Skip to main content

Main menu

  • Content
    • Current Issue
    • Advance Access
    • Archive
    • Supplements
    • Special Collections
    • Topic Collections
  • For Authors
    • Instructions for Authors
    • Tips for Writing About Programs in GHSP
      • Local Voices Webinar
      • Connecting Creators and Users of Knowledge
    • Submit Manuscript
    • Publish a Supplement
    • Promote Your Article
    • Resources for Writing Journal Articles
  • About
    • About GHSP
    • Editorial Team
    • Advisory Board
    • FAQs
    • Instructions for Reviewers

User menu

  • My Alerts

Search

  • Advanced search
Global Health: Science and Practice
  • My Alerts

Global Health: Science and Practice

Dedicated to what works in global health programs

Advanced Search

  • Content
    • Current Issue
    • Advance Access
    • Archive
    • Supplements
    • Special Collections
    • Topic Collections
  • For Authors
    • Instructions for Authors
    • Tips for Writing About Programs in GHSP
    • Submit Manuscript
    • Publish a Supplement
    • Promote Your Article
    • Resources for Writing Journal Articles
  • About
    • About GHSP
    • Editorial Team
    • Advisory Board
    • FAQs
    • Instructions for Reviewers
  • Alerts
  • Find GHSP on LinkedIn
  • Visit GHSP on Facebook
  • RSS

Latest Articles

  • Open Access
    Action-Oriented Population Nutrition Research: High Demand but Limited Supply
    Judy Pham and David Pelletier
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2015, 3(2):287-299; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-15-00009

    Action-oriented research in nutrition, vital to guiding effective policies and programs at scale, is greatly underrepresented in public health journals and, even more so, in nutrition journals.

  • Open Access
    Bedside Availability of Prepared Oxytocin and Rapid Administration After Delivery to Prevent Postpartum Hemorrhage: An Observational Study in Karnataka, India
    Corrina Moucheraud, Jonathon Gass, Stuart Lipsitz, Jonathan Spector, Priya Agrawal, Lisa R Hirschhorn, Atul Gawande and Bhala Kodkany
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2015, 3(2):300-304; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00239

    Advance preparation and bedside availability of oxytocin before childbirth was significantly and robustly associated with rapid administration of the utertonic, as recommended to prevent postpartum hemorrhage.

  • Open Access
    Predictors of Essential Health and Nutrition Service Delivery in Bihar, India: Results From Household and Frontline Worker Surveys
    Katrina Kosec, Rasmi Avula, Brian Holtemeyer, Parul Tyagi, Stephanie Hausladen and Purnima Menon
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2015, 3(2):255-273; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00144

    Only about 35% of sample households reported receiving immunization, food supplements, pregnancy care information, or nutrition information. Monetary incentives for such product-oriented services as immunization improved performance and may have spillover effects for information-oriented services. Immunization day events and good frontline worker recordkeeping also improved service delivery.

  • Open Access
    Response to “A False Dichotomy: RCTs and Their Contributions to Evidence-Based Public Health”
    James D Shelton
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):141-143; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-15-00045

    While randomized controlled trials (RCTs) can and do make valuable contributions, they also have severe limitations, including in answering the basic question of “Does it work?” and, even more so, in steering how to proceed with complex public health programming at scale. They deserve no exalted position in the pantheon of methodologies for evidence-based public health.

  • Open Access
    Engaging Communities With a Simple Tool to Help Increase Immunization Coverage
    Manish Jain, Gunjan Taneja, Ruhul Amin, Robert Steinglass and Michael Favin
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):117-125; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00180

    Use of a simple, publicly placed tool that monitors vaccination coverage in a community has potential to broaden program coverage by keeping both the community and the health system informed about every infant's vaccination status.

  • Open Access
    Biometric Fingerprint System to Enable Rapid and Accurate Identification of Beneficiaries
    Daniel Matthew L Storisteanu, Toby L Norman, Alexandra Grigore and Tristram L Norman
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):135-137; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-15-00010

    Inability to uniquely identify clients impedes access to services and contributes to inefficiencies. Using a pocket-sized fingerprint scanner that wirelessly syncs with a health worker's smartphone, the SimPrints biometric system can link individuals' fingerprints to their health records. A pilot in Bangladesh will assess its potential.

  • Open Access
    A False Dichotomy: RCTs and Their Contributions to Evidence-Based Public Health
    Laurel E Hatt, Minki Chatterji, Leslie Miles, Alison B Comfort, Benjamin W Bellows and Francis O Okello
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):138-140; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00245

    Global public health should rely on those research methods that best answer the pressing questions at hand. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and other rigorous impact evaluation methods have a critical role to play in public health.

  • Open Access
    Barriers to Health Care in Rural Mozambique: A Rapid Ethnographic Assessment of Planned Mobile Health Clinics for ART
    Amee Schwitters, Philip Lederer, Leah Zilversmit, Paula Samo Gudo, Isaias Ramiro, Luisa Cumba, Epifanio Mahagaja and Kebba Jobarteh
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):109-116; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00145

    Mobile health clinics can markedly decrease clients' transportation time and cost to access antiretroviral therapy (ART) and other health services in rural areas, potentially improving use. Close coordination with community leaders and regularly scheduled visits by the mobile clinics are critical.

  • Open Access
    Tightening Up the Nomenclature for Non-Physician Clinicians: Why Not Call All of Them Physician Assistants?
    Luppo Kuilman and Gomathi Sundar
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):144-145; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00217
  • Open Access
    Female Health Workers at the Doorstep: A Pilot of Community-Based Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Service Delivery in Northern Nigeria
    Charles A Uzondu, Henry V Doctor, Sally E Findley, Godwin Y Afenyadu and Alastair Ager
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2015, 3(1):97-108; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-14-00117

    Deployment of resident female Community Health Extension Workers (CHEWs) to a remote rural community led to major and sustained increases in service utilization, including antenatal care and facility-based deliveries. Key components to success: (1) providing an additional rural residence allowance to help recruit and retain CHEWs; (2) posting the female CHEWs in pairs to avoid isolation and provide mutual support; (3) ensuring supplies and transportation means for home visits; and (4) allowing CHEWs to perform deliveries.

Pages

  • Previous
  • Next
  • 1
  • …
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • 98
  • 99
  • 100
  • 101
  • 102
  • 103
  • …
  • 111
Back to top
Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs

Follow Us On

  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • RSS

Articles

  • Current Issue
  • Advance Access Articles
  • Past Issues
  • Topic Collections
  • Most Read Articles
  • Supplements

More Information

  • Submit a Paper
  • Instructions for Authors
  • Instructions for Reviewers

About

  • About GHSP
  • Advisory Board
  • FAQs
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

© 2026 Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. ISSN: 2169-575X

Powered by HighWire