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Global Health: Science and Practice

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More articles from ORIGINAL ARTICLE

  • Open Access
    Applying a Three-Tier Approach to Address Gaps in Oral Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Uptake and Continuity in Uganda: A Mixed Methods Approach
    Simon Sensalire, Abel Nkolo, Juliana Nabwire Ssali, Martin Muhire, Augustin Muhwezi and Herbert Kadama
    Global Health: Science and Practice April 2024, 12(2):e2300229; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00229

    We introduced a transformative approach consisting of a gap analysis and root cause analysis to understand and address significant gaps in enrollment and continuity on oral pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) and a national quality improvement collaborative to map interventions to address specific barriers in the PrEP cascade.

  • Open Access
    National Policy Influences of Contraceptive Prevalence and Method Mix Strategy: A Longitudinal Analysis of 59 Low- and Middle-Income Countries, 2010–2021
    Michael A. Cohen, Suzanne Gold, Arthur Ostrega and Mark Zingbagba
    Global Health: Science and Practice April 2024, 12(2):e2300352; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00352

    Evidence from over a decade of Contraceptive Security Indicators survey data across 59 countries reveals a subset of finance, governance, and logistics policies that boost modern contraceptive prevalence rate and method-mix strategy.

  • Open Access
    Budget Process and Execution: A Case Study on the Underperformance of the Peruvian Health System, 2000–2021
    Rolf Erik Hönger and Doreen Montag
    Global Health: Science and Practice April 2024, 12(2):e2300250; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00250

    Four interconnected influences have caused the Peruvian health system to underperform. To break the influence of these cycles, the Ministry of Health needs to argue in economic terms to prioritize health.

  • Open Access
    Implementation and Cost Analysis of a Novel Silicosis Case-Finding Program For Mine Workers in Rural Rwanda
    Robert Tumusime, Michael S. Miller, Anne Niyigena, Symaque Dusabeyezu, Pierrot Uwitonze, Emmanuel Harerimana, Grace Umugiraneza, Wellars Dusingizimana, Samuel Hatfield, Stella Savarimuthu, Juliana Lawrence, Pacifique Hagenimana, Jean Marie Vianney Ngenzi, Aristarque Murara, Phoebe Mwiseneza, Paul Sonenthal, Vincent K. Cubaka, Fredrick Kateera and Innocent Kamali
    Global Health: Science and Practice April 2024, 12(2):e2300290; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00290

    Implementing occupational lung disease case-finding in resource-limited settings is clinically and economically feasible and can be integrated into routine noncommunicable disease case-finding.

  • Open Access
    Risk for Severe Intimate Partner Violence in Nairobi’s Informal Settlements: Tailoring the Danger Assessment to Kenya
    Shannon N. Wood, Nancy Perrin, Irene Akumu, Ben Asira, Amber Clough, Nancy Glass, Jacquelyn Campbell and Michele R. Decker
    Global Health: Science and Practice February 2024, 12(1):e2300116; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00116

    Although a tailored 16-item weighted danger assessment may be valuable for research purposes, the unweighted 16-item Kenya-Danger Assessment is most valuable for implementation among practitioners working directly with intimate partner violence survivors, given simplicity for field implementation.

  • Open Access
    Surgical System Efficiency and Operative Productivity in Public and Private Health Facilities in Ethiopia: A Cross-Sectional Evaluation
    Manuel Kassaye Sibhatu, Edlawit Mesfin Getachew, Dawit Yifru Bete, Senedu Bekele Gebreegziabher, Tsegaye Hailu Kumsa, Mulatu Birru Shagre, Kassa Haile Merga, Desalegn Bekele Taye, Hassen Mohammed Bashir, Mikiyas Teferri Yicheneku, Wuletaw Chanie Zewude, Akililu Alemu Ashuro, Tigistu Adamu Ashengo and Berhane Redae Meshesha
    Global Health: Science and Practice February 2024, 12(1):e2200277; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-22-00277

    The surgical system in Ethiopia in both public and private health facilities was inefficient, requiring immediate action to improve timely access to safe surgical care.

  • Open Access
    Improving TB Case Detection Through Active Case-Finding: Results of Multiple Intervention Strategies in Hard-to-Reach Riverine Areas of Southern Nigeria
    Joseph N. Chukwu, Cosmas Kenan Onah, Edmund Ndudi Ossai, Charles C. Nwafor, Chukwuka Alphonsus, Okechukwu E. Ezeakile, Ngozi Murphy-Okpala, Chinwe C. Eze, Obioma Chijioke-Akaniro, Anthony Meka, Martin I. Njoku, Francis S. Iyama and Ngozi Ekeke
    Global Health: Science and Practice February 2024, 12(1):e2300164; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00164

    To address TB control efforts more comprehensively, active case-finding is another important approach to increasing TB case detection rates, especially in hard-to-reach areas with high-risk populations.

  • Open Access
    Effectiveness of Capacity-Building and Quality Improvement Interventions to Improve Day-of-Birth Care in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of the Congo
    Virgile Kikaya, Fernand Katembwe, Jacky Yabili, Marcel Mbwanya, Elana Dhuse, Patricia Gomez, Rachel Waxman, Diwakar Mohan and Hannah Tappis
    Global Health: Science and Practice February 2024, 12(1):e2300236; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00236

    A low-dose, high-frequency capacity-building approach coupled with quality improvement interventions improved health care provider performance and maternal and newborn health outcomes.

  • Open Access
    Barriers and Facilitators to Implementing a Community-Based Psychosocial Support Intervention Conducted In-Person and Remotely: A Qualitative Study in Quibdó, Colombia
    Diana Carolina Chaparro Buitrago, Michel Rattner, Leah Emily James and Juan Fernando Botero García
    Global Health: Science and Practice February 2024, 12(1):e2300032; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00032

    This study explores contextual barriers and facilitators and perceived psychosocial changes associated with implementing a community-based psychosocial support group intervention for conflict-affected adults delivered via in-person and remote modalities and presents recommendations for strengthening the provision of community-based services within routine mental health services in Colombia.

  • Open Access
    Perceptions of the COVID-19 Vaccine and Other Adult Vaccinations in Malawi: A Qualitative Assessment
    Natalie Tibbels, Rominie Kaseghe, Alvin Blessings Chisambi, Vitima Ndovi, Alfred Mang’ando and Maria Elena Figueroa
    Global Health: Science and Practice February 2024, 12(Supplement 1):e2300146; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00146

    Low perceived risk of COVID-19 and fear of the COVID-19 vaccines suggest the utility of integrating COVID-19 vaccine delivery into other health services and using trusted community-based vaccinators who emphasize the public good and avoid framing COVID-19 vaccines as different from other vaccines.

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