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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
    Feasibility and Effectiveness of mHealth for Mobilizing Households for Indoor Residual Spraying to Prevent Malaria: A Case Study in Mali
    Keith Mangam, Elana Fiekowsky, Moussa Bagayoko, Laura Norris, Allison Belemvire, Rebecca Longhany, Christen Fornadel and Kristen George
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):222-237; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-15-00381

    Sending voice and/or text messages to mobilize households for spraying was more costly per structure and less effective at preparing structures than traditional door-to-door mobilization approaches supplemented with radio and town hall announcements. Challenges included:

    • Lack of familiarity with mobile phones and with public health mobile messaging

    • Lack of face-to-face communication with mobilizers, making it easier to ignore mobilization messages and preventing trust-building

    • Low literacy levels

    • Gender differentials in access to mobile phones

  • Open Access
    Fertility Awareness Methods Are Not Modern Contraceptives: Defining Contraception to Reflect Our Priorities
    Kirsten Austad, Anita Chary, Alejandra Colom, Rodrigo Barillas, Danessa Luna, Cecilia Menjívar, Brent Metz, Amy Petrocy, Anne Ruch and Peter Rohloff
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):342-345; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00044

    A recent article in GHSP calls for classifying fertility awareness methods as “modern contraceptives” despite their inferiority. We believe in a rights-based approach, which considers the real-world conditions that many women face, including constrained sexual agency and low baseline reproductive health literacy. We must demonstrate true commitment to increasing access to the most effective and reliable contraceptive methods.

  • Open Access
    Response to Austad: Offering a Range of Methods, Including Fertility Awareness Methods, Facilitates Method Choice
    Shawn Malarcher, Madeleine Short Fabic, Jeff Spieler, Ellen H Starbird, Clifton Kenon and Sandra Jordan
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):346-349; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00115

    When selecting a contraceptive method, women and men consider various attributes in addition to effectiveness, such as side effects, return to fertility, level of medical intervention, and interference with sexual activity. Offering a range of methods, including fertility awareness methods that meet the standard to be considered modern, helps to address these considerations, facilitating method choice.

  • Open Access
    Declining HIV Prevalence in Parallel With Safer Sex Behaviors in Burkina Faso: Evidence From Surveillance and Population-Based Surveys
    Fati Kirakoya-Samadoulougou, Nicolas Nagot, Sekou Samadoulougou, Mamadou Sokey, Abdoulaye Guiré, Issiaka Sombié and Nicolas Meda
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):326-335; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00013

    HIV prevalence among pregnant women ages 15–49 declined from 7.1% to 2.0% in urban areas between 1998 and 2014, and from 2.0% to 0.5% in rural areas between 2003 and 2014; similar declines were reported in the Demographic and Health Surveys. During the same time period, individuals reported safer sex behaviors, including delayed sexual debut and reduced number of sex partners among youth, as well as increased condom use at last sex with nonmarital partners among men and women ages 15–49.

  • Open Access
    A Convenient Truth: Cost of Medications Need Not Be a Barrier to Hepatitis B Treatment
    Matthew Barnhart
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):186-190; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00128

    Drugs that are inexpensive to manufacture and simple to administer greatly expand the potential to help tens of millions of people who need treatment for chronic hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. Key program implementation challenges include identifying who would benefit from antiviral medication and ensuring long-term and consistent treatment to people who feel well. The best opportunities are where health systems are advanced enough to effectively address these challenges and in settings where HIV service platforms can be leveraged. Research, innovation, and collaboration are critical to implement services most efficiently and to realize economies of scale to drive down costs of health care services, drugs, and diagnostics.

  • Open Access
    Success Providing Postpartum Intrauterine Devices in Private-Sector Health Care Facilities in Nigeria: Factors Associated With Uptake
    George IE Eluwa, Ronke Atamewalen, Kingsley Odogwu and Babatunde Ahonsi
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):276-283; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00072

    41% of women delivering in the social franchise private facilities chose the postpartum IUD. Factors associated with acceptance included lower education, higher parity, and being single. Scale-up of postpartum IUD services in both public and private facilities has the potential to significantly increase use of long-acting reversible contraception in Nigeria.

  • Open Access
    Improved Childhood Diarrhea Treatment Practices in Ghana: A Pre-Post Evaluation of a Comprehensive Private-Sector Program
    Marianne El-Khoury, Kathryn Banke and Phoebe Sloane
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):264-275; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00021

    From 2011 to 2015, a diarrhea management program in Ghana targeting pharmaceutical suppliers, private-sector providers, and caregivers successfully increased caregiver use of oral rehydration salts (ORS) with zinc to treat diarrhea in children under 5, from 0.8% to 29.2%, and reduced antibiotic use (which is generally inappropriate for treatment of non-bloody diarrhea) from 66.2% to 38.2%.

  • Open Access
    Partnerships for Policy Development: A Case Study From Uganda’s Costed Implementation Plan for Family Planning
    Alyson B Lipsky, James N Gribble, Linda Cahaelen and Suneeta Sharma
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):284-299; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-15-00300

    The development and launch of the costed implementation plan (CIP) in Uganda was successful in many ways. However, it would have benefitted from more focus on long-term partnership development critical for executing the CIP and by including district health officers—key players in executing the plan—more substantially in the process. Using a partnership approach sets the stage for ensuring that the right people are contributing to both development and execution.

  • Open Access
    Factors Associated With Community Health Worker Performance Differ by Task in a Multi-Tasked Setting in Rural Zimbabwe
    Rukundo A Kambarami, Mduduzi NN Mbuya, David Pelletier, Dadirai Fundira, Naume V Tavengwa and Rebecca J Stoltzfus
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):238-250; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00003

    Programs should consider specific tasks and how they relate to health worker factors, community support, and the work context. In a setting where community health workers were responsible for multiple tasks, those who referred more pregnant women were female, unmarried, under 40 years old, and from larger households, and they felt they had adequate work resources and positive feedback from supervisors and the community. In contrast, workers with high scores on delivering household behavior change lessons were from smaller households and received more supportive supervision.

  • Open Access
    Leading With LARCs in Nigeria: The Stars Are Aligned to Expand Effective Family Planning Services Decisively
    James D Shelton and Clea Finkle
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2016, 4(2):179-185; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00135

    Despite years of family planning effort in Nigeria, the modern contraceptive prevalence (mCPR) has reached only 10%. Yet a few recent seminal, well-executed programs have been outstandingly successful providing long-acting reversible contraceptives (LARCs)—both in the public and private sector, and in the North and South. Remarkably, the LARCs they provided were equivalent to 2% mCPR in 2015 alone.

    Accordingly, we advocate markedly increased support for: (1) private-sector approaches such as social franchising, particularly in the South, (2) mobile outreach, and (3) support to public clinical facilities, including expanding access through community health extension workers (CHEWs), particularly in the North. Success will require system support, quality, and concerted engagement from a variety of partners including the Government of Nigeria.

    Without significant progress in Nigeria, the global FP2020 goal appears unattainable. Fortunately, leading with LARCs along with wide choice of other methods provides a clear avenue for success.

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