TY - JOUR T1 - Ten Years for GHSP: Where Are We Now? Where Will We Go? JF - Global Health: Science and Practice JO - GLOB HEALTH SCI PRACT DO - 10.9745/GHSP-D-23-00102 VL - 11 IS - 2 SP - e2300102 AU - Zulfiqar A. Bhutta AU - Rajani Ved AU - Nana Twum-Danso AU - Abdulmumin Saad AU - Stephen Hodgins Y1 - 2023/04/28 UR - http://www.ghspjournal.org/content/11/2/e2300102.abstract N2 - In 2013, Global Health: Science and Practice (GHSP) launched with funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development. From the beginning, GHSP’s vision was to leverage knowledge gleaned from the implementation of health programs and services to improve programs and, ultimately, health outcomes and well-being. Shortly after GHSP’s launch, in 2016, the world transitioned from the Millennium Development Goals to the more wide-ranging Sustainable Development Goals.1 Over the past decade, global funding agencies and initiatives, including Gavi, the Global Fund, and the World Bank’s Global Financing Facility, have served as accelerators for change in various areas, including immunization, HIV, malaria, as well as maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health. These new models of development financing have helped bridge gaps in some of the world’s poorest countries.2,3 But they have also contributed to the verticalization of program efforts at the global and often country level, with limited integration even within programs. For example, in many countries, there has been little integration between polio eradication efforts and the delivery of routine immunization services.4Since 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic began, the world has faced numerous health crises, natural disasters, and conflicts that have had devastating health and economic consequences worldwide, reversing progress on achieving the Sustainable Development Goals.5,6 According to the World Bank, the pandemic pushed about 70 million people into extreme poverty in 2020, the largest 1-year increase since global poverty monitoring began in 1990.7 Recovery has been uneven. Because of the pandemic, many populations have experienced important indirect effects, including adverse impacts on health outcomes due to the disruptions … ER -