PIH History
Considering Injustices
Pillars of PIHE
Organizing
Setting Goals
100

Name one of the four founders of PIH.

Who are Dr. Paul Farmer, Ophelia Dahl, Dr. Jim Kim, Todd McCormack, and Thomas J. White?

100

The experience of repeated, widespread, systemic injustice

What is oppression?

100

The three pillars of PIHE.

What are Advocacy, Fundraising, and Community Building & Education?

100

Identifying and recruiting volunteer leaders, building community around that leadership, and generating power from that community.

What is organizing?

100

Planning for campaign goals it is important to make specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and time bound goals.

What is SMART and what does it stand for?

200

The country in which PIH is fundraising and helping to build a Maternal Center of Excellence

What is Sierra Leone?

200

Systematic ways in which social structures harm disadvantaged individuals

What is structural violence?

200

Advancing legislation that eliminates barriers to care is an example of this pillar.

What is Advocacy?

200

The Women's Committee in the college in Montgomery planned a day when African Americans would stay of the buses in solidarity for Rosa Parks getting arrested as a form of boycotting segregation. 

What is an example of Organizing 

200

Paul Farmer Memorial Resolution 

What is the name of the resolution we are planning for 

300

The decade during which PIH was founded

What is the 1980s?

300

Describe the difference between charity and solidarity.

What is belief in a hierarchical system, creating a power dynamic that reinforces systems of oppression VS a systems-change approach in which all relationships and power dynamics are multi-directional?

300

Understanding the systemic inequities that lead to poor health outcomes in impoverished communities is an example of this pillar.

What is Community Building and Education?

300

Commitment to action 

What is one of the "4 C's" of getting clear commitment when organizing?

300

By March 2022, get at least 3 Members of Congress to sign on to the Paul Farmer Memorial Resolution following our team advocating with them to do so

What is an example of following a SMART team campaign goal?

400

The country in which PIH’s mission began

What is Haiti?

400

The term for the belief that even and especially the most vulnerable communities and individuals should have access to quality healthcare

What is a preferential option for the poor?

400

Ensuring PIH has the resources to deliver high-quality healthcare in some of the world’s poorest places is an example of this pillar.

What is Fundraising?

400

We want to make a ____ that is specific, concrete, and significant so we can actually see a difference.

What is the change we are wanting to make?


400

Committing the United States to strengthen health-care systems in lower and middle income countries and address any historical harm.

What is an example of a goal for an advocacy campaign year?

500

Name two of five aspects that PIH’s model of service focuses on.

What are partnership, sustained commitment, strengthening health systems, ethical engagement, and social justice?

500

Global health inequity is fueled by ___.

What are wealth distribution, globalization and slavery, and colonialism and resource extraction (among others!)

500

PIHE utilizes this model of leadership.

What is a Snowflake Model?

500

Our _____ comes from people like you, who organize resources into the power we need to create change."

What is the source of our power?

500

Create a relationships with other countries with mutual respect to address global health disparities

What is a step we can take to meet an advocacy goal?