{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/6666be8ab6f3d900125875e8/6953f45f09314afbec50c6e5?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Healing Communities in Crisis: Public Health, Hunger, and Preparedness in Conflict Settings","description":"<p>In this second part of our conversation with <strong>Dr Fekri Dureab</strong>, physician-researcher at the Heidelberg Institute of Global Health, we move from surveillance systems and misinformation to some of the most difficult questions in public health: <strong>hunger, disease preparedness, and ethical decision-making in conflict settings</strong>.</p><p><br></p><p>Drawing on his work in <strong>Yemen, Somalia, and Iraq</strong>, Dr Dureab explains why planning for outbreaks in fragile health systems is never just a technical exercise. Even when strategies exist on paper, a lack of resources, infrastructure, and trained personnel can turn predictable health threats—such as cholera or measles—into full-blown crises. He reflects on his role in developing Yemen’s electronic disease early-warning system and why speed, simplicity, and local ownership can mean the difference between containment and catastrophe.</p><p><br></p><p>The conversation then turns to <strong>malnutrition and food insecurity</strong>, exposing the ethical dilemmas that arise when humanitarian aid meets chronic poverty. Through powerful field examples, Dr Dureab illustrates how short-term food assistance can unintentionally create harmful incentives, and why long-term, nationally supported food-security systems are essential for protecting children’s health and dignity.</p><p><br></p><p>Throughout the episode, one theme remains constant: <strong>sustainable solutions come from within communities</strong>. From training local health workers to strengthening national systems, Dr Dureab makes the case that public health is inseparable from human rights—and that awareness-raising is itself a form of action.</p><p><br></p><h3><strong>What will you learn?</strong></h3><p><br></p><ul><li>Why outbreak preparedness in conflict zones often fails despite early warnings.</li><li>How electronic surveillance systems can function even with weak internet and ongoing violence.</li><li>The ethical dilemmas of food aid and why treating malnutrition alone is not enough.</li><li>What Iraq’s long-standing food-ration system reveals about preventing undernutrition during conflict.</li><li>How individuals outside the health sector can still contribute by raising awareness and amplifying lived realities.</li></ul><p><br></p><h3><strong>🧠 Topics Covered</strong></h3><p><br></p><ul><li>Disease preparedness in fragile and conflict-affected health systems</li><li>Early-warning systems and rapid response in low-resource settings</li><li>Capacity building and training local health professionals</li><li>Malnutrition, hunger, and ethical dilemmas in humanitarian aid</li><li>National food-security systems vs. emergency assistance</li><li>Public awareness as a tool for advancing health and human rights</li></ul><p><br></p><h3><strong>👤 About the Guest</strong></h3><p><br></p><p><strong>Dr Fekri Dureab</strong> – Medical doctor, PhD, and public-health researcher at the Heidelberg Institute of Global Health. His work focuses on health-systems strengthening, epidemic preparedness, nutrition, and disease surveillance in fragile and conflict-affected settings, including Yemen, Somalia, and Iraq. He has played a key role in developing Yemen’s electronic disease early-warning system and coordinating nutrition and emergency health programmes with the WHO.</p><p><br></p><h3><strong>📚 Resources &amp; Links</strong></h3><p><br></p><ul><li>Heidelberg Institute of Global Health – https://globalhealth.uni-heidelberg.de</li><li>Just Access Podcast – https://just-access.de/podcast</li><li>Support Just Access – https://just-access.de/donate</li><li>Contact the show – podcast@just-access.de</li></ul><p><br></p><h3><strong>⏱ Key moments</strong></h3><p><br></p><ul><li>02:00 – Why preparedness plans collapse without resources</li><li>04:50 – Building early-warning systems during active conflict</li><li>10:00 – Hunger, malnutrition, and unintended consequences of aid</li><li>16:40 – Iraq’s food-ration system and lessons for long-term solutions</li><li>18:20 – Why awareness-raising is everyone’s responsibility</li></ul><p><br></p><h3><strong>Call-to-action</strong></h3><p><br></p><p>Help <strong>Just Access</strong> keep critical conversations alive—share this episode, leave a review, and support our work at https://just-access.de/donate.</p><p>Because <strong>everyone can be a human rights defender</strong>.</p>","author_name":"Just Access"}