Personalizing the World Health Crisis
Fourteen million people die each year from treatable diseases like HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, and diarrhea, while another two billion are infected. In addition to these main killers are the numerous little known diseases like sleeping sickness, river blindness, rotavirus, and trachoma, all of which shatter families, jolt economies and destabilize security and food supplies. More than one billion people lack access to clean water, and 2.6 billion lack access to sanitation. Yet the amount spent on world health is less than two percent of the global military budget. World health is a human right and the most pressing development issue facing us today.
By living among, and forming intimate friendships with the diseased and disenfranchised people whose stories are documented, this project aims to give a voice, hope and dignity to the victims, and humanize the crisis by putting faces and personalities on the overwhelming statistics.
HIV/AIDS

TRACHOMA

MALARIA

This project will illustrate the cultural politics and anthropology of malaria: how people experience it; how malaria shatters families, stunts and destabilizes economies, security and food supplies; how malariologists, technologists, educators, and a vast culture of malaria survivors fight what the WHO calls the "public health enemy number one."
Malaria cases, drug resistance, and mosquito persistence are worsening around the world. With the globe becoming more traveled and warmer, deforestation, expanding mosquito habitat, and indiscriminate anti-malarial use, the fear is that the world's most untreatable malaria will find its way to Africa and the temperate zones. Nevertheless, there are hopes for its eradication and this project will document the realities, dilemmas and consequences surrounding eradication programs, including DDT.
The story moves to Tanzania where the entire population is exposed to malaria for a least part of the year, and, where malaria is the country's biggest killer. Here communities are benefiting from new drugs and eradication strategies, including favoring the manufacture and distribution of insecticide impregnated bed nets, over indoor spraying of DDT. A dire shortage of the promising anti-malarial plant Sweet Wormwood has prompted a number of agencies to transplant the herb, which the WHO predicts will cut the world's malaria deaths in half, from China to Tanzania.
After malaria the project will focus on diabetes among Canada's First Nations people, tuberculosis in Russian prisons, obesity in America, river blindness, schistosomiasis or snail fever, lymphatic filariasis, and other diseases.
View Image Galleries:
Project-related links:
Work from Personalizing the World Health Crisis has been exhibited at universities and galleries and appeared in print media, including:
Selected Project links:
- In Burma, Fever of War - a photo essay on The Tyee
- SMRU: Shoklo Malaria Research Unit
- Cover story: Robert Semeniuk's World Health project featured in the Seattle Times weekend magazine, "Terrible Truths: Photographer Robert Semeniuk won't let us look away," by Seattle Times writer Paula Bock, August 12, 2007.
- Exhibition - Trachoma in Ethiopia, photographs from Personalizing the World Health Crisis, from The Gallery on Bowen Island and The Bowen Island Arts Council.
- Trachoma in Ethiopia - a photo essay in Ascent Magazine
- Uprooted After 30,000 Years - a photo essay on The Tyee
- The San: Aids and Dislocation - a photo essay in Ascent Magazine
- The San - photo feature in Cultural Survival Magazine, Spring 2006
- Exhibition - The San: AIDS and Dislocation, Victoria School of Performing and Visual Arts Gallery, Edmonton -read the review see the show
- Life and Death in the Kalahari - photo feature in The Toronto Star, August 14, 2005
For more information on how to support this project - please click here
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