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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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Health Systems

  • Open Access
    Impact of the Saving Mothers, Giving Life Approach on Decreasing Maternal and Perinatal Deaths in Uganda and Zambia
    Florina Serbanescu, Thomas A. Clark, Mary M. Goodwin, Lisa J. Nelson, Mary Adetinuke Boyd, Adeodata R. Kekitiinwa, Frank Kaharuza, Brenda Picho, Diane Morof, Curtis Blanton, Maybin Mumba, Patrick Komakech, Fernando Carlosama, Michelle M. Schmitz and Claudia Morrissey Conlon on behalf of the Saving Mothers, Giving Life Working Group
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2019, 7(Supplement 1):S27-S47; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00428

    Through district system strengthening, integrated services, and community engagement interventions, the Saving Mothers, Giving Life initiative increased emergency obstetric care coverage and access to, and demand for, improved quality of care that led to rapid declines in district maternal and perinatal mortality. Significant reductions in intrapartum stillbirth rate and maternal mortality ratios around the time of birth attest to the success of the initiative.

  • Open Access
    Addressing the First Delay in Saving Mothers, Giving Life Districts in Uganda and Zambia: Approaches and Results for Increasing Demand for Facility Delivery Services
    Florina Serbanescu, Mary M. Goodwin, Susanna Binzen, Diane Morof, Alice R. Asiimwe, Laura Kelly, Christina Wakefield, Brenda Picho, Jessica Healey, Agnes Nalutaaya, Leoda Hamomba, Vincent Kamara, Gregory Opio, Frank Kaharuza, Curtis Blanton, Fredrick Luwaga, Mona Steffen and Claudia Morrissey Conlon on behalf of the Saving Mothers, Giving Life Working Group
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2019, 7(Supplement 1):S48-S67; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00343

    The Saving Mothers, Giving Life initiative used 3 coordinated approaches to reduce maternal deaths resulting from a delay in deciding to seek health care, known as the “first delay”: (1) promoting safe motherhood messages and facility delivery using radio, theater, and community engagement; (2) encouraging birth preparedness and increasing demand for facility delivery through community outreach worker visits; and (3) providing clean delivery kits and transportation vouchers to reduce financial barriers for facility delivery. These approaches can be adapted in other low-resource settings to reduce maternal and perinatal mortality.

  • Open Access
    Saving Mothers, Giving Life: It Takes a System to Save a Mother
    Claudia Morrissey Conlon, Florina Serbanescu, Lawrence Marum, Jessica Healey, Jonathan LaBrecque, Reeti Hobson, Marta Levitt, Adeodata Kekitiinwa, Brenda Picho, Fatma Soud, Lauren Spigel, Mona Steffen, Jorge Velasco, Robert Cohen and William Weiss on behalf of the Saving Mothers, Giving Life Working Group
    Global Health: Science and Practice March 2019, 7(Supplement 1):S6-S26; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00427

    A multi-partner effort in Uganda and Zambia employed a districtwide health systems strengthening approach, with supply- and demand-side interventions, to address timely use of appropriate, quality maternity care. Between 2012 and 2016, maternal mortality declined by approximately 40% in both partnership-supported facilities and districts in each country. This experience has useful lessons for other low-resource settings.

  • Open Access
    Implementation Research to Strengthen Health Care Financing Reforms Toward Universal Health Coverage in Indonesia: A Mixed-Methods Approach to Real-World Monitoring
    Rena Eichler, Susan Gigli and Lisa LeRoy
    Global Health: Science and Practice December 2018, 6(4):747-753; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00328

    Implementation research enabled stakeholders to formulate questions, assess implications of research results that informed changes in regulations and payment at the primary care level, and strengthen monitoring capacity. While the national health insurance system had some impact on performance of primary care facilities, individual providers remained unsatisfied because payment was largely based on factors outside of their control such as tenure and position, rather than their contributions to improved performance.

  • Open Access
    Digital Health and Health Systems of the Future
    Alain Labrique, Lavanya Vasudevan, Garrett Mehl, Ellen Rosskam and Adnan A. Hyder
    Global Health: Science and Practice October 2018, 6(Supplement 1):S1-S4; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00342

    Digital strategies have been formally recognized as a critical health systems strengthening strategy to help meet the Sustainable Development Goals and universal health coverage targets. This landscaping collection reviews multiple possible approaches across health system pillars, from digital referrals to decision support systems, identifying key knowledge gaps across these domains and recognizing the growth needed in the field to realize its full potential.

  • Open Access
    What Does It Take to Be an Effective National Steward of Digital Health Integration for Health Systems Strengthening in Low- and Middle-Income Countries?
    Michael J. Frost, Jacqueline B. Tran, Fatema Khatun, Ingrid K. Friberg and Daniela C. Rodríguez
    Global Health: Science and Practice October 2018, 6(Supplement 1):S18-S28; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00270

    A purposeful literature review of peer-reviewed and gray literature identified 4 broad thematic areas of digital health stewardship—strategic direction, policies and procedures, roles and responsibilities, and health service delivery—that need further research and development in order for digital health to be better positioned to positively impact low- and middle-income country health systems.

  • Open Access
    The Role of Digital Strategies in Financing Health Care for Universal Health Coverage in Low- and Middle-Income Countries
    Bruno Meessen
    Global Health: Science and Practice October 2018, 6(Supplement 1):S29-S40; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00271

    The development and adoption of effective digital health financing solutions that fit well in both coherent digital health information architectures and the universal health coverage agenda will require strong partnerships between entrepreneurs, developers, implementers, policy makers, and funders.

  • Open Access
    Establishing Standards to Evaluate the Impact of Integrating Digital Health into Health Systems
    Alain Labrique, Lavanya Vasudevan, William Weiss and Kate Wilson
    Global Health: Science and Practice October 2018, 6(Supplement 1):S5-S17; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00230

    The key milestones in the rise of digital health illustrate efforts to bridge gaps in the evidence base, a shifting focus to scale-up and sustainability, growing attention to the precise costing of these strategies, and an emergent implementation science agenda that better characterizes the ecosystem—the social, political, economic, legal, and ethical context that supports digital health implementation—necessary to take digital health approaches to scale.

  • Open Access
    At Last! Universal Health Coverage That Prioritizes Health Impact: The Latest Edition of Disease Control Priorities (DCP3)
    James D. Shelton
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2018, 6(2):232-236; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00193

    Sadly, we face a vast sea of health problems in global health. Universal health coverage programming should prioritize interventions with the most health impact, but instead largely succumbs to emphasizing less impactful clinical curative services. In contrast, DCP3 provides an evidence-based template that prioritizes impact. Yet even the most basic and realistic DCP3 package comes at a formidable price.

  • Open Access
    Universal Health Coverage in Francophone Sub-Saharan Africa: Assessment of Global Health Experts' Confidence in Policy Options
    Elisabeth Paul, Fabienne Fecher, Remo Meloni and Wim van Lerberghe
    Global Health: Science and Practice June 2018, 6(2):260-271; https://doi.org/10.9745/GHSP-D-18-00001

    Even within the fairly homogenous context of francophone Africa, among 18 options presented to experts on how to proceed toward universal health coverage (UHC), consensus was reached on only 1 with respect to effectiveness and another with respect to feasibility. The complexity and challenges of UHC as well as the weak evidence base likely contribute to this uncertainty.

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