Month: May 2020

UNESCO launches a series of online forums entitled “Imagining the world to come”

UNESCO launches a series of online forums entitled “Imagining the world to come”

UNESCO is calling on inspiring voices from across the globe to take part in a series of online discussions to help us imagine the world taking shape as a result of the COVID-19 crisis. The series will kick off in May with a unique event featuring leading women experts and thinkers.

The COVID-19 crisis has had a major impact on societies, challenging what we thought were fundamental truths. Given that the pandemic is ongoing, and no one knows how it will end, it is all the more urgent that we take time to think. Indeed, these events have revealed the world in a new light, underlining the need for us to reflect on the future. That is what UNESCO, as a laboratory of ideas, intends to do. This week, UNESCO, is launching a series of online forums entitled “Imagining the world to come” to give voice to all those who will kick-start our reflections. The first forum features women, whose views have not been sufficiently heard during this crisis.

New contributions from women and men working in a wide range of disciplines around the world will be added to the platform in the coming weeks and months. These forums will inform UNESCO’s strategic reflections – making sure that tomorrow’s programmes meet the needs of our changing world. UNESCO also hopes that the series will inspire national policy-makers and make a positive contribution to global governance.

All contributions, however diverse, are welcome! Do not hesitate to support the promotion of this online forum by visiting the dedicated website and sharing it on your social networks.

In the face of Covid-19, UNESCO leads the reflection on

what the future should look like.

LINKS In English

Contact : forum@unesco.org

#UnescoForum #LeMondeAVenir #TheWorldToCome #ForumDeLUnesco #LaVoixDesFemmes #WomensVoices

Posted by Didier in News
Spotlight on adolescent health and well-being

Spotlight on adolescent health and well-being

The Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC), a WHO collaborative cross-national study, has been seeking to understand and monitor young people’s health across Europe and Canada for more than 30 years. As the study has grown to include 50 member countries and regions, the utility of the data it provides about the health, well-being, social environment and health behaviour of 11-, 13- and 15-year-old boys and girls has also grown. The seventh international report offers findings on adolescent health and well-being from 45 participating countries and regions in 2017/2018. It presents data from over 220 000 young people in 45 countries and regions in Europe and Canada. The data focus on social context (relations with family, peers, school and online communication), health outcomes (subjective health, mental health, overweight and obesity, and injuries), health behaviours (patterns of eating, physical activity and toothbrushing) and risk behaviours (use of tobacco, alcohol and cannabis, sexual behaviour, fighting and bullying) relevant to young people’s health and well-being. New items on electronic media communication and cyberbullying and a revised measure on family meals were introduced to the HBSC survey in 2017/2018 and measures of individual health complaints and underweight are also included for the first time in the report.

The report is divided into two volumes. Volume 1 provides an overview of the key findings highlighting important gender and socioeconomic differences, as well as changes since the last survey in 2013/2014. The key data are presented in Volume 2 in a series of charts showing country/region-level and overall prevalence by age, gender and family affluence.

Hans Henri P. Kluge, WHO Regional Director for Europe, explains the following in his foreword: “Life has changed enormously in Europe over the last two decades. Digitization, globalization, migration, urbanization and climate change mean we now live in a more complex Europe. Young people are often the first to be exposed to and affected by these changes and have become outspoken advocates on issues such as climate change. It is important, at European level and in each country/region, to understand what young people think, know and understand in terms of their health, and how they behave. The Health Behaviour in School-aged Children (HBSC) study, now presenting its seventh international report, helps us with all of this. HBSC is truly international; (…) And its primary purpose is to advocate for policy changes to safeguard the health and well-being of one of society’s most vulnerable groups – children and adolescents. (…) . This seventh international report and the vital data it presents shows that HBSC is, and will continue to be, a central support of the new vision for the WHO Regional Office for Europe.

Posted by Didier in News
Questionnaire reopening schools and COVID-19

Questionnaire reopening schools and COVID-19

With the reopening of schools in countries where they have been closed, we are now entering a new phase of the COVID-19 pandemic. These nationwide and localized closures of schools are impacting over 90% of the world’s student population (around 1.3 billion children and young people). Reopening schools is not an easy thing to do, although at this stage of the pandemic in most countries it is a priority because the impact of closure is massive. The concrete mechanisms of the reopening differ, depending on the socioeconomical context and the cultures of the countries.

Since this pandemic is unique so as the extend of closure, there is a crucial need for sharing information about the local and national strategies in different contexts. That’s why the UNESCO Chairs and WHO Collaborating Centre on Global Health and Education together with the Schools for Health in Europe network foundation (SHE) and the EUPHA Health Promotion Section have launched a knowledge sharing process on school reopening.

We would be happy if you are prepared to complete the short questionnaire about the situation in your country, region, city or school in order to enrich the inventory of practices. Your contribution will be added to our webpage about COVID-19 where you find the articles related to the available scientific data, guidelines developed by UNESCO, WHO, WASH in Schools and other institutions and the practices collected worldwide by the community of the Chair.

Thank you in advance for your contribution.

Posted by Didier in News