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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
    Achieving better maternal and newborn outcomes: coherent strategy and pragmatic, tailored implementation
    Stephen Hodgins
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):146-153; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00030

    Maternal and newborn health program effort needs to: shift from mere contact to the actual content or substance of care; respond better to local context; ensure delivery of all key interventions needed during pregnancy, labor and delivery, and postnatally; and actively monitor performance to manage and improve programs.

  • Open Access
    Islam and family planning: changing perceptions of health care providers and medical faculty in Pakistan
    Ali Mohammad Mir and Gul Rashida Shaikh
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):228-236; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00019

    Training health care providers and medical college faculty about the supportive nature of Islam toward family planning principles addressed their misconceptions and enhanced their level of comfort in providing family planning services and teaching the subject.

  • Open Access
    Forest cover associated with improved child health and nutrition: evidence from the Malawi Demographic and Health Survey and satellite data
    Kiersten B Johnson, Anila Jacob and Molly E Brown
    Global Health: Science and Practice August 2013, 1(2):237-248; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-13-00055

    In Malawi, net forest cover loss over time is associated with reduced dietary diversity and consumption of vitamin A-rich foods among children. Greater forest cover is associated with reduced risk of diarrheal disease. These preliminary findings suggest that protection of natural ecosystems could play an important role in improving health outcomes.

  • 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
    Reducing child global undernutrition at scale in Sofala Province, Mozambique, using Care Group Volunteers to communicate health messages to mothers
    Thomas P Davis, Carolyn Wetzel, Emma Hernandez Avilan, Cecilia de Mendoza Lopes, Rachel P Chase, Peter J Winch and Henry B Perry
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2013, 1(1):35-51; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00045

    Care Group peer-to-peer behavior change communication improved child undernutrition at scale in rural Mozambique and has the potential to substantially reduce under-5 mortality in priority countries at very low cost.

  • Open Access
    Chlorhexidine for umbilical cord care: game-changer for newborn survival?
    Steve Hodgins, YV Pradhan, Leela Khanal, Shyam Upreti and Naresh Pratap KC
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2013, 1(1):5-10; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00014

    A simple technology with potential to prevent 500,000 global neonatal deaths annually.

  • Open Access
    Meeting the community halfway to reduce maternal deaths? Evidence from a community-based maternal death review in Uttar Pradesh, India
    Sunil Saksena Raj, Deborah Maine, Pratap Kumar Sahoo, Suneedh Manthri and Kavita Chauhan
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2013, 1(1):84-96; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00049

    Even in the face of vigorous commitment to improving maternal health services in India, inadequate staffing, supplies, and equipment at health facilities, as well as transportation costs and delays in referral, appear to contribute to a substantial proportion of maternal deaths in a representative district in Uttar Pradesh.

  • Open Access
    Women's growing desire to limit births in sub-Saharan Africa: meeting the challenge
    Lynn M Van Lith, Melanie Yahner and Lynn Bakamjian
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2013, 1(1):97-107; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00036

    Contrary to conventional wisdom, many sub-Saharan African women—often at young ages—have an unmet need for family planning to limit future births, and many current limiters do not use the most effective contraceptive methods. Family planning programs must improve access to a wide range of modern contraceptive methods and address attitudinal and knowledge barriers if they are to meet women's needs.

  • Open Access
    Effectiveness of a community-based positive prevention intervention for people living with HIV who are not receiving antiretroviral treatment: a prospective cohort study
    Avina Sarna, Stanley Luchters, Eustasius Musenge, Jerry Okal, Matthew Chersich, Waimar Tun, Sabine Mall, Nzioki Kingola and Sam Kalibala
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2013, 1(1):52-67; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-12-00023

    In Mombasa, Kenya, a community-based HIV risk-reduction intervention effectively reached people living with HIV who were not receiving antiretroviral treatment (ART)—a difficult-to-reach population because they often fall outside the ambit of health care services—and succeeded in reducing reported risky sex behavior and increasing ART uptake.

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