News

Government of Canada Supports National Farm to School Initiative

News Release 

For Immediate Release

Government of Canada Supports National Farm to School Initiative 

New national program will bring more of the local harvest into school cafeterias 

October 3,                            2017 Ottawa, Ontario                                 Public Health Agency of Canada

Improving food literacy – the ability to make healthy food choices – through activities such as hands-on cooking, exposure to new foods, and farm and gardening activities can help build the skills required to plan, purchase and prepare healthier foods. These activities help encourage children to make healthy eating choices and supports healthy living.

find out more

 

CPHA Election 2017 – Two PHABC Board Members Candidates for Director Positions

Canadian Public Health Association Election 2017

 

We are excited to announce that two members of our Board of Directors have been selected as candidates for the Canadian Public Health Association’s 2017 election; our Treasurer, Roger Wheeler, and one of our Director’s-at-large, Veronica Fynn-Bruey.

There are currently four directors positions up for election and one student director position, we encourage all PHABC/CPHA conjoint members to review Roger and Veronica’s biographies and consider voting for them between Tuesday October 10th and Thursday November 16th, 2017.

Roger Wheeler

To begin, I would like to thank my nominators, Irving Rootman and Shannon Turner.  Their dedication to public health has been inspirational.  I have accepted their nomination to serve as a CPHA Director, and feel well-positioned to add value to CPHA in a governance role by sharing my public health experience, my business knowledge, and my passion: to increase attention to public health goals – and expand action toward improved health outcomes – by those outside the health sector.  I see a strong link between my passion and CPHA’s mission, and I seek a Director role in order to help the organization pursue its six interconnected goals.

My education includes an undergraduate degree in physical and health education, and Master’s degrees in science (MSc), and business administration (MBA).  My career evolved from a frontline allied health practitioner, to a healthcare administrator, to a business professor in post-secondary education.  During my time in healthcare, I was recruited to the position of Public Health Administrator by a Medical Health Officer, where I spent the most enjoyable and meaningful years of my healthcare career collaborating with a strong team of senior leaders in health promotion, epidemiology, public health nursing, health protection, and aboriginal health services.  In this leadership role, I was directly involved in the strategy and operations of a broad spectrum of public health services, and acted to support public health leaders and practitioners in their efforts to overcome challenges and advance best practices in public health advocacy and services.  Although my career has since moved outside the health sector, my passion for public health remains, and my public health work continues in a different form.

My current role as professor in post-secondary business education has provided me with the opportunity to engage in public health advocacy and intersectoral knowledge sharing.  Moving outside the health sector has heightened my awareness of the need to foster partnerships across sectors to advance public health goals.  In fact, it has become my professional passion.  I developed and teach an upper-year course on Sustainable Management in order to bring concepts such as social responsibility, social innovation, determinants of health, health equity and sustainable development goals into the classroom to positively influence the thinking of future business leaders.  As well, I have been enabled to pursue opportunities to share business knowledge and business/health collaboration insights with public health practitioners via presentations, workshops and symposia at provincial, national and international public health and health promotion conferences.

In closing, I wish to acknowledge my colleagues on the Board of the Public Health Association of BC (PHABC), who have often expressed their appreciation for my business perspective and governance skills as I fulfil my role as Treasurer of the Board.  It is very rewarding volunteer work, and I wish to further my contributions in the field of public health by taking on a governance role at the national level with CPHA.  I believe that I have the capacity to add value to the organization, its mission, and its membership.

To read more about my PH research and presentations please follow the link below:

okanagan.bc.ca/Roger_Wheeler

 

Veronica Fynn Bruey

 

Background: With almost six university degrees from across four continents, I have travelled to some 20 countries, teaching, researching, consulting and speaking at conferences. I am completing my PhD in Law at Australian National University with focus on “systematic violence and the rule of law in Indigenous Liberia and Australia.”

Experience: I am a board member of the Public Health Association of British Columbia. I also sit on the Board of the World Computer Exchange (Canada). I am an active member of the Law Section and International Health Section of the American Public Health Association. I regularly volunteer at the Seattle/King County Clinic. In Australia, I am an active member of the Indigenous Health Network, Refugee Action, ANU Gender Institute and the RECOGNISE Movement. In the past, I sat on the board of the African Peace Festival (Vancouver) and the Winnipeg Refugee Education Network (Manitoba); chaired the Centre for Refugee Studies’ Student Caucus (Toronto) and was a student board member of the International Association for the Study of Forced Migration (Toronto). Between 2002 and 2005, I founded and chaired Africa Awareness at the University of British Columbia. In 2006, I worked with the International Organisation of Migration (Switzerland) on Migrant Health and Human Trafficking. I was appointed a Research Analyst of the BC’s Office to Combat Trafficking in Persons 2007-2008. In 2008, I founded the Journal of Internal Displacement and have served as the Editor–in-Chief since. I am a peer-reviewer of the Journals of Human Trafficking, Health and Human Rights, Public Health Reviews and CPHA Conference abstracts. In 2014, I contributed toward drafting the Mental Health Law and domesticating the African Union Convention on Internally Displaced Persons (Liberia). Between 2011-2015 I taught Public Health Law at the School of Population and Public Health (UBC). Currently, I am an Adjunct Professor at Seattle University School of Law, a Director of Flower School of Health Sciences and a Senior Researcher at the Liberia’s Centre for Policy Studies. Last year, I founded the “Displaced Peoples” Law and Society Association Collaborative Research Network.

Skills: I bring over 15 years of experience in advocacy, administration and management.  As an international research scholar, I embrace interdisciplinary learning exchange. My passion for social justice affords me a broader perspective into cross-cutting intersections of law and public health. The strong sense of responsibility, attention to detail, and negotiation skills I have developed, is a reflection of several years of advocating for public health law and policy reform. I am confident that my cross-cultural communication skills, collaborative leadership and affable personality will ensure my success as a director of CPHA. Since community engagement and good governance require eloquence and respectful representation, I believe that my unique academic and practical expertise will legitimise CPHA’s commitment to equity and diversity as the voice of the public’s health.

Goals: If elected, I will work toward: 1) strengthening interest in public health law research; 2) expanding advocacy for migrant health; and 3) promoting Aboriginal health through cross-cultural exchange

 

Welcome Ida Holland-Letz: Student Intern at the Public Health Association of BC

Welcome to the PHABC Team

Ida Holland-Letz

Student Intern

 

 

PHABC’s office coordinator, Christina (left), and student intern, Ida (right)

 

 

The Public Health Association of BC is pleased to introduce, Ida Holland-Letz, who will be interning for PHABC until the end of January 2018. Ida is a 3rd year student of public health hailing from Germany; born in Cologne and currently living in Bremen, just outside of Hamburg. Her bachelor’s degree will be supplemented by her internship with PHABC and provide her with the opportunity to gain practical knowledge, a greater understanding of public health, and network with public health and health professionals across the province.

 

Ida Holland-Letz is incredibly interested in public health, especially in the topics of health prevention and promotion. This interest grew after she completed her high school education and traveled to India as a volunteer English teacher for 11 months. Through this volunteer service and her subsequent work in a refugee centre back home in Germany, she gained extensive experience working with disadvantaged people and navigating intercultural and social interactions with care and compassion. Ida Holland-Letz looking forward to using her growing skill set to help fulfill PHABC’s vision of a healthy and accessible British Columbia for all.

 

Throughout her internship Ida will be given the opportunity to provide support to PHABC in a myriad of ways and will work closely with the executive director, office coordinator, various project managers, contractors and partner organizations across the province. We hope to impart with Ida a keen understanding of all aspects of public health over the next six months.

 

If you see her at this year’s conference (November 16th & 17th, 2017 at the Sutton Place Hotel in downtown Vancouver) be sure to introduce yourself and welcome her to Canada!

Call for Nominations-2017-2019 Board of Directors

The Board of Directors is now accepting nominations for the following Director positions for 2017-2019. There is one Executive position: President (2-year term) and 4 Director-at-large (2-year term) positions available. Being a PHABC Director is an interesting and challenging opportunity, a terrific way to build your professional network, connect with like-minded people and advance the principles of public health in British Columbia.

Directors come from different professions and locations in the province. It is the Board’s hope and intention to have each major geographic area of BC represented on the Board. Directors can expect to put in a minimum 4 to 5 hours of volunteer work per month – more if you are a member of the Executive Committee, or a committee chair. Many of the Board meetings and other committee meetings are conducted by telephone conference call.

A Director may be called upon to undertake a number of functions. Most of these functions are outlined in the Bylaws on the PHABC website. In addition, a Board member may be asked to Chair a committee such as the PEC (Public Engagement Committee), PARC (Policy, Advocacy, Research and Communications Committee), CBC (Capacity Building Committee) or to work on specific projects or issues. A Director may be asked to attend events in their area to represent PHABC. More information can also be found about PHABC on our website. If you are interested in becoming a Director you must be a PHABC member in good standing. In case your membership is expired here is a link to renew your membership. In order to complete your nomination application 2 PHABC members must support your nomination.

Positions currently available on the Board are: President and 4 Director-at-Large positions.

If you are interested in being a Board member, please send the completed form by email to Christina Harding at staff@phabc.org, she will also be happy to answer any questions you may have. The deadline for applications is September 21st at 5:00 pm. The Elections open and close respectively on October 5th and October 26th @ 5 pm, 2017. Results of the Election are announced at the AGM on November 16th, 2017. After receiving your completed form, a member of the Governance Committee or one of the current Directors will contact you by phone.

Download the form here PHABC_BOD_call_for_nominations_2017

 

Safe Communities Prevent Violence with Compassion – By Dr. Trevor Hancock

The Public Health Association of British Columbia is a proud partner to POVC (Prevention of Violence Canada) and would like to share their latest blog post, written by Dr. Trevor Hancock. His article highlights world renowned criminologist and violence prevention advocate Irvin Waller’s compassionate community safety approach to violence prevention.

 

Safe Communities Prevent Violence with Compassion

Dr. Trevor Hancock

21 August 2017

 

Safety means different things to different people. In Europe, the Safe Communities movement has mainly focused on preventing unintentional injury (so-called ‘accidents’). But in the USA, and to a large degree in Canada, it has focused more on prevention of intentional injury, even though this is much less common than unintentional injury.

There are two main forms of intentional injury; deliberate injury to oneself (suicide and attempted suicide) and deliberate injury of others (homicide and assault); the latter are often what people have in mind when they think about a Safe Community, although homicide and assault are much less common than suicide and attempted suicide.
A 2015 report from the BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit (BCIRPU) found that between 2010 and 2014 suicide accounted for almost one quarter of all injury deaths in BC, while homicide represented only 2 percent. Similarly, while attempted suicide and self-abuse accounted for 5.5 percent of hospitalisation for injury assault was just 2.7 percent.

The BCIRPU also reported that unintentional injury resulted in more than 1,400 deaths, 30,000 hospitalisations and 435,000 ER visits in 2010, while intentional injury accounted for over 560 deaths (over 500 were from suicide) but only 4,000 hospitalisations and 17,000 ER visits. Nonetheless, the total costs of violence in BC that year was $157 million, including $84 million in health care costs.

But the health impact of violence does not come from just physical assault and injury, it includes mental and emotional harm, and the costs are not just in health care but in emotional trauma and disrupted lives and communities, effects that can last decades, lifetimes, even generations. Violence can take many forms, including bullying, harassment, abuse and neglect, and can occur in many settings and affect many groups, but several categories stand out.

First comes domestic violence, which includes child and elder abuse and neglect as well as spousal/intimate partner violence. Harassment, bullying and sometimes violence is found among young people in schools and among adults in workplaces, while elder abuse and neglect can be seen in care facilities. Finally, there is violence in the community, everything from on-line abuse and harassment to road rage, sexual assault and random or targeted assaults, including racist and Islamophobic violence and abuse.
In all these settings, certain groups are more vulnerable and/or more targeted, including women, children, the elderly, Indigenous people, LGBTQ people and various ethno-racial or religious groups – and clearly, people can be members of several of these groups. But what this tells us is that much violence is deeply rooted in cultural and social values that have to do with power, on the one hand, and fear and hatred on the other. So violence prevention will take significant social and cultural change.

I have always been impressed by the work of Irvin Waller, a criminologist at the University of Ottawa and a world expert on prevention of violence. He is clear that this is much more than simply a matter of law and order, policing and punishment. Just as public health advocates for upstream interventions to keep people healthy rather than downstream interventions to fix them when they are sick, Waller provides the evidence that “reductions in violence against women, street violence and homicides by 50% are all achievable within a five to ten year period by investments in early prevention” – and observes that this is a cheaper approach to reducing crime.

He points to “investments in people such as youth outreach, positive parenting programming, and social interventions in emergency rooms”. And he adds there is evidence that “modifications in school curricula to make achievement in life skills and healthy relationship skills stop violence”. So, he asks, “why not make them as important and measured as writing, reading and arithmetic?”.

This approach – what Waller calls ‘compassionate community safety’ – was epitomised recently by Ted Upshaw, the Public Safety Advisor for Halifax and a former RCMP inspector. In a session on healthy communities at the Canadian Public Health Association conference earlier this year, he discussed the importance of social justice, respect, good quality housing and neighbourhoods, access to parks and other social and community benefits if we are to create safe and healthy communities. It makes sense to me.

© Trevor Hancock, 2017

Shannon Turner, Our Executive Director Was Awarded Honorary Life Membership Award from the Canadian Public Health Association

Shannon Turner, PhD(c) is an exemplar practitioner scholar and has been a stalwart advocate for public health throughout her career. The promotion of health and social good has been foundational to Shannon’s contributions to policy, research and practice. When Shannon began as President of the Public Health Association of British Columbia, there were only 20 members and very little funding. Over the course of her term, she rebuilt the Association and established a foundation for a vibrant and engaged membership. Shannon has also served four separate terms on the board of CPHA and helped to strengthen national networks and public health service and policy throughout Canada. As the national co-chair of Prevention of Violence Canada for over a decade she has worked to build a Canada free of violence with a powerful health promotion engagement strategy for civil society and government.

Shannon’s research efforts on violence prevention, equity and technology are focused on the power of collective voices to promote healthy public policy. Her appetite for seeking collaborative and innovative approaches to advance public health is evident in all her work. She recently co-founded Bridge for Health cooperative, a social enterprise focused on social innovation and equity. Her volunteer efforts for over 30 years, combined with her professional roles as Director of Public Health of a regional health authority in BC and Executive Director of the Public Health Association, demonstrate an unfailing commitment to public health advocacy and service to promoting the health of Canadians.