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Mobility and Health Workshop
Bern, Switzerland, November 2004.
Research on mobility and health
has concentrated on northern and high income settings and on
issues such as transport and safety, environmental health and
the international diffusion of infections. There is little research
on issues relating to southern, low-income settings. Most of
the research in developing country contexts is confined to issues
such as the rural-urban HIV diffusion and ways to mitigate this,
and some related research on transport workers, migrants,
tourists, the sex trade and on construction workers and sexual
promiscuity. Some research has looked at water management issues
in the construction of roads and the potential for the spread
of malaria, bilharzias and filariasis and on the distance of
travel to health care for the treatment of HIV AIDS or TB patients.
Everyone would agree that transport
can have both a positive and a negative impact on poor people’s
health. Some of these positive and negative impacts are well
known. The direct positive impacts of improved transport infrastructure
and services on health are to increase access to health services,
to enable better servicing of health outposts and to facilitate
the movement of health extension workers. Improved access can
also help improve water supply, which has positive consequences
for the health of communities. These factors in turn contribute
to reducing morbidity and mortality, to increasing awareness
about reproductive issues, and to improving livelihoods and
reducing poverty. The experience with the spread of HIV/AIDS
has dramatically shown that improving access and mobility can
also have strong negative impacts. Developing transport corridors
for long distance goods transport often results in increased
sexual activity and the spread of HIV. Many large scale transport
sector programmes and initiatives that work on combating the
spread of HIV AIDS are now working to address this problem through
awareness training of transport workers and sex workers along
these corridors.
The workshop held in Bern in November
2004, organised by Transnet (a network of Swiss professionals
working in the transport sector in developing countries) in
collaboration with the IFRTD and supported by the Mobility and Health
desks of the Social Development Division of SDC identified several
other gaps in the knowledge on mobility and health. It brought
together transport and health specialists to discuss the issues
and develop a plan of action that will push this relatively
new agenda forward.
A case study of micro-level
impacts of the Almondangu-Jiri road project in Nepal showed
that, despite many benefits, improved infrastructure had the
potential to; exacerbate female poverty through migration of
male family members, lead to the importation of harmful substances
to hitherto isolated villages, have negative impacts on local
trade, and increase the diffusion of infections. A presentation
from Ethiopia focused on the transportation of critical and
high risk patients in rural areas, and how poor handling and
positioning of patients on the different modes of transport
used often leads to secondary injuries. A third presentation
from South Africa highlighted gaps in the way the transport
sector currently deals with the issue of HIV/AIDS and another
from Transaid emphasised the importance of transport management
in the delivery of health care.
These case studies focused on
some aspects of mobility and health in specific contexts, and
need to be triangulated and verified with information from other
contexts if issues relating to mobility and health are to be
more fully understood. Even then, there is still a great deal
that is not known. There is, for instance, lack of evidence
about the impact of mobility on women’s health status;
there is little knowledge on how rural transport planning can
design appropriate transport hubs that optimise positive health
and mobility impacts; there is a dearth of disability and age-sensitive
data; there is a limited perspective on road safety and the
lack of knowledge on safety issues relating to infrastructure
and transport provision in low-income and rural areas. The main
knowledge gap however was that we do not know exactly where
existing gaps in knowledge are.
The IFRTD network has made a
commitment to fully assess the gaps in our knowledge, make steps
to share existing research and generate new research to fill
the gaps. We recognise that the knowledge generated needs to
be translated into practical guidelines for designing and implementing
transport sector interventions that can mitigate the potential
negative impacts, and increase the positive contribution to
poor people’s health status. The transport sector needs
to be proactive in sensitising the health sector to the importance
of mobility as a cross-cutting component of health interventions,
and work in collaboration with health sector professionals.
The full workshop report and workshop presentations can be downloaded at:http://www.trans-web.ch/transnet/transnet8/default.htm
One of the key outcomes of this workshop has been the development of IFRTD's Mobility and Health international networked research programme. Click here for more information
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