What is sustainable about HIV/AIDS?
May 6, 2010 2 min. read

I’m currently attending a conference about sustainability in the HIV/AIDS sector, hosted by a prominent NGO that provides technical assistance to US Government funded organizations.  The opening session was quite interesting, addressing the topic of “What is the future for HIV/AIDS programmes in South Africa?”  It was a good crowd-attention getter, since everyone in the room […]

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Solutions: Soap Operas
May 5, 2010 2 min. read

Soap operas could save the world.  Who knew?  Soul City, one of the longest-running, most popular soaps in South Africa, is funded by the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) and carries the messages of HIV prevention regularly (watch a clip here).   And an article in Sunday’s Boston Globe makes the case that soaps are also changing the ways […]

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Systems Thinking: Service Delivery
May 4, 2010 4 min. read

Health Service Delivery: a commonly-used term without common definition.  Despite searching high and low for a definition that would satisfy me – the WHO, my source of choice, even failed me here – I have been forced to try my hand at crafting one.  But let me start with a story from my adopted country, […]

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Demand for Maternal Health Services Rises Ten-Fold in Sierra Leone
May 3, 2010 2 min. read

Last week, President Koroma of Sierra Leone launched an initiative which promised free health care for pregnant and lactating women in the country.  This week, the numbers of women presenting at hospitals have increased ten-fold, stretching the capacity of the health system to provide care.  With infant mortality rates that rank the worst in the […]

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Global Health Round-Up May 2nd
May 2, 2010 3 min. read

Here are a few articles that have caught my attention this week, focusing on some emerging analysis about the implications for President Obama’s re-vamp of PEPFAR and reduced commitments to the Global Fund: ·         A Boston Globe story from early April, which highlighted fears from HIV/AIDS treatment advocates that funding under Obama’s recent re-authorization and […]

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Data Goldmines
April 29, 2010 1 min. read
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I’ve received a few requests recently for my data sources, so I thought I’d highlight Eric Green’s latest post at Change.org.  Here, he has compiled an excellent list of data sources for global health.  In particular, he highlights the open data initiative at the World Bank, which was launched last Tuesday, compiling more than 2,000 […]

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Gates' Changes Tactics in War on Polio
April 26, 2010 2 min. read
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An article by Robert Guth in the Wall Street Journal last week highlighted the theory that I posed in last Thursday’s post, that our global health system is designed to be reactionary and emergency-focused: That question goes to the heart of one of the most controversial debates in global health: Is humanity better served by […]

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Healthy Earth, Healthy Cities
April 22, 2010 2 min. read

Earlier this month, on World Health Day, I wrote about how we are all in this together, with a focus on the social determinants of health, including the social and environmental factors which affect our health.  What I overlooked, however, were the environmental determinants of health – a conversation which is pretty timely, considering that […]

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Simple Solutions: Malaria Nets Uncovered
April 21, 2010 4 min. read
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I’m planning to devote Wednesdays to simple solutions that have a big impact in Global Health.  In anticipation of World Malaria Day (April 25th), I thought I’d highlight some of the latest research on insecticide-treated nets and some of the simple solutions that are being utilized to get them where they are needed most.   […]

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Systems Thinking: What is a Health System?
April 20, 2010 2 min. read
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In an effort to focus this blog – and provide myself a bit of structure and sanity! – I’m devoting Tuesdays to “systems issues”.  For today, let’s start with the basics: what is a health system?  I know, this sounds patronizing, but in fact, the goal of defining and strengthening health systems has only recently […]

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Country Spotlight: South Africa Steps Forward on HIV/AIDS
April 19, 2010 3 min. read

Last week, on April 15, South Africa launched the largest HIV testing campaign in the world, aiming to have 15 million South Africans tested by June 2011.  This initiative is evidence that the recent budgetary increase of over $1 billion in funds available for HIV prevention and treatment are having an impact on the ground, and it […]

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Maternal mortality – a primer
April 15, 2010 3 min. read

Two significant topics are causing buzz in maternal and infant health circles: (1) on Monday, the Lancet published an article that shows significant decline in the number of maternal deaths, from 526,300 deaths in 1980 to 342,900 deaths in 2008, representing a 35% decline; and (2) today, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon has announced a joint action plan […]

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