A Healthy Society Edmonton Book Launch September 24 @ 7 pm

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Council of Canadians Edmonton

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Sep 6, 2012, 5:13:57 PM9/6/12
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A Healthy Society: How a Focus on Health can Revive Canadian Democracy
Edmonton Book Launch and discussion with author Dr. Ryan Meili
Monday, September 24 at 7:00 pm
Room 2-490, Edmonton Clinic Health Academy
11405-87 Avenue, University of Alberta Campus
Invite friends to the Edmonton Facebook event.
 
There’s more to health than the medical system – there’s democracy and social justice! Dr. Ryan Meili argues that health delivery too often focuses on treatment of immediate causes and ignores more fundamental conditions that lead to poor health in the first place. He explores how income, education, employment and other factors make the difference in our health.
 
Dr. Meili’s new book, A Healthy Society: How a Focus on Health can Revive Canadian Democracy, brings the issues alive with real-life stories drawn from his experiences working as a doctor in inner-city Canada and rural communities in Mozambique and Saskatchewan.
 
When’s the last time the doctor ordered more democracy? Join us as Dr. Meili calls for democratic reforms that could help reshape the way we organize ourselves to create a truly healthy society.
 
Copies of A Healthy Society will be available for purchase.
 
Sponsored by the Council of Canadians, United Nurses of Alberta, Parkland Institute, Alberta Federation of Labour, Public Interest Alberta, and Friends of Medicare.
 
For more information about the book and Ryan, visit ryanmeili.ca.
 
About the Book
 
Drawing on his experiences as a family physician in the inner city of Saskatoon, Mozambique, and rural Saskatchewan, Dr. Meili argues that health delivery too often focuses on treatment of immediate causes and ignores more fundamental conditions that lead to poor health. Income, education, employment, housing, the wider environment, and social supports: far more than the actions of physicians, nurses, and other health care providers, it is these conditions that make the greatest difference in our health. Brought to life by patient stories, A Healthy Society explores a number of specific health determinants, and ends in a discussion of democratic reforms that could help reshape the way we organize ourselves to create a truly healthy society.
 
Through a mix of scholarship and story, the author proposes a new approach to politics. The use of human health as a measure of our success as a society, and the application of the ideas of the social determinants of health to public policy, appeals beyond political lines to common values. By synthesizing diverse ideas into a plan for action based in the lived experiences of practitioners and patients, A Healthy Society breaks important ground in the renewal of politics toward the goal of better lives for all Canadians.
 
Praise for A Healthy Society
 
“We know it in our hearts: poor health is intimately linked to poverty, abuse, and lack of social services. Yet in all these areas, Canada is marching steadily backward. In A Healthy Society, Ryan Meili, a practicing doctor who knows this first hand, sounds a clarion call to all Canadians. We will not have a healthy society until we put social justice and universal social security for all back at the top of our political agenda.”
- Maude Barlow, National Chairperson, Council of Canadians
 
 
About Dr. Ryan Meili
 
Ryan Meili is a family doctor at the West Side Community Clinic in Saskatoon. He also works for the College of Medicine at the University of Saskatchewan as head of the Division of Social Accountability, where he’s responsible for helping ensure that Saskatchewan’s future doctors are equipped to meet the health needs of the diverse communities they will serve. Ryan also serves as vice-chair of the national advocacy organization, Canadian Doctors for Medicare.
 
A Healthy Society: How a Focus on Health can Revive Canadian Democracy, published by Purich Publishing of Saskatoon, is Dr. Meili’s first book.
 
From its inception, Ryan has been involved in SWITCH, the Student Wellness Initiative Toward Community Health, a student-run, interdisciplinary, inner-city clinic whose mandate is to bring students from nursing, medicine, social work, physiotherapy, pharmacy, nutrition, and numerous other disciplines together to serve the residents of Saskatoon’s core communities.
 
Ryan also runs the College of Medicine’s Making the Links program, which gives medical students the opportunity to work in Northern Saskatchewan, at SWITCH, and in the rural communities of Mozambique in southeast Africa. One of the program’s goals is for students to gain firsthand knowledge of the social factors influencing health by living among and working with diverse peoples.
 
Ryan lives in Saskatoon with his wife, Mahli, who is training to be a pediatrician, and their son, Abraham.
 
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