Monthly Archives: June 2011

Two Cool Things You Should Know About

By: Alanna Shaikh

Cool thing number one: The World Community Grid Dengue Fever Project

The world community grid uses excess computer capacity to solve major human problems. It joins together lots of individual computers to achieve massive computational powers. (Seriously, the website uses that exact phrase – massive computational powers.) Pretty much everyone with a computer can participate; you just register and download their software to link in. From there, your computer will communicate with their servers when it is idle to receive small computing tasks and send back solutions.

You can pick which of their projects you want to donate your computer’s time to support. The dengue fever project is attempting to discover promising drug candidates for Dengue, Hepatitis C, West Nile, Yellow Fever, and other related viruses that are part of the Flaviviridae family. It has already completed phase 1, which looked at about three million small drug-like molecules to find candidates likely to respond strongly to virus components. Phase two will sift through the phase 1 likely candidates.

Getting involved in global health can be frustrating. So often all you can do is donate money to organizations, push your government to donate money, and raise money. This is a chance to do something different in support of global health, something a little more direct. For more information about the dengue project, see their FAQ. (Their forums are also a lot of fun to read; it’s clear that for some people monitoring the World Community Grid is a satisfying hobby.) Continue reading

Reading List 6/30/2011

Civilian Power and U.S NTD Diplomacy Abroad

Yesterday June 28th, 2011,  Sabin Vaccine Institute President  Dr. Peter J. Hotez published an article in PLoS Journal titled “Unleashing “Civilian Power”: A New American Diplomacy through Neglected Tropical Disease Control, Elimination, Research, and Development.” Last year, U.S Secretary of State Hilary Rodham Clinton expressed  a new outlook for American diplomacy and development through strengthening “civilian power”. Civilian Power is described as:

[T]he new doctrine calls for the creation of a new cadre of civilian experts who could jointly pursue diplomacy and international development for purposes of solving global challenges related to health, agriculture and food insecurity, environmental degradation, drugs and organized crime, energy, and climate change .

Secretary Clinton’s intends to exercise this new doctrine by leveraging the distinct strengths of the State Department and USAID in carrying out U.S Foreign Policy.  In “the coming years the State Department and USAID would now work more closely to enhance global development in the context of diplomacy”

In this paper, Dr. Hotez delineates the reasons why NTDs should be a major part of Secretary Clinton’s forthcoming campaign to strengthen our diplomacy efforts abroad.  He writes that “there are a number of reasons why taking on the NTDs would be a worthy early first test for civilian power. It is now possible to control or in some cases eliminate one or more of the seven most common NTDs.” Putting more energy into NTD control efforts resonates with Secretary Clinton’s empowering and strengthening  fragile states

Because the NTDs destabilize these communities and also represent important impediments to human rights , , NTD control should comprise an essential element of civilian power for the reinvention of American diplomacy and development.

Deworm the World launches its new website

Today Deworm the World reveals its newly revamped website. The site is now more interactive and more suited to feature deworming programs around the world. Below are new components to the website:

  • an interactive global map detailing their impact in the countries where they work
  • a section for implementers detailing how to start a school-based deworming program
  • comprehensive list of resources, including the latest findings on school-based deworming
  • a and  keeping supporters up-to-date with all that’s happening in the deworming world

Click here to browse the new Deworm the World website.