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Global Health: Science and Practice
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Global Health: Science and Practice

Dedicated to what works in global health programs

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Latest Articles

  • Open Access
    Food commodity pipeline management in transitional settings: challenges and lessons learned from the first USAID food development program in South Sudan
    Hannah Tappis, Shannon Doocy and Stephen Amoako
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):193-202; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00018

    Efficient and reliable commodity transport is critical to effective food assistance in development settings as well as in emergency situations. Increasing the flexibility of U.S. government Title II food assistance program procurement regulations and more comprehensive contingency planning could improve the effectiveness of these programs in non-emergency settings with high food insecurity and political volatility.

  • Open Access
    Making the most of food aid to help prevent child and maternal deaths
    Bruce Cogill
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):141-144; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00084

    Advances in child nutrition over the last several decades are creating momentum for a programmatic push to reduce undernutrition worldwide. The contribution of food aid may be small, but, nonetheless, U.S. food aid policy should be revamped to benefit more effectively and more efficiently the children and mothers in need.

  • Open Access
    Limited electricity access in health facilities of sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review of data on electricity access, sources, and reliability
    Heather Adair-Rohani, Karen Zukor, Sophie Bonjour, Susan Wilburn, Annette C Kuesel, Ryan Hebert and Elaine R Fletcher
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):249-261; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00037

    Only 34% of hospitals have reliable electricity access in surveyed sub-Saharan African countries. However, analysis in 2 countries indicates modest improvements in electricity access over time. Ambitious plans to improve health service delivery in sub-Saharan Africa need to address this critical issue.

  • Open Access
    Successful use of tablet personal computers and wireless technologies for the 2011 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey
    Deepak Paudel, Marie Ahmed, Anjushree Pradhan and Rajendra Lal Dangol
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):277-284; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00056

    Using tablet personal computers and wireless technologies in place of paper-based questionnaires to administer the Nepal DHS in a geographically diverse setting appeared to improve data quality and reduce data collection time. Challenges include inconsistent electricity supply, safe storage and transport of equipment, and screen readability issues under direct sunlight, which limited confidential interview spaces.

  • Open Access
    Client-centered counseling improves client satisfaction with family planning visits: evidence from Irbid, Jordan
    Sarah Kamhawi, Carol Underwood, Huda Murad and Bushra Jabre
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):180-192; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00051
  • Open Access
    High and equitable mass vitamin A supplementation coverage in Sierra Leone: a post-event coverage survey
    Mary H Hodges, Fatmata F Sesay, Habib I Kamara, Mohamed Turay, Aminata S Koroma, Jessica L Blankenship and Heather I Katcher
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):172-179; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00005

    In Sierra Leone, an intensive mass vitamin A supplementation (VAS) campaign to reduce under-5 mortality reached over 90% of children ages 6–59 months, eliminating coverage disparities among districts and between age groups. Delivering VAS with other essential maternal and child health interventions was key to the success.

  • Open Access
    Improving performance of Zambia Defence Force antiretroviral therapy providers: evaluation of a standards-based approach
    Young Mi Kim, Joseph Banda, Webby Kanjipite, Supriya Sarkar, Eva Bazant, Cyndi Hiner, Maya Tholandi, Stephanie Reinhardt, Panganani Dalisani Njobvu, Adrienne Kols and Bruno Benavides
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):213-227; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00053

    A detailed standards-based performance approach modestly improved providers' performance and facility readiness to offer antiretroviral therapy. The approach included mutually reinforcing activities: (1) training, (2) supportive supervision, (3) assessments of service quality, and (4) facility-based action plans.

  • Open Access
    Focusing on implementation: the power of executing many small advances well
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):145; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00100

    Success often comes through many small, incremental, well-executed improvements.

  • Open Access
    Use of modern contraception increases when more methods become available: analysis of evidence from 1982–2009
    John Ross and John Stover
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):203-212; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00010

    International data over 27 years show that as each additional contraceptive method became available to most of the population, overall modern contraceptive use rose. But in 2009 only 3.5 methods, on average, were available to at least half the population in surveyed countries. Family planning programs should strive to provide widespread access to a range of methods.

  • Open Access
    Multiplicity in public health supply systems: a learning agenda
    Alan Bornbusch and James Bates
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):154-159; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00042

    Supply chain integration—merging products for health programs into a single supply chain—tends to be the dominant model in health sector reform. However, multiplicity in a supply system may be justified as a risk management strategy that can better ensure product availability, advance specific health program objectives, and increase efficiency.

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