement, citing the risks of disease spread that come with sitting for hours in an exam room with strangers, but only a handful of schools, including Stanford and the University of Minnesota, did so. The AAMC, which administers the test, maintains that all students should still take the MCAT.

And not all schools have used the moment to update their curricula, nor done a seamless job of bringing learning online. A study of U.K. medical students found that the majority experienced some disruption to their normal training. “This is a detriment to my education, sitting in my bedroom trying to focus when my parents are home working,” agrees 23-year-old Elli Warsh, who is in a nursing program at New Jersey’s Rutgers University. Warsh and her classmates were pulled out of the hospital from March to July and didn’t see any patients for those months. They had to practice skills like full-body assessments on family members or roommates; some students who lived alone used teddy bears. Now, Warsh says, she has no idea if her skills will be on par with previous new nurses when she graduates in May.

Those are real fears, particularly for students who aren’t attending big-name, richly endowed medical schools that were able to adjust on the fly, and for students shouldering burdens like financial distress and childcare during the pandemic. Time will tell how they fare when their residency placements come around. In the meantime, students like Zevallos-Roberts, from Kaiser’s School of Medicine, find optimism in the disruption. “Although the pandemic is obviously devastating,” Zevallos-Roberts says, “I’m hoping that the energy and momentum for change that we’re seeing now, that we’re able to bring that forward when we’re graduating three years from now.”

Update, Jan. 7, 2021

This story has been updated to include information about Dr. Aysha Khoury’s suspension from Kaiser Permanente’s medical school.

Fuente de la Información: https://time.com/5914062/medical-schools-coronavirus-pandemic/

 

 

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Estados Unidos: Biodegradable plastic that can break down in your compost developed by scientists

Biodegradable plastic that can break down in your compost developed by scientists

Biodegradable plastic bags, cutlery and coffee cup lids may seem like a win for the environment, but they often introduce more problems than solutions.

Despite being touted as «green», many of these plastics take just as long as their conventional counterparts to break down in home composts and landfill, leading to more pollution in soils and waterways.

Many are also not recyclable, and can only be broken down by industrial composting under high temperatures.

Now, a team of researchers at the University of California, Berkeley have finally created a biodegradable plastic that disappears almost entirely in household compost within a matter of days, just by adding heat and water.

The new material includes built-in enzymes that chew the plastic down to non-toxic molecules without leaving behind traces of harmful microplastics.

The researchers’ study has been published today in Nature.

«Enzymes are really just catalysts evolved by nature to carry out reactions,» materials scientist and study co-author Ting Xu said.

Biodegradable does not equal compostable

2015 study estimated that just 9 per cent of the world’s plastics are recycled, with most of it ending up in landfill.

Australia is marginally better, with about 18 per cent of our plastic waste ending up at recycling facilities.

Biodegradable plastics — which break down into water, carbon dioxide or organic material with the help of microorganisms — have been proposed as an environmentally friendlier alternative to petroleum-based varieties.

Many of these plastics are made from polyesters, such as polylactic acid (PLA) and polycaprolactone (PCL).

They comprise tightly packed chains of molecules, called polymers.

This makes them durable, but also difficult for water and soil microbes to penetrate enough to degrade them.

Scientist in lab creating plastic

While the chemical make-up of these traditional materials is technically biodegradable, they can only be broken down in industrial composting facilities under tightly controlled temperatures and conditions, said materials scientist Hendrik Frisch at the Queensland University of Technology, who was not involved in the study.

«Under other conditions such as soil or marine environments, these materials often display a similar durability as their conventional fossil-fuel-based counterparts, causing significant environmental damage and pollution,» Dr Frisch said.

In response to this problem, the federal government launched a National Plastics Plan earlier this year that aims to phase out plastics that «do not meet compostable standards».

The power of enzymes

Professor Xu has been exploring how to use enzymes to tackle pollution and make materials more biodegradable for more than a decade.

In 2018, Professor Xu and her team created fibre mats with embedded enzymes that break down toxic chemicals, found in insecticides and chemical warfare agents, in water.

In their new study, Professor Xu and colleagues dispersed billions of polyester-eating enzymes throughout PLA and PCL beads, which are used early in the manufacturing process to create plastic products.

After melting these beads down, they shaped the material into filaments and sheets for testing.

Biodegradable plastic breaks down in compost

To prevent these enzymes from falling apart before they had a chance to do their job, the researchers coated them in custom-designed polymers to keep them embedded in the plastic.

Without this supportive polymer coating, the enzymes could only partially chew through the molecular chains, leaving behind polluting microplastics.

But when wrapped in the coating, the enzymes were able to chomp these large molecules down to their building blocks, similar to unthreading a pearl necklace.

«The enzyme doesn’t leave the plastic [behind],» Professor Xu said.

«Even when the plastic degrades into very small pieces, the enzymes keep working.»

Plastics pull a disappearing act

When the team added their enzyme-studded polyesters to household soil compost with a little tap water, 98 per cent was converted into their individual building blocks in just a few days.

The small molecules left behind were harmless, with the enzymes turning PLA into lactic acid, a food source for soil microbes.

The enzymes ate away at the plastics even faster under industrial composting conditions, with PCL breaking down in just two days at 40 degrees Celsius, and the PLA disappearing within six days at 50C.

While the «programmed degradation» offers a promising approach to tackling plastic pollution, Dr Frisch says more research is needed to find out whether the technique works on other types of plastic.

Reassembling the remains of the degraded plastics into new products may also require a specialised recycling facility, he added.

«Implementing multiple cycles of making and unmaking will be something that has to be investigated in the future.»

Professor Xu said the approach could one day be applied to make products that are more biodegradable, from polyester clothing to biodegradable glue in phones and electronics.

«We want to work with industry to really move this forward, so that it’s in the grocery store and on your countertop.»

Fuente de la Información: https://www.abc.net.au/news/science/2021-04-22/biodegradable-plastic-compost-enzymes-environment-soil-green/100082958

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Corea del Norte: How Extreme Flooding in the DPRK Affects Daily Life

How Extreme Flooding in the DPRK Affects Daily Life

With contributions from aid workers.

The North Korean people have faced truly extreme humanitarian challenges in 2020. Before this summer, the DPRK was dealing with high levels of chronic malnutrition and severe economic disruptions caused by COVID-19 shutdowns and ongoing sanctions. The multiple typhoons that have hit over the past few weeks causing widespread flooding around the country exacerbate an already difficult year. Even after decades of visiting the North, it is devastating to witness the array of grave humanitarian difficulties that the North Korean people must endure. Sadly, humanitarian assistance for relief, recovery and rebuilding is unlikely to be delivered any time soon.

The Tyranny of Geography

The topography of the Korean Peninsula, featuring steep mountains and narrow valleys, makes it vulnerable to flooding; every mid-summer, it receives significant rainfall. In a normal season, as much as half of the annual rainfall can come during the roughly month-long “rainy season” that ordinarily begins in late June and ends by mid-July. As long as the rain showers are gentle, the hillside vegetation and natural drainage system of creeks, lakes, reservoirs and rivers can absorb and remove the excess water without widespread damage. But if the rainy season is prolonged, or if typhoons bring high winds and dump large amounts of rainfall in a short period of time, the system is quickly overwhelmed, causing mudslides, large-scale flooding and crop damage, loss of homes and infrastructure, and lives.

2020 Has Been a Bad Year

The rainy season of 2020 was prolonged and heavy, and was followed by three typhoons that struck different parts of the country in a two-week period: Bavi (August 26-27), Maysak (September 2-3) and Haishen (September 7). These storms brought further damage to already hard-hit communities, and new levels of hardship to other cities and regions that were spared mass flooding earlier in the season. Meanwhile, the risk from more typhoons continues into the fall.

According to a September 16, 2020 Pyongyang Times article, the summer of 2020 brought the second-highest level of precipitation recorded in the DPRK in the last 25 years. During the typhoons, the North Korean government issued emergency warnings and permitted unusual live, on-the-scene reporting showing significant flooding in Wonsan (North Korea’s fifth-largest city) and other areas. Yet so far, although the current flooding is likely much worse and more widespread than prior years, North Korea has neither publicly requested outside assistance nor shared precise damage estimates or casualty figures. Since the outbreak of COVID-19, the fight against the pandemic has been the government’s top priority, meaning tight quarantine measures and travel and economic restrictions remain in place. These priorities were further reiterated on August 14 when Kim Jong Un reportedly said at a Politburo meeting, “The worsening coronavirus situation around the globe calls for tighter border closures and stricter virus prevention measures, and not allowing any outside assistance whatsoever regarding the flood damage.” However, even though detailed casualty and damage figures are not available, much can be gleaned from the broadcast footage and experience gained from extensive United Nations (UN) and NGO travel and prior humanitarian engagement in the country.

The View From Ground Zero

The Korean Peninsula north of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) ranges from coastal rice-growing areas and lowlands planted with corn, soybean, vegetables, fruit trees and other crops, to mountainous areas. Steep mountain slopes are drained by small creeks running down narrow valleys, feeding into larger rivers that meander through agricultural areas, villages and towns to the sea. On previous visits to the North, aid workers have seen firsthand the widespread devastation that happens when too much water falls in these vulnerable areas in too short a time. Homes, schools, clinics and other buildings rim the edges of the narrow valleys, and when heavy rains hit steep slopes, the small creeks that drain these valleys turn into rushing torrents that soon sweep away everything in their path. Mountainsides lacking in cover vegetation can quickly become saturated and slough off, burying buildings below in mud. Standing water around the base of mud-brick buildings can cause them to “melt” and collapse. Outhouses and open waste channels are soon overrun, contaminating the floodwaters. Perimeter walls built for security collapse. Phone and electric lines are severed. Rural dirt roads turn into mud, making the surface impassible. Bridges break as abutments wash away.

As the ground becomes saturated and rivers overflow, nearby croplands are inundated. Crops like corn, soybean and rice that were weeks away from being harvested instead risk rotting in the fields. Farmers and community members will do what they can to try to salvage crops by tying them up, to hopefully allow them time to finish ripening for harvest. But if the damage is too widespread, it is simply an overwhelming task.

Swollen rivers inundate towns, uproot trees and vegetation, wash away topsoil, and deposit rocks, refuse and waste that have been pulled into the churning waters. Entire towns can be swept away, the landscape forever changed once the waters recede. It will take months of backbreaking work to rebuild homes, roads, rail lines and bridges and to remove debris from agricultural fields. With topsoil buried or washed away, the productivity of affected fields is often reduced going forward, making life even harder for those working the ground.

In the immediate aftermath of flooding, those who have lost their homes and personal belongings may be housed in the small apartments or residences of family or friends, or find shelter in community buildings, while communities try to rebuild housing. In some cases, “shock troops” of soldiers or organized volunteer laborers from various sectors of the society may be sent by the government to quickly reconstruct devastated homes and other buildings in larger communities. But in poorer areas, it seems that local communities and even individual families are left to try to rebuild and repair on their own—with few resources, an already overburdened workload and with winter just around the corner.

Inundated or partially inundated homes must be repaired; mounds of mud must be removed and belongings cleaned—yet in most cases, the only water available for cleaning is contaminated. Kitchen gardens that individual households heavily depend on must be immediately replanted, but that may be impossible if seed stocks have been lost in the flooding. People who are already malnourished and suffering will struggle even more for basic survival in the coming weeks and months from increased incidence of diarrhea caused by contaminated water sources, the sudden loss of food stocks, garden produce, or fuel, and the hugely increased workload.

Help Is Not on the Way

The damage to the roads alone makes it very difficult for relief supplies, if available at all, to be delivered. Remote communities can be entirely cut off for days or weeks while mudslides are removed, often by hand, and roads are repaired enough to restore even basic travel. Furthermore, under normal circumstances, September and October are some of the busiest months in the DPRK as they are critical for harvesting the main food crops of corn, rice and soybean. Roads must be passable in order for crops to be harvested and moved from the fields to the threshing areas and out for distribution, and electricity lines and supply must be restored in order to run the threshing machines.

The virtual closure of the border with China and the halt in nearly all external relief shipments since January 2020 out of concern for COVID-19 will make longer-term recovery efforts even more difficult. Vehicles of all kinds are needed for rebuilding efforts—to transport building materials like sand, gravel and concrete. But the parts and tires needed to keep these vehicles operational usually come from China. With trade cut off due to COVID-19 quarantines, many of these vehicles will break, further limiting transportation and supply networks. Similarly, while greenhouses have greatly expanded food production in the shoulder seasons between late fall and early spring, the supply of replacement greenhouse plastic is critical—which has also very likely been significantly curtailed due to border closures related to COVID-19 measures.

People injured during the flooding or the rebuilding effort have no option but to seek treatment at clinics or hospitals that are overwhelmed and ill-equipped to feed or house them, let alone provide them with significant medical help. Besides those already at the margins of society and highly vulnerable to shocks of any kind (children under five, pregnant and nursing women, the elderly, the disabled, those who are sick, etc.), those who lost their homes to the flooding, and communities most affected will be particularly vulnerable to increased rates of malnutrition. As people crowd together in small spaces due to the loss of shelter, there is not only the potential for the spread of COVID-19, but also the transmission of more common communicable diseases like tuberculosis or multidrug-resistant tuberculosis.

Perhaps most devastating is the emotional impact and disruption caused by the loss of loved ones, homes or livelihoods on people already on a knife-edge of survival, and the overwhelming workload. Usual tasks must be completed (on top of urgent flood restoration duties at both the community level and at the household level) before the cold of winter sets in. For millions of North Koreans, the challenge is formidable but help will not be on the way until outside humanitarian assistance and related travel is again facilitated by North Korea, a reality recognized on September 11 by US Deputy Secretary of State Stephen Biegun in remarks to the National Committee on North Korea (NCNK):

We recognize that North Korea is facing an unusually severe set of challenges this year that perhaps is making it more difficult for Pyongyang to make the decision to engage. But I can assure you we will be ready when the DPRK is ready. In the meantime, it is critical that we and the international community remain focused on the humanitarian challenges faced by the North Korean people.

Conclusion

Even after visiting the DPRK over two decades, it is heartbreaking to witness the damage and setbacks caused by floods. This year, it is even more difficult to see the devastation on communities and lives from afar without being able to lend a helping hand.

Fuente de la Información: https://www.38north.org/2020/09/nkflooding092320/

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Bélgica: Movilización en capital belga contra bloqueo de EEUU a Cuba

Cubanos residentes en Bélgica y asociaciones locales de solidaridad participarán hoy en esta capital en una manifestación para demandar el fin del bloqueo económico, comercial y financiero impuesto por Estados Unidos a la isla.

 

La emblemática Explanada del Atomium acogerá la movilización enmarcada en la convocatoria del profesor cubanoamericano Carlos Lazo, promotor del proyecto Puentes de Amor, a desarrollar este domingo en todo el planeta caravanas y actividades contra el cerco de Washington y su impacto en la familia cubana.

Desde la plataforma Puentes de Amor Bélgica y la Asociación de Cubanos Residentes en Bélgica se lanzaron en los últimos días llamados a participar en la manifestación, que sigue a la caravana realizada en el propio lugar el 28 de marzo, durante una primera jornada mundial de rechazo al bloqueo aplicado por Washington por más de seis décadas.

Los organizadores del evento adelantaron a Prensa Latina que divulgarán fotos, videos y declaraciones en las redes sociales.

Asociaciones belgas de solidaridad como la Coordinadora contra el Bloqueo a Cuba y Cubanismo.be confirmaron su participación en la movilización en el Atomium.

En su llamado a promover puentes de amor entre Estados Unidos y Cuba y a exigir el levantamiento del bloqueo, Lazo instó a ‘hombres y mujeres de buena voluntad, más allá de credos e ideologías’ a sumarse a lo que calificó de megacaravana galáctica.

jha/wmr/cvl

Fuente e imagen: prensa-latina
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Despiden en comunidades zapatistas a delegación que partirá rumbo a Europa

Algunas comunidades bases de apoyo del Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN) despidieron a las orillas de los ríos Jataté, Tzaconejá y Colorado a las y los delegados que realizarán la «Travesía por la vida, capítulo Europa», informaron en un comunicado. La delegación zapatista se prepara para zarpar hacia Europa y encontrarse con luchas y movimientos de más de 30 países.

Fuente e imágenes: desinformemonos
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México, sin ‘dinero’ ni política integral para enfrentar los retos educativos

Por: Pedro Rendón

Aunque el discurso oficial del gobierno menciona que en materia educativa la prioridad está puesta en la revalorización magisterial y en colocar a los niños, niñas y adolescentes al centro, si se revisan los datos del presupuesto 2020, “es claro que no sólo no hay una política con presupuesto para la atención a la primera infancia, sino tampoco una para la formación inicial de los docentes y/o para su desarrollo profesional”, señaló la Dra. Arcelia Martínez Bordón, académica de la Universidad Iberoamericana Ciudad de México.

Esto fue dicho por la docente e investigadora del Departamento de Educación en Los retos del Sistema Educativo Nacional y las grandes líneas de política para atenderlos, cuarta conferencia del ciclo Especialistas frente al contexto, co-organizada por el Departamento de Ciencias Sociales y Políticas, y que forma parte del Diplomado Análisis Político de Coyuntura, impartido por la Dirección de Educación Continua de la IBERO.

En su exposición aseveró que la política pública que no se traduce en presupuestos es sólo discurso. Para ilustrar lo anterior señaló que en 2020, por ejemplo, hubo un recorte muy importante al presupuesto destinado al  desarrollo profesional docente -del orden del 60.1%-; además de que no hubo un incremento, sino también un recorte de 3.5% al presupuesto de la educación inicial, no obstante que este nivel se volvió obligatorio con la reforma educativa de 2019.

Por el contrario, recordó que la prioridad en el gasto educativo se ha puesto en las transferencias de dinero a partir de becas: en el Programa Nacional de Becas para el Bienestar Benito Juárez, para educación media superior, que tras un incremento del 62% representa el 25.4 del gasto total en ese nivel educativo; y en el programa Jóvenes Escribiendo el Futuro, que luego de un incremento del 73.8% concentra el 5.8% del total del presupuesto para educación superior.

Por otra parte, la doctora Martínez, coordinadora del Faro Educativo de la IBERO, dijo que para el ciclo escolar 2018-2019 el sistema educativo nacional contaba con más de 36 millones de estudiantes -desde preescolar hasta educación superior-, poco menos de 260 mil escuelas y alrededor de dos millones de docentes para todos los niveles.

Entre los principales retos que enfrenta este sistema señaló, la equidad y calidad, que conllevan rezagos importantes que desembocan en la deserción en el nivel medio superior y en el bajo nivel de logro de aprendizajes, hoy agravado por la pandemia después de un año de educación a distancia.

Respecto a la permanencia en el sistema mencionó que, previo al problema de la pandemia por COVID-19, el sistema educativo era “un embudo”. Al analizar, por ejemplo, el tránsito escolar de las y los alumnos, se observa que de 100 que ingresaron a la primaria en el ciclo escolar 2002-2003, egresaron 92; de esos, 88 ingresaron a secundaria y egresaron 73; luego, 70 ingresaron a bachillerato o a una opción profesional técnica, pero sólo 47 terminaron una u otra; de estos 47, 35 ingresaron a la universidad y sólo la concluyeron 25 en el ciclo 2018-2019.

En cuestión de aprendizaje, Martínez Bordón, quien antes de la IBERO colaboró en el hoy desaparecido Instituto Nacional para la Evaluación de la Educación (INEE), rememoró que los resultados de 2018 del Plan Nacional para la Evaluación de los Aprendizajes (Planea), referidos al logro educativo de los alumnos y alumnas de sexto de primaria, arrojaron que el 49% tuvo un dominio insuficiente de los aprendizajes clave de lenguaje y comunicación, y 59% obtuvo un nivel insuficiente en matemáticas.

En ese mismo 2018, en el Programa Internacional para la Evaluación de Estudiantes (PISA, por sus siglas en inglés), realizado por la Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económicos (OCDE), el 35% de las y los estudiantes mexicanos no obtuvo un nivel mínimo de competencia en tres áreas: lectura, matemáticas y ciencias -13% fue el promedio del resto de países de la OCDE-.

Tras este vistazo al sistema educativo nacional, la académica de la IBERO, universidad jesuita de la Ciudad de México, concluyó que mejorar los aprendizajes de todos los y las estudiantes debería ser una de las principales metas de la política educativa.

A partir de ello, recapituló y dijo que no se trata sólo de otorgar becas; que la investigación y evaluación educativa han dado cuenta de que se necesita una mejor planeación de las políticas, con presupuestos bien pensados, articulados y sostenidos para la preparación y capacitación docente, la mejora de la infraestructura escolar, el equipamiento y la conectividad -esta última como un tema urgente-, la elaboración planeada y no apresurada de los libros de texto, entre otras cosas, para continuar con programas e intervenciones que han mostrado su efectividad.

Fuente e imagen:  IBERO

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México: Crece la violencia contra niñas y mujeres en Guerrero

Texto y foto: Isabel Briseño


Tlachinollan en la Montaña de Guerrero documentó que desde el inicio de la pandemia en esa región 20 mujeres fueron víctimas de feminicidios. La organización lanzó una campaña para visibilizar las violencias que padecen las mujeres en esa zona: “Mar de agravios, Montaña de quebrantos”

En los últimos años ha incrementado la violencia vertiginosamente en las comunidades de la región de la Montaña de Guerrero hacia las mujeres así como hacia los defensores y defensoras que las acompañan durante los procesos en que exigen justicia. Veinte mujeres fueron víctimas de feminicidio en la región durante 2020.

Ante ello, el pasado miércoles 21 de abril Tlachinollan, Centro de Derechos Humanos de la Montaña de Guerrero presentó la campaña por la vida: “Mar de agravios, Montaña de quebrantos”.

La organización busca visibilizar la violencia, la impunidad y la vulnerabilidad que está imperando en esta región.

Defensores emergentes

Asimismo, las víctimas también se han denominado defensores emergentes a partir de la defensa de sus casos. Como ellos también defienden los derechos de los demás, no solo piden justicia para ellos, también para todas las víctimas que han padecido violaciones a sus derechos.

“Durante la pandemia los casos de violencia contra la mujer han aumentado exorbitante”, señala la abogada Neil Arias, integrante de Tlachinollan.

En tanto, de parte de las autoridades hay indolencia, falta de sensibilidad y ausencia de perspectiva de género. El operador de justicia, sea hombre o mujer, no da la atención debida. Desde el inicio de la denuncia las víctimas desafían en primer lugar un gran riesgo por atreverse a levantar la voz, cuando acuden ante la agencia del Ministerio Público además se enfrentan contra la falta de credibilidad y por eso muchos casos quedan impunes, agrega Arias.

Agresiones

La organización monitoreó desde 2014 hasta abril 2021 las agresiones a mujeres en la región, con los siguientes resultados:

  • 71 feminicidios en la Montaña, de los cuales 20 sucedieron durante el año 2020
  • 20 delitos sexuales de enero 2020 a abril 2021
  • 80 casos de mujeres violentadas dentro del hogar doméstico
  • 85 casos de violencia económica
  • 3 casos de mujeres desaparecidas en el 2020
  • 35 desapariciones de personas desde 2016, 10 son mujeres
  • 20 casos de conflictos por disputa de hijos por guardia y custodia el cual es un mecanismo que usan los hombres para seguir violentando a la mujer.

Voces de las víctimas

Catarina Velázquez Moreno, mujer indígena Na savi, madre de Aurelia Velázquez Moreno. “Quiero saber dónde está mi hija, es un ser humano, no es un animalito para que la desaparezcan”.

Su hija fue vista por última vez en casa de sus suegros. Dejó a 3 hijos pequeños.

“He escuchado rumores de que me van a matar por pedir justicia”, continúa.

Después de 10 días de la desaparición de Aurelia, llamaron a la señora Velázquez a casa de la síndica. Ahí estaban sus consuegros, quienes además acusan a Aurelia de haber asesinado a Sergio, esposo de la mujer desaparecida.

Maribel Pérez Espinobarros, perteneciente a la comunidad de Huiztlatzala municipio de Zapotitlán Tablas, pide justicia para su hermano Ángel. Lo dice pellizcando sus manos y con voz entrecortada. Un día posterior a la desaparición, Maribel fue avisada que su hermano, su esposa y sus dos niñas aparecieron calcinados dentro de una camioneta en un crucero de Tlapa de Comonfort.

“Fue una muerte muy cruel y queremos justicia”.

En el pueblo han desaparecido más familias, ha habido muchas muertes, expresa la señora Espinobarros.

Piden intervención de los gobiernos

La organización y las víctimas llamaron a los gobiernos federal y estatal a desmontar las causas de la violencia. También pidieron a al poder judicial agilizar investigaciones y acceder a la justicia. Si denuncian, se arriesgan, por eso el abogado Vidulfo Rosales también solicitó medidas cautelares que garanticen la seguridad de las personas.

La Guardia Nacional no ha implementado acciones orientadas a proteger a las mujeres en la zona. Las autoridades carecen de estrategias de alcance regional para impulsar la investigación de feminicidios, y tampoco cuentan con un plan de prevención y contención ante el crimen organizado, indicó el antropólogo Abel Barrera.

Tlachinollan anunció que pedirán reuniones con autoridades federales y estatales así como con la oficina de la ONU en México para que la campaña redunde en mayor protección para las víctimas y garantice la verdad y la justicia.

Fuente e imagen: piedepagina

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