Syllabus/achievement requirements

It may be subject to small changes.

General:

  • Lakoff, A. (2017). Unprepared: global health in a time of emergency. Oakland, California, University of California Press.
  • Rosenberg, C. E. (1992). Explaining Epidemics. In: Explaining Epidemics and Other Studies in the History of Medicine, 293-304. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: 293-304.
  • Lachenal, G. (2015). Lessons in Medical Nihilism: Virus Hunters, Neoliberalism, and the AIDS Pandemic in Cameroon. Para-states and medical science: making African global health. P. W. Geissler. Durham, N.C, Duke University Press: 103-141.
  • Agyei-Mensah, S. and A. de-Graft Aikins (2010). "Epidemiological Transition and the Double Burden of Disease in Accra, Ghana." Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine 87(5): 879-897.

Tuberculosis:

  • McMillen, C. W. (2015). Discovering Tuberculosis: A Global History, 1900 to Present. New Haven, Yale University Press.
  • Ogden, J., G. Walt, et al. (2003). "The politics of 'branding' in policy transfer: the case of DOTS for tuberculosis control." Social Science & Medicine 57(1): 179-188.
  • Gradmann, C. (in print). "Treatment on Trial: Tanzania’s National Tuberculosis Program, the International Union against Tuberculosis and Lung Disease, and the Road to DOTS, 1977-1991." Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences: 25p.

HIV:

  • WHO Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations: 2016 update. Consolidated guidelines on HIV prevention, diagnosis, treatment and care for key populations.
  • Wang, H., T. M. Wolock, et al. (2016). "Estimates of global, regional, and national incidence, prevalence, and mortality of HIV, 1980-2015: the Global Burden of Disease Study 2015." The Lancet HIV 3(8): E361-E387.

Ethics & Politics:

  • Aellah, G., T. Chantler, et al. (2016). Global health research in an unequal world: ethics case studies from Africa. Global health research in an unequal world, CABI CAB International.
  • Petryna, A. (2009). When Experiments Travel: Clinical Trials and the Global Search for Human Subjects. Princeton, Princeton University Press.

Biosecurity: 

  • Rushton, S. (2011). 'Global Health Security: Security for Whom? Security from What?' Political Studies 59(4): 779-796.
  • de Bengy Puyvallee & S. Kittelsen (2019). '"Disease Knows No Borders": Pandemics and the Politics of Global Health Security' in K. Bj?rkdahl & B. Carlsen (eds.), Pandemics, Publics, and Politics: Staging Responses to Public Health Crises. Palgrave Pivot, pp. 59 - 73.

Ebola:

Influenza:

  • Mamelund, S. E. (2018). "1918 pandemic morbidity: The first wave hits the poor, the second wave hits the rich." Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses 12(3): 307-313.
  • Mamelund, S-E. (2017). Social inequality - a forgotten forgotten factor in pandemic influenza preparedness. Journal of the Norwegian Medical Association 137(12/13):911-913. 
Published Dec. 30, 2019 1:29 PM - Last modified Dec. 30, 2019 1:29 PM