75 research outputs found
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Global public health and the Millennium Development Goals: how can we prevent 10 million child deaths each year?
Lecture for International Affairs U6043 (Integrated Approaches to Development Practice), fall 2009
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The Importance of a Multi-Sectoral Approach to Food and Nutrition Security in Africa
One of the targets of the first Millennium Development Goals (MDG) is to s (MDG) is to reduce the proportion of people who suffer from hunger by half between 1990 and 2015, with hunger measured as the proportion of the population who are undernourished and the prevalence of children under five who are underweight. Many countries remain far from reaching this target, and much of the progress made has been eroded by the recent global food price and economic crises. As we enter the final five years to trying to achieve the MDGs, we look upon one of the trying to achieve the MDGs, we look upon one of the achieve the MDGs, we look upon one of the e the MDGs, we look upon one of the the MDGs, we look upon one of the greatest challenges of our time with one billion people hungry, 129 million and 195 million children underweight and stunted respectively and more than 2 billion people deficient in micronutrients
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An Evaluation of Progress Toward the Millennium Development Goal One Hunger Target: A countryâlevel, food and nutrition security perspective
One of the targets of the first Millennium Development Goal (MDG) is to reduce the proportion of people who suffer from hunger by half between 1990 and 2015, with hunger measured as the proportion of the population who are undernourished and the prevalence of children under five who are underweight. Many countries remain far from reaching this target, and much of the progress made has been eroded by the recent global food price and economic crises. As we enter the final five years to achieve the MDGs, we look upon one of the greatest challenges of our time with one billion people hungry, 129 million and 195 million children underweight and stunted respectively and more than 2 billion people deficient in micronutrients. In light of these global trends, this report charts progress on the hunger component of the MDG 1 commitment, by reviewing country programs and policies and drawing attention to key lessons and future directions for the coming period. Case studies of programs and interventions within countries were reviewed, where the implementation and operational systems required to support reductions in hunger and undernutrition have the potential to shed light on what success and scale might look like. A number of types of programs were profiled, including preventionâ and treatmentâbased initiatives, food production interventions, multiâsectoral programs, and safety net and food assistance approaches. The report examined both smallâscale community based programs as well as efforts to move interventions to national scale. The strongest lesson emerging from both communityâbased and national efforts is that making rapid gains in reducing hunger and undernutrition is possible. There is little debate about the technical and scientific evidence underpinning interventions. We know what works. The challenge is integrating the delivery of these interventions within locally owned, locally appropriate systems that facilitate high levels of cost-effective coverage on a sustained basis, with substantive and prioritized financial commitment at the 2 national and international levels. Many of the case studies presented have found innovative ways to overcome historical barriers to implementation â from householdâlevel delivery systems, to subsidies for small holder farmers, to linking efforts to reduce hunger with wider efforts to empower women or create work and business opportunities. Evidence from the case studies also suggest that increasing economic growth alone, while necessary and important, is unlikely to be sufficient to address hunger and undernutrition. Food and nutrition security is complex, and requires efforts across a spectrum that includes enhancing food production while simultaneously increasing access and utilization with substantive political commitment to address the most vulnerable populations with an equitable, basic human rights lens approach (11). Finally, addressing hunger and undernutrition are inextricably linked to wider progress towards other MDG targets. They are both cause and consequence of gains in health, income, education, gender equality and the environment. A comprehensive approach to addressing hunger and nutrition will therefore require working on multiple fronts. While there may be no magic bullet or single recipe for success, the case studies highlighted in this report help us to understand what success might look like as we together define a future direction for 2015
A combined microfinance and training intervention can reduce HIV risk behaviour in young female participants.
OBJECTIVE: To assess effects of a combined microfinance and training intervention on HIV risk behavior among young female participants in rural South Africa. DESIGN: : Secondary analysis of quantitative and qualitative data from a cluster randomized trial, the Intervention with Microfinance for AIDS and Gender Equity study. METHODS: Eight villages were pair-matched and randomly allocated to receive the intervention. At baseline and after 2 years, HIV risk behavior was assessed among female participants aged 14-35 years. Their responses were compared with women of the same age and poverty group from control villages. Intervention effects were calculated using adjusted risk ratios employing village level summaries. Qualitative data collected during the study explored participants' responses to the intervention including HIV risk behavior. RESULTS: After 2 years of follow-up, when compared with controls, young participants had higher levels of HIV-related communication (adjusted risk ratio 1.46, 95% confidence interval 1.01-2.12), were more likely to have accessed voluntary counseling and testing (adjusted risk ratio 1.64, 95% confidence interval 1.06-2.56), and less likely to have had unprotected sex at last intercourse with a nonspousal partner (adjusted risk ratio 0.76, 95% confidence interval 0.60-0.96). Qualitative data suggest a greater acceptance of intrahousehold communication about HIV and sexuality. Although women noted challenges associated with acceptance of condoms by men, increased confidence and skills associated with participation in the intervention supported their introduction in sexual relationships. CONCLUSIONS: In addition to impacts on economic well being, women's empowerment and intimate partner violence, interventions addressing the economic and social vulnerability of women may contribute to reductions in HIV risk behavior
The UN Commission on Life Saving Commodities 3 years on: global progress update and results of a multicountry assessment
Background In September, 2012, the UN Commission on Life Saving Commodities (UNCoLSC) outlined a plan to
expand availability and access to 13 life saving commodities. We profi le global and country progress against these
recommendations between 2012 and 2015.
Methods For 12 countries in sub-Saharan Africa that were off -track to achieve the Millennium Development Goals for
maternal and child survival, we reviewed key documents and reference data, and conducted interviews with ministry
staff and partners to assess the status of the UNCoLSC recommendations. The RMNCH fund provided short-term
catalytic fi nancing to support country plans to advance the commodity agenda, with activities coded by UNCoLSC
recommendation. Our network of technical resource teams identifi ed, addressed, and monitored progress against
cross-cutting commodity-related challenges that needed coordinated global action.
Findings In 2014 and 2015, child and maternal health commodities had fewer bottlenecks than reproductive and
neonatal commodities. Common bottlenecks included regulatory challenges (ten of 12 countries); poor quality
assurance (11 of 12 countries); insuffi cient staff training (more than half of facilities on average); and weak supply
chains systems (11 of 12 countries), with stock-outs of priority commodities in about 40% of facilities on average. The
RMNCH fund committed US68¡2 million (39¡0%) of the funds supported systems-strengthening interventions with the remainder split across
reproductive, maternal, newborn, and child health. Health worker training (53¡3 million, 30¡0%), and demand generation ($21¡1 million, 12¡0%) were the major topics of focus. All priority
commodities are now listed in the WHO Essential Medicines List; appropriate price reductions were secured; quality
manufacturing was improved; a fast-track registration mechanism for prequalifi ed products was established; and
methods were developed for advocacy, quantifi cation, demand generation, supply chain, and provider training. Slower
progress was evident around regulatory harmonisation and quality assurance.
Interpretation Much work is needed to achieve full implementation of the UNCoLSC recommendations. Coordinated
eff orts to secure price reductions beyond the 13 commodities and improve regulatory effi ciency, quality, and supply
chains are still needed alongside broader dissemination of work products
Voice and Agency: Empowering women and girls for shared prosperity
This document presents Voice and Agency: Empowering women and girls for shared prosperity is a major new report by the World Bank that shines a spotlight on the value of voice and agency, the patterns of constraints that limit their realization, and the associated costs, not only to individual women but to their families, communities, and societies. It highlights promising policies and interventions, and it identifies priority areas where further research and more and better data and evidence are needed. Underlining that agency has both intrinsic and instrumental, concrete value, this report puts advancing women's voice and agency squarely on the international development agenda
SARS-CoV-2 Antibody Seroprevalence in Jakarta, Indonesia
The SARS-CoV-2 transmission dynamics in low- and middle-income countries remain poorly understood. This study aimed to estimate the SARS-CoV-2 antibodies seroprevalence in Jakarta, Indonesia, and to increase knowledge of SARS-CoV-2 transmission in urban settings. A population-based serosurvey among individuals aged one year or older was conducted in Jakarta. Employing a multistage sampling design, samples were stratified by district, slum, and non-slum residency, sex, and age group. Blood samples were tested for IgG against three different SARS-CoV-2 antigens. Seroprevalence was estimated after applying sample weights and adjusting for cluster characteristics. In March 2021, this study collected 4,919 respondents. The weighted estimate of seroprevalence was 44.5% (95% CI = 42.5-46.5). Seroprevalence was highest among adults aged 30-49 years, with higher seroprevalence in women and the overweight/obese group. Respondents residing in slum areas were 1.3-fold more likely to be seropositive than non-slum residents. It was estimated that4,717,000 of Jakarta's 10.6 million residents had prior SARS-CoV-2 infection. This suggests that approximately 10 infections were undiagnosed/underreported for every reported case. About one year after the first COVID-19 case was confirmed, close to half of Jakarta's residents have been infected by SARS-CoV-2
Assessing household wealth in health studies in developing countries: a comparison of participatory wealth ranking and survey techniques from rural South Africa
BACKGROUND: Accurate tools for assessing household wealth are essential for many health studies in developing countries. Household survey and participatory wealth ranking (PWR) are two approaches to generate data for this purpose. METHODS: A household survey and PWR were conducted among eight villages in rural South Africa. We developed three indicators of household wealth using the data. One indicator used PWR data only, one used principal components analysis to combine data from the survey, while the final indicator used survey data combined in a manner informed by the PWR. We assessed internal consistency of the indices and assessed their level of agreement in ranking household wealth. RESULTS: Food security, asset ownership, housing quality and employment were important indicators of household wealth. PWR, consisting of three independent rankings of 9671 households, showed a high level of internal consistency (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.81, 95% CI 0.79-0.82). Data on 1429 households were available from all three techniques. There was moderate agreement in ranking households into wealth tertiles between the two indicators based on survey data (spearman rho = 0.69, kappa = 0.43), but only limited agreement between these techniques and the PWR data (spearman rho = 0.38 and 0.31, kappa = 0.20 and 0.17). CONCLUSION: Both PWR and household survey can provide a rapid assessment of household wealth. Each technique had strengths and weaknesses. Reasons for differences might include data inaccuracies or limitations in the methods by which information was weighted. Alternatively, the techniques may measure different things. More research is needed to increase the validity of measures of socioeconomic position used in health studies in developing countries
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The effect of an integrated multisector model for achieving the Millennium Development Goals and improving child survival in rural sub-Saharan Africa: a non-randomised controlled assessment
Background Simultaneously addressing multiple Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) has the potential to complement essential health interventions to accelerate gains in child survival. The Millennium Villages project is an integrated multisector approach to rural development operating across diverse sub-Saharan African sites. Our aim was to assess the eďŹects of the project on MDG-related outcomes including child mortality 3 years after implementation and compare these changes to local and national reference data
Violence against female sex workers in Karnataka state, south India: impact on health, and reductions in violence following an intervention program
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Violence against female sex workers (FSWs) can impede HIV prevention efforts and contravenes their human rights. We developed a multi-layered violence intervention targeting policy makers, secondary stakeholders (police, lawyers, media), and primary stakeholders (FSWs), as part of wider HIV prevention programming involving >60,000 FSWs in Karnataka state. This study examined if violence against FSWs is associated with reduced condom use and increased STI/HIV risk, and if addressing violence against FSWs within a large-scale HIV prevention program can reduce levels of violence against them.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>FSWs were randomly selected to participate in polling booth surveys (PBS 2006-2008; short behavioural questionnaires administered anonymously) and integrated behavioural-biological assessments (IBBAs 2005-2009; administered face-to-face).</p> <p>Results</p> <p>3,852 FSWs participated in the IBBAs and 7,638 FSWs participated in the PBS. Overall, 11.0% of FSWs in the IBBAs and 26.4% of FSWs in the PBS reported being beaten or raped in the past year. FSWs who reported violence in the past year were significantly less likely to report condom use with clients (zero unprotected sex acts in previous month, 55.4% vs. 75.5%, adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 0.4, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.3 to 0.5, p < 0.001); to have accessed the HIV intervention program (ever contacted by peer educator, 84.9% vs. 89.6%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.4 to 1.0, p = 0.04); or to have ever visited the project sexual health clinic (59.0% vs. 68.1%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.6 to 1.0, p = 0.02); and were significantly more likely to be infected with gonorrhea (5.0% vs. 2.6%, AOR 1.9, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.3, p = 0.02). By the follow-up surveys, significant reductions were seen in the proportions of FSWs reporting violence compared with baseline (IBBA 13.0% vs. 9.0%, AOR 0.7, 95% CI 0.5 to 0.9 p = 0.01; PBS 27.3% vs. 18.9%, crude OR 0.5, 95% CI 0.4 to 0.5, p < 0.001).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This program demonstrates that a structural approach to addressing violence can be effectively delivered at scale. Addressing violence against FSWs is important for the success of HIV prevention programs, and for protecting their basic human rights.</p
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