Join the UW Consortium for Global Mental Health and the Population Health Initiative for a talk on Resilience and Health Access among Bedouin communities in Israel. This is our first event in a series of 6 for the 2024-25 year. Lunch is provided for each event in the series. Members of the audience will have a chance to ask questions after the talk and meet Dr. Shibli. Please register to let us know you'll be attending! bit.ly… More About the Topic: This lecture focuses on the resilience and mental health access barriers faced by the Arab Bedouin community, one of Israel's most vulnerable groups. Special emphasis is given to the role of social, cultural, gender, geographic, and structural factors that impact mental health and resilience of the Bedouin community, with particular focus on the most vulnerable subgroups such as Bedouin women.
Staff, faculty, and students of all disciplines are welcome to attend this hybrid event. Lunch provided at 11:30, speaking starts at 11:45. Please register with the link to let us know you’ll be attending: bit.ly… About the Speaker: Dr. Haneen Shibli is a Fulbright researcher at the University of Washington, holds a PhD. in Public Health. Her research focuses on healthcare accessibility, resilience and quality of life related to health among the Muslim Arab minority in Israel, with a particular emphasis on the most disadvantaged group, the Arab Bedouin women. Her research centers on social, cultural and gender issues through the lens of intersectionality and the framework of social determinants of health. In addition to her work in Israel, Dr. Shibli conducts research on community resilience and mental health among displaced Muslim communities in the US. Her passion for public health drives her interest in addressing health inequalities and shaping policies to reduce disparities among marginalized populations, bringing a unique perspective as both an insider and outsider in her research. |