The U.N. Lacks Moral Authority to Dictate Morale in Haiti
November 25, 2013 4 min. read

  It is a volcano jumping between dormant and active stages and last month, it erupted again, spitting a litany of condemning editorials across global opinion pages that set ablaze United Nations’ inexcusable, uncompromising policy in Haiti, where the cholera epidemic, now entering its fourth year, killed more than 8,300 people and sickened another 650,000. […]

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Global Health Update: World Water Week, Misoprostol, and Overtreatment
August 30, 2012 4 min. read

Clean Drinking Water: The Cure for Malnutrition? This week is World Water Week — which is timely, given the serious cholera outbreak in Sierra Leone and neighboring countries. The focus of this year’s conference is on food security, water scarcity, and their ties to food (and water) waste. As I’ve written before, up to 40 percent […]

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West Nile, Ebola, and Cholera: Lessons from Three Epidemics
August 27, 2012 4 min. read

In the past month, we’ve seen the United States’ worst outbreak of West Nile Virus, Ebola in Uganda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), and cholera in Sierra Leone that’s spread to its West African neighbors. What lessons can be learned from these three epidemics? West Nile, which has only been endemic to […]

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Power of 1
May 31, 2012 4 min. read

Recently I’ve focused on democracy issues on a pretty grand scale: the nation of Egypt’s first open presidential elections, Greece’s struggle to form a government and how it might impact the global economy. Yet one of the remarkable things about democracy is that you don’t need large numbers to make a difference. Sometimes all it […]

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Papua New Guinea’s Ignored Cholera Crisis
March 7, 2011 5 min. read

by Cate Mackenzie When it emerged in October 2010 that there was an outbreak of cholera in Haiti, sympathy poured in for those affected; the presence of journalists and international aid workers meant that people across the world were quickly alerted to the situation. But the fact that 16,000 kilometers away, in Papua New Guinea […]

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Cholera, a Deterrent to Child Trafficking
December 2, 2010 5 min. read
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The irony of profitability Lately, Haitians have experienced high levels of—what scholars have coined– psychological reactance. It is a reaction caused by the fear of losing something deemed valuable, in this particular case, their very lives. Naturally– when neighbors– friends, and family members—those still alive—keep dying of an invisible, highly contagious and seemingly uncontrollable disease, […]

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Haiti in the Time of Cholera (link)
November 4, 2010 1 min. read

Earlier this week I reported on the devastating cholera epidemic currently racing through the Haitian countryside for The Atlantic. The numbers have now climbed to 442 registered deaths and 6,742 hospitalizations, but my reporting from the Artibonite and Central plateau regions is still timely. “Cholera arrived in Haiti this month with a vengeance. Since the […]

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Cholera in Haiti (images)
October 25, 2010 2 min. read

This week Haiti was struck by a massive Cholera epidemic, as though the island and its inhabitants haven’t already faced enough this year.  So far 250 have been registered as deceased, most of dehydration en route to medical centers.  Over 3,000 people have visited medical sites.  Many others have likely died without reaching a clinic […]

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