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Launch of the Berlin office LSHTM-Charité Global Health Lecture Series on Feb 12, 2020 with Dr Moeti, Prof Drosten, Prof Piot, and Ms Yei-Mokuwa.

LSHTM Berlin Office

Collaborating with leading scientists from Germany, UK, and further afield to conduct, and promote discussion around, cutting-edge research on global health issues including migration, gender, health equity and health systems.

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About us

The LSHTM Berlin Office was established in 2018 in partnership with the Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin to enhance collaboration and cooperation in global health.

Lecture Series

The LSHTM-Charité Global Health Lecture Series together leading scientists from the UK, Germany and further afield to present cutting-edge research on global health issues and discuss implications of the work for policy and practice.

Research

Research portfolio includes research into the impacts of and response to migration and its intersection with gender in South Africa and the health equity impacts of policies passed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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About us
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The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) is renowned for its research, postgraduate studies and continuing education in public and global health. The School has an international presence and collaborative ethos, and is uniquely placed to help shape health policy and translate research findings into tangible impact. It has 3,000 staff conducting research in over 100 countries, and more than 4,000 students - all working with a collective purpose to improve health worldwide.

In Europe, LSHTM works with many institutions and collaborators and remains committed to maintaining and strengthening those partnerships in future. In 2018 the School partnered with the Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin to enhance collaboration and cooperation in global health. The Berlin Office of the LSHTM is based at the Charité Institute of Virology, which is part of the .

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Berlin Office Team

Johanna
Hanefeld

Professor of Global Health Policy

Alicia Longthorne

Research Assistant
Research
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The LSHTM Berlin office’s research portfolio includes research into the impacts of, and response to, migration and its intersection with gender in South Africa and the health equity impacts of economic policies passed in response to the COVID19 pandemic.

MiGHS

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is a research collaboration between  at the , the at the , the and the . You can follow MiGHS on .

It has been developed to address one of the most pressing issues facing health systems globally and at a national level in South Africa – the impacts of and response to migration and its intersection with gender.

MiGHS responds specifically to needs identified through . The project has been designed to directly inform policies and build capacity amongst researchers, policymakers and implementers, to make health systems more responsive to the intersection between gender and migration in South Africa and globally. It will do so by generating new knowledge and a series of innovative impact activities.

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Assessing the health equity impact of policy responses to COVID-19

In April 2020, a study to assess the health equity impacts of social and economic policy responses to COVID-19 was initiated by the Robert Koch Institute in collaboration the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM). Funded by the World Health Organisation Regional Office for Europe, the study focuses on eight countries – Germany, Kyrgyzstan, Italy, Norway, Serbia, Spain, Sweden, and the United Kingdom – and aims to assess and monitor the health equity impacts of the different social and economic policies adopted nationally in response to COVID-19. Given the unprecedented economic bailout packages to mediate the negative effects of the current crisis alongside the measures adopted to prevent and control the spread of COVID-19, there is need to better understand the uptake, implementation and differential impact of the policies adopted. The monitoring and assessment of how these policies affect health equity aims to identify the impact of the policies on vulnerable groups that risk facing greater exclusion and marginalization as a result of the crisis. Engaging in the research is an interdisciplinary team of social scientists and social epidemiologists.

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