African Diaspora and control of HIV infection due to unsafe medical practices in Africa

Authors

  • Ngoyi K. Zacharie Bukonda
  • Tumba Ghislain Disashi

Keywords:

African diaspora, capacity development, control of HIV infection, global learning, health care workers

Abstract

Members of the African Diaspora have been portrayed as defectors, disloyal to their motherland. Such
overgeneralized characterizations unfortunately risk clouding a complex reality and masking the positive
involvement of a large number of Africans of the Diaspora in African affairs, particularly in the context of
the HIV/AIDS crisis. One illustration of this involvement is a pilot project undertaken by US-based members
of the African Diaspora in collaboration with one Congolese medical school. Implemented in the Eastern
Kasai Province (Democratic Republic of the Congo), the pilot project focused on the training of health care
professionals and on the deployment of quality improvement teams to effectively mitigate HIV infection
which results from unsafe medical practices. Project aims, design, strategies, and accomplishments are
described. Building on this case, arguments are presented to expand the concept of global learning to
include capacity development projects, conceived and implemented by the African Diaspora.

 

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Published

2008-10-05