eMagazine August 2023
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OUR PEOPLE,<br />
OUR MISSION<br />
Global Health<br />
<strong>eMagazine</strong><br />
<strong>August</strong> <strong>2023</strong><br />
Highlights<br />
Spotlight<br />
Clinical Case of the Month<br />
Reflections<br />
Global Mental Health<br />
United Kingdom; A man jogs by the image of a woman wearing a respirator in Brick Lane, in<br />
London, United Kingdom, on April 18, 2020.<br />
REUTERS/Simon Dawson<br />
Hispanic/Latinx Communities<br />
Voices of Ugandan Students<br />
Our Beautiful Planet<br />
Innovation and Technology<br />
Nursing Division<br />
Art to Remind Us of Who We<br />
Can Be<br />
Article of the Month<br />
Video of the Month<br />
Dr. Menn Memorial<br />
Among the Letters<br />
Congratulations<br />
Welcome<br />
Calendar<br />
Global Health Family<br />
Photo News<br />
Previous Issues of<br />
the <strong>eMagazine</strong><br />
South Africa; Artist Senzart911 created larger than life images of children wearing protective face<br />
masks during the COVID outbreak in Kliptown, the oldest residential district of Soweto, South<br />
Africa, on October 27, 2021.<br />
REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko<br />
Street art has flourished during the pandemic. Kaleidoscopic collages with<br />
messages to mask-up and get vaccinated decorate walls across the world.<br />
There are two-story tall tributes to health-care workers and memorial murals<br />
dedicated to those who’ve died from COVID-19. Some images lean to the<br />
political, while others prompt hope.<br />
We’re sharing just a fraction of the COVID street art out there — but, here’s<br />
to all of the artists who’ve told the story of the pandemic these past two<br />
years with their paint brushes and spray cans, especially those who’ve used<br />
their canvases to promote health messages and raise awareness of health<br />
inequalities.<br />
36<br />
Art continued on next page >>