4 research outputs found

    Fund the Gap

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    <p>A worldwide civil society campaign to save round six of the Global Fund.</p

    Trend of health services coverage (%) in Ethiopia, 2003–2007.

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    a<p>The number of tuberculosis cases diagnosed during the reporting period.</p>b<p>The proportion of tuberculosis patients who have completed their treatment and been cured.</p>c<p>Expanded program of immunization: defined as receiving three doses of the combined vaccine against diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus.</p>d<p>The proportion of reproductive-age women (15–49 years) who are accepting a modern contraceptive method (new and repeat acceptors).</p>e<p>The proportion of pregnant women who attended antenatal care at least once during their current pregnancy, and were seen by a health professional, for reasons related to their pregnancy.</p><p>Source: <a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pmed.1000056#pmed.1000056-Ethiopian9" target="_blank">[21]</a>.</p

    Decentralization of ART and chronic HIV care in Ethiopia, October 2006 and October 2007.

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    <p>Source: Monthly ART reports, National HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Office, Ethiopian Ministry of Health.</p

    Universal health coverage and the right to health.

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    <p>The pooled funds represent the total amount of funding that states have available to expand universal health coverage along three dimensions: 1) who is covered, and the proportion of population covered; 2) what services are covered; and 3) the extent to which the state covers the cost of these services. Under a right to health approach, this total level of funding will be derived from the maximum of available resources that states are required to dedicate to the right to health and other rights.</p
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