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Dive into the research topics where Jerry Spiegel is active.

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Featured researches published by Jerry Spiegel.


Ecohealth | 2005

Barriers and Bridges to Prevention and Control of Dengue: The Need for a Social–Ecological Approach

Jerry Spiegel; Shannon N. Bennett; Libby Hattersley; Mary H. Hayden; Pattamaporn Kittayapong; Sustriayu Nalim; Daniel Nan Chee Wang; Emily Zielinski-Gutierrez; Duane J. Gubler

This article critically examines how programs for the prevention and control of dengue fever have been conducted in the absence of an integrated approach, and considers the social and ecological factors influencing their effectiveness. Despite recognition of dengue fever as the most important arboviral disease affecting humans, and in spite of a greater emphasis on community-based control approaches, the burden placed on the communities, countries, and regions affected by this disease continues to rise. In considering historical experience in the Americas and the Asia-Pacific region, as well as the global forces that are exerting new pressures, the important elements of successful control programs are identified as community ownership, partnership with government, leadership, scalability, and control of immature mosquitoes. The key barriers to the exchange of knowledge and the transdisciplinary cooperation necessary for sustainable dengue control are rooted in differences in values among policy-makers, citizens, and scientists and are repeatedly expressed in technical, economic, cultural, geographic, and political dimensions. Through consideration of case studies in Cuba, Guatemala, Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, and Vietnam, the limitations of control approaches that fail to take into account the complexities of ecological and social systems are presented. Bridges to effective control are identified as the basis for adaptability, both of control programs to the mosquito vector’s changing behavior and of education programs to public, regional and local particularities, as well as transdisciplinarity, community empowerment, the ability to scale local experiences up to the macro-level, and the capacity to learn from experience to achieve sustainability.


BMJ | 2003

Setting global health research priorities

Ronald Labonté; Jerry Spiegel

When the G8 countries met in Canada in 2002 the topics of security, health, and Africa figured prominently. The three issues are related. Africas human health is reeling from HIV/AIDS and other infectious diseases, posing national and regional security risks. The continents economic health is stagnant or eroding, the result of structural adjustment programmes,1 domestic conflicts, corruption, and deteriorating human health. Recognising the complexities of these entwined relations, the G8 Africa action plan included a commitment to support health research on diseases prevalent in Africa. How well G8 member nations—Canada, the United States, England, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and Russia—abide by this commitment is a matter of time and lobbying efforts. But what form should this new health research investment take? Should it emphasise specific diseases affecting poor people most, as favoured by the Commission on Macroeconomics and Health of the World Health Organization?2 Should it heed the call of biotechnology researchers, who have tabled their list of “top 10” research investments for global health, which range from better …


AAOHN Journal | 2002

Effectiveness of Installing Overhead Ceiling Lifts: Reducing Musculoskeletal Injuries in an Extended Care Hospital Unit

Lisa A. Ronald; A Yassi; Jerry Spiegel; Robert B. Tate; Don Tait; Michelle R. Mozel

The effectiveness of replacing floor lifts with mechanical ceiling lifts was evaluated in the extended care unit of a British Columbia hospital. Sixty-five ceiling lifts were installed between April and August 1998. Injury data were abstracted from injury reports for all staff musculoskeletal injuries (MSI) occurring in the unit during a 3 year period prior to installation and a 1.5 year follow up period. Descriptive statistics were calculated for injuries pre- versus post-installation. Rates were calculated as number of injuries per 100,000 worked hours. Rates for three pre- and three post-installation intervals were compared using Poisson regression. The rate of MSI caused by lifting/transferring patients was significantly reduced (58% reduction, p = .011) after installation, but rates of all MSI and MSI caused by repositioning did not statistically decline (p > .05). Further follow up is necessary to determine whether or not ceiling lifts also can be effective for decreasing injuries related to repositioning patients on this unit.


PLOS Medicine | 2010

Which new approaches to tackling neglected tropical diseases show promise

Jerry Spiegel; Shafik Dharamsi; Kishor M. Wasan; Annalee Yassi; Burton H. Singer; Peter J. Hotez; Christy Hanson; Donald A. P. Bundy

This PLoS Medicine Debate examines the different approaches that can be taken to tackle neglected tropical diseases (NTDs). Some commentators, like Jerry Spiegel and colleagues from the University of British Columbia, feel there has been too much focus on the biomedical mechanisms and drug development for NTDs, at the expense of attention to the social determinants of disease. Burton Singer argues that this represents another example of the inappropriate “overmedicalization” of contemporary tropical disease control. Peter Hotez and colleagues, in contrast, argue that the best return on investment will continue to be mass drug administration for NTDs.


Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2007

Social and environmental determinants of Aedes aegypti infestation in Central Havana: results of a case–control study nested in an integrated dengue surveillance programme in Cuba

Jerry Spiegel; Mariano Bonet; Ana-Maria Ibarra; Nino Pagliccia; Veronic Ouellette; Annalee Yassi

Objective  To characterize the social and environmental risk factors associated with the presence of Aedes aegypti in order to improve community dengue control.


AAOHN Journal | 2002

Implementing a Resident Lifting System in an Extended Care Hospital: Demonstrating Cost—Benefit

Jerry Spiegel; A Yassi; Lisa A. Ronald; Robert B. Tate; Penny Hacking; Teresa Colby

1. Implemeting mechanical resident lifting equipment in an extended care facility produced a payback from direct savings alone within 4 years. Payback occurred more quickly when the effect of indirect savings or the trend to rising compensation costs was considered. 2. Combining the observations of the occupational health nurses related to staff well being with relevant cost-benefit data is useful in influencing decision makers and in securing funding for prevention measures. 3. Clear identification of a viewpoint is an important part of an economic evaluation and cost-benefit analysis.


International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2004

Understanding “Globalization” as a Determinant of Health Determinants: A Critical Perspective

Jerry Spiegel; Ronald Labonté; Aleck Ostry

Abstract The purpose of this article is to explain how globalization has evolved, in order to provide a context for assessing the health care restructuring that is occurring worldwide. The authors begin by defining globalization and introducing a framework for considering pathways that can affect social organization and health. They then draw attention to current trends, such as the GATS (General Agreement on Trade in Services), that promise to open health services provision to increased pressures of globalization.


International Journal of Occupational and Environmental Health | 2004

Labor markets and employment insecurity: impacts of globalization on service and healthcare-sector workforces.

Aleck Ostry; Jerry Spiegel

Abstract Global changes in the economies of most developed nations have impacted the way healthcare is organized, even within largely public systems, and the working conditions of healthcare workers. Since the acceleration of globalization in the 1970s, service-sector workers in developed nations have faced high unemployment, increased skill requirements for most jobs, and a rise in non-traditional work arrangements. These secular shifts in service-sector labor markets have occurred against the background of an erosion of the welfare state and growing income inequality. Aswell, many healthcare systems, including Canadas, were severely downsized and restructured in the 1990s, exacerbating the underlYing negative secular trends in the service sector, and worsening the working conditions for many healthcare workers. Globalization has altered the labor market and shifted working conditions in waysthat have been unfavorable to many healthcare workers.


Health Policy and Planning | 2015

Food sovereignty, food security and health equity: a meta-narrative mapping exercise

Anelyse M. Weiler; Chris Hergesheimer; Ben Brisbois; Hannah Wittman; Annalee Yassi; Jerry Spiegel

There has been growing policy interest in social justice issues related to both health and food. We sought to understand the state of knowledge on relationships between health equity—i.e. health inequalities that are socially produced—and food systems, where the concepts of ‘food security’ and ‘food sovereignty’ are prominent. We undertook exploratory scoping and mapping stages of a ‘meta-narrative synthesis’ on pathways from global food systems to health equity outcomes. The review was oriented by a conceptual framework delineating eight pathways to health (in)equity through the food system: 1—Multi-Scalar Environmental, Social Context; 2—Occupational Exposures; 3—Environmental Change; 4—Traditional Livelihoods, Cultural Continuity; 5—Intake of Contaminants; 6—Nutrition; 7—Social Determinants of Health and 8—Political, Economic and Regulatory context. The terms ‘food security’ and ‘food sovereignty’ were, respectively, paired with a series of health equity-related terms. Combinations of health equity and food security (1414 citations) greatly outnumbered pairings with food sovereignty (18 citations). Prominent crosscutting themes that were observed included climate change, biotechnology, gender, racialization, indigeneity, poverty, citizenship and HIV as well as institutional barriers to reducing health inequities in the food system. The literature indicates that food sovereignty-based approaches to health in specific contexts, such as advancing healthy school food systems, promoting soil fertility, gender equity and nutrition, and addressing structural racism, can complement the longer-term socio-political restructuring processes that health equity requires. Our conceptual model offers a useful starting point for identifying interventions with strong potential to promote health equity. A research agenda to explore project-based interventions in the food system along these pathways can support the identification of ways to strengthen both food sovereignty and health equity.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2003

Community Participation in a Multisectoral Intervention to Address Health Determinants in an Inner-City Community in Central Havana

Annalee Yassi; Niurys Fernandez; Ariadna Fernandez; Mariano Bonet; Robert B. Tate; Jerry Spiegel

It is increasingly acknowledged that the process of community involvement is critical to the successful implementation of community-based health interventions. Between 1995 and 1999, a multisectoral intervention called Plan Cayo Hueso was launched in the inner-city community of Cayo Hueso in Havana, Cuba, to address a variety of health determinants. To provide a better understanding of the political structures and processes involved, the Cuban context is described briefly. The interventions included improvements in housing, municipal infrastructure, and social and cultural activities. A qualitative study, consisting of interviews of key informants as well as community members, was conducted to evaluate the community participatory process. Questions from an extensive household survey pre-and postintervention that had been conducted in Cayo Hueso and a comparison community to asses the effectiveness of the intervention also informed the analysis of community participation, as did three community workshops held to choose indicators for evaluating effectiveness and to discuss findings. It was found that formal leaders led the interventions, providing the institutional driving force behind the plan. However, extensive community involvement occurred as the project took advantage of the existing community-based organizations, which played an active role in mobilizing community members and enhanced linkage systems critical to the projects success. Women played fairly traditional, roles in interventions outside their households, but had equivalent roles to men in interventions within their household units. Most impressive about this project was the extent of mobilization to participate and the multidimensional ecosystem approach adopted. Indeed, Plan Cayo Hueso involved a massive mobilization of international, national, and community resources to address the needs of this community. This, as well as the involvement of community residents in the evaluation process, was seen as resulting in improved social interactions and community well-being and enhanced, capacity for future action. While Cuba is unique in many respects, the lessons, learned about enhancing community participation in urban health intervention projects, as well as in their evaluation, are applicable worldwide.

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Annalee Yassi

University of British Columbia

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Karen Lockhart

University of British Columbia

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A Yassi

University of British Columbia

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Letshego E. Nophale

University of the Free State

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Lyndsay M. O’Hara

University of British Columbia

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Margot W. Parkes

University of Northern British Columbia

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P Adu

University of British Columbia

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