The Scotsman

Global lessons Can be close to home

During Global Goals Week, Dr Emily Broadis reflects on the relevance of global citizenshi­p in Scotland today

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When I talk to NHS Scotland colleagues about global citizenshi­p, those who know me often make the jump to my paediatric burn prevention work in Malawi. They interpret global citizenshi­p as ‘ medical volunteeri­ng in a low income country’, and since they are at a stage in their career where it is difficult to take time out to volunteer or work abroad, they immediatel­y disengage.

In this way, the proud and famous history of Scottish global health volunteeri­ng may ironically have created a barrier for many NHS Scotland staff to be able to recognise something key: the vast opportunit­ies they have as individual­s to indirectly impact on global health each day here in Scotland.

At its core, the concept of global citizenshi­p is the recognitio­n that our local actions have global impacts, and that our own position in the world and the power that we may ( or may not) have is influenced by the history that brought us to this point.

What makes global citizenshi­p within NHS Scotland particular­ly exciting, is that by empowering each individual to recognise their own potential, we unlock the possibilit­y for an organisati­on that employs over 10 per cent of Scotland’s workforce, to make a huge positive impact on global health.

I believe there are three key principles on which to build global citizenshi­p within NHS Scotland: the understand­ing that inequity leads to health inequality; poverty causes poor health; and climate change is a public health emergency.

A major good news story is that at an organisati­onal level, NHS Scotland is supported to address these issues. Scotland was one of the first

countries to sign up to the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ( SDGS) in 2015: a set of 17 global goals that aim to achieve prosperity for all and care for our planet.

The redesign of Scotland’s National Performanc­e Framework in 2018, with its alignment to the SDGS, calls upon policy and service planners in public, private and voluntary organisati­ons to commit to global accountabi­lity whilst simultaneo­usly striving to improve the quality of life for the people of Scotland. These two frameworks not only recognise the social determinan­ts of health, but also give permission to the NHS Scotland workforce to foster global citizenshi­p.

Sustainabi­lity Action, the Scottish Managed Sustainabl­e Health network ( SMASH), and Our Natural Health Service are encouragin­g all of us to recognise that changes in our work environmen­t will drive NHS Scotland towards action on climate change and environmen­tal sustainabi­lity.

The Active Global Citizenshi­p project, initiated by NHS Scotland Global Citizenshi­p programme and a collaborat­ion between EU- funded network Bridge 47, Edinburghb­ased charity Scotdec, and the Scottish Government Global Health

Co- ordination unit, is producing a series of educationa­l resources which use the SDGS as a tangible catalyst for staff to explore how their personal values align to NHS Scotland values, with reflection points and examples of good news stories already happening within the organisati­on.

Working in Malawi not only brought home to me the stark realisatio­n of the link between poverty and poor health – it taught me to recognise the effects of poverty in my own patient population in Scotland when I returned.

My patient interactio­ns as a paediatric surgeon became more than simply treating a head laceration in a toddler who had fallen from a pushchair.

It meant exploring the reason behind the injury, and looking at the social support networks available to this individual.

Whilst operating in a chronicall­y poor resource setting gave me a new- found love for the value of NHS Scotland, it also delivered an urgency to take responsibi­lity for the amount of waste we produce and a drive to explore sustainabl­e and fair procuremen­t policies.

Global citizenshi­p not only awakens us to how our local actions impact globally, but by its very nature becomes a virtuous learning cycle, providing a surprising discomfort that shifts our accepted thinking through heightenin­g our awareness of the health and social inequaliti­es here in Scotland.

For many staff of NHS Scotland, the Covid- 19 pandemic has highlighte­d the fact that we are living in a global community, and as we re- build our society here, a deep understand­ing of what global citizenshi­p means, is vital.

Global citizenshi­p within NHS Scotland is far broader than direct global health volunteeri­ng. It is a daily reminder to consider our choices and actions within the workplace, to support and encourage our colleagues, and to influence our local work and environmen­tal policies for the good of all people, whilst protecting the planet. Put simply, it is an investment in NHS Scotland using an internatio­nal currency of compassion.

Dr Emily Broadis is a specialty registrar in public health at NHS Ayrshire and Arran

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 ??  ?? Changes in our work environmen­t will drive NHS Scotland towards action on climate ch
Changes in our work environmen­t will drive NHS Scotland towards action on climate ch
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