Good Health and Decent Work for Sustainable Development:
Reshaping Infectious Disease Control and the Future of Work
14~16 November 2022 Jeju, Republic
of Korea
14
~ 16 November 2022
14:30
~ 17:30 (Seoul Time)
Organized by
United
Nations Institute for Training and Research(UNITAR) CIFAL Jeju/JITC
KNTA STOP-TB Partnership
KOREA
Background
Given that vulnerable people are highly exposed to the
pandemic impacts along with the existing inequalities, it is critical to place
a greater focus on equity, resilience, and sustainability while taking action
to build more inclusive and sustainable systems to deliver health and
well-being. In particular, the disproportionate impact of the crisis is quite
significant in certain population groups and workers in specific sectors: women
who have suffered from disproportionate job and income losses, youth who have a
hard time with education, training and employment, those in the informal
economy who have no access to social protection, and workers in the service
industry and manufacturing, many of whom are migrant workers.[3]
In addition to the unequal impacts of the crisis in
the world of work, the global community is faced with the unprecedented
challenge in achieving more equitable health for all. In 2020, for the first
time in history, key programmatic outcomes in the fight against infectious
diseases declined in particular across all three terrible epidemics: HIV/AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria (HTM). Tuberculosis(TB), the leading cause of death
from a single infectious agent, ranking above HIV, is generally curable and
preventable with a 6-month drug regimen. However, since the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic, more people have died from TB with much fewer people being
diagnosed and treated or provided with the preventive treatment and overall
spending on essential TB services falling.[4]
To get back on track against these life-threatening
diseases and move towards more equitable, resilient, and sustainable world for
all, we must address structural barriers, leverage innovations, and build
inclusive systems not to be knocked off course from the Sustainable Development
Goals(SDGs). With this sense of urgency in mind, UNITAR CIFAL Jeju
and STOP-TB Partnership KOREA co-organize a three-day training workshop. The
event will facilitate deeper understanding of a human-centered approach for
good health and well-being, explore the needs of the most vulnerable and
hardest hit by the pandemic, and put more focus on catalytic, people-centered investments
that promote faster progress in efforts to end infectious diseases as public
health threats. The participants will be able to have a closer look at
challenges and opportunities in the two main contexts: good health and
well-being, and labor market policy/recovery for ensuring decent work. Different
learning opportunities including a series of expert lectures, panel discussion,
and knowledge sharing session will be provided for the participants to rethink
infectious disease control and the changing world of work in the pandemic
context and beyond.
Event Objectives
To provide a platform for
sharing good practices and lessons learned on the pathways
to equitable, resilient, and sustainable world for
all To explore what
people-centered investments are and how to leverage them along with innovative
technologies to tackle the challenges in ensuring good health and well-being To gain insight into how to
implement recovery strategies that ensure decent work and support the needs of
the most vulnerable and hardest hit by the pandemic To apprehend the impact of
infectious diseases, such as COVID-19, tuberculosis on the economic
productivity of a community, nation, and the world, as well as individuals, and
to recognize the urgency of active prevention and control of such diseases.
Expected outcomes
Better understanding of what
a human-centered approach for good health and well-being is Sharing different
experiences in challenges and opportunities in the context of good health and
the changing world of work during the pandemic and beyond Getting familiar with
strategies and tools that can be adapted to the contexts and needs of each
locality for health and labor market policies Adapting gained knowledge
and experience to the contexts of infectious diseases: understanding a
patient-centered approach, sharing different challenges and opportunities, and
getting familiar with strategies and tools that can be adapted to the local
contexts and needs of each site in the prevention and control of infectious
diseases such as tuberculosis, as well as COVID-19.
Target Audience
This training is mainly open to those from
different sectors in the Asia Pacific region – governments, NGOs, CSOs and
Private Sector, who have been engaged in the area of social
inclusion in line with SDG 3 – Good health and
well-being, and SDG 8 Decent work and economic growth. The third
session, however, is a working-level workshop on infectious diseases,
especially tuberculosis; it requires staff at clinics and other medical
institutions in the Asia Pacific region to be a target audience.
Methodology
The training consists of: - expert lecture and Q&A session - panel discussion
* For detailed information on the program, please download and see the attached agenda above.
Venue
Online
+ Offline(Jeju-do, Republic of Korea)
Registration
- Register by November 10, 2022 (Thursday) through the following link: https://bit.ly/3rWpQbw
E-Certificate
E-Certificate of Participation will be jointly issued by UNITAR, UNITAR CIFAL Jeju and KNTA
STOP-TB Partnership KOREA.
Contact
Ms. Sunhee Cho, Senior Program
Officer/UNITAR CIFAL Jeju
E-mail:cifaljeju.jitc.1@gmail.com
Ms.
Sumin Shim, Global TB Program Officer/STOP-TB Partnership KOREA
E-mail: asiya0427@gmail.com
[1] WHO (2020) Impact
of COVID-19 on people’s livelihoods, their health and our food systems,
Joint statement by ILO, FAO, IFAD and WHO, available at
https://www.who.int/news/item/13-10-2020-impact-of-covid-19-on-people's-livelihoods-their-health-and-our-food-systems
[2] Global Fund Strategy
(2021) Fighting Pandemics and Building a Healthier and More Equitable World,
available at
https://www.theglobalfund.org/media/11612/strategy_globalfund2023-2028_narrative_en.pdf
[3] ILO (2021)
Global Call to Action for a human-centered recovery from the COVID-19 crisis
that is inclusive, sustainable and resilient, available at
https://www.ilo.org/infostories/en-GB/Campaigns/covid19/globalcall#intro
[4]WHO (2021) Global
Tuberculosis Report 2021, available at https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240037021
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