February 15, 2023
1 min read

Indian-American appointed to panel on racism, health discrimination

Krishtel has spent 20 years exposing structural inequities affecting access to medicines and vaccines across the Global South and in the United States…reports Asian Lite News

Indian-American health justice lawyer Priti Krishtel, along with four other US-based experts, has been named to the O’Neill-Lancet Commission on Racism, Structural Discrimination and Global Health.

Housed at Georgetown University Law Center in Washington, the three-year commission, co-led by UN Special Rapporteur on right to health, seeks to identify anti-racist strategies to improve health globally.

The panel includes close to 20 experts from across the globe, with a purpose to promote anti-racist strategies and actions that will reduce barriers to health and wellbeing.

“I’m so proud to serve on this Commission that will help shape a future where all people know they can keep their loved ones healthy, where people actively shape what access to medicines looks like for their families and communities,” Krishtel said in a statement.

She has spent 20 years exposing structural inequities affecting access to medicines and vaccines across the Global South and in the United States.

Krishtel was chosen as 2022 McArthur Fellow for exposing inequities in the patent system to increase access to affordable, life-saving medications on a global scale.

Early in her career, she worked to increase access to antiretroviral (ARV) treatments at the height of the global AIDS epidemic, and in 2006, she co-founded the Initiative for Medicines, Access, and Knowledge (I-MAK) to ensure the public had a voice in the pharmaceutical patent system.

The concept of the Commission is founded on the recognition that racism, rather than race, creates and maintains unjust and avoidable health inequities in countries around the world. Racial and ethnic disparities in health outcomes are increasingly recognized worldwide, according to a university statement.

It added that the Commission will go beyond simply documenting disparities, as that is insufficient for understanding the connections between race, ethnicity, structural discrimination and global health.

ALSO READ: Biden, Macron, Sunak hail AI-Airbus-Boeing deal

Previous Story

India leads G20 efforts to empower women

Next Story

China shuts down consular office in Pakistan

Latest from -Top News

Crackdown in Balochistan Draws Global Outrage

Despite repeated denials from Islamabad, rights watchdogs and political activists say the pattern of abuses reflects a systemic campaign to silence the Baloch voice….reports Asian Lite News Human rights organisations have renewed

‘Killer’ Chants as Munir Visits US Event

Videos of the protest against Munir have surfaced on social media. Overseas Pakistanis staged a protest during the US visit of Pakistan’s Chief of Army Staff, Field Marshal Asim Munir, shouting slogans

G7 Sides with Israel in Escalating Conflict

The leaders said “Iran is the principal source of regional instability and terror.”…reports Asian Lite News Leaders of the G7 nations, meeting at a summit in Canada, issued a joint statement backing

Awami League Slams ‘Fascist’ Yunus

The videos from the protest shared on the party’s social media page showed several party activists marching through the streets of Dhaka in support of Hasina…reports Asian Lite News Hundreds of Awami

Tehran Alert: India Asks Nationals to Evacuate

As the Israel-Iran conflict entered its fifth day, the hostilities between the two nations continued to escalate…reports Asian Lite News India has urged its nationals in Iran and Persons of Indian Origin(PIO)
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Indian-American Neera Tanden named as new domestic policy adviser

Tanden was initially nominated by Biden to head the Office

Aneesha ready for singing debut

“The song was shot in Goa and I am happy