• Nandini Jayarajan

    K4Health, JHU∙CCP | Communications Specialist

    At the mHealth Summit 2012, ATIS, a leading technology and solutions development organization that brings together top ICT companies to advance the industries’ most pressing business priorities, hosted a session titled, M2M Delivery & Securing Electronic Health Records in the Cloud.

    The session focused on how mobile technology and cloud computing is changing traditional healthcare delivery, research, business, and policy. ATIS is currently playing a leading role in unifying standards across eHealth sectors and has identified machine-to-machine (M2M) secure delivery of health information as critical to ensuring sustainable success in this sector.

    During this session, panelist Bela Sandor, Director of Healthcare Cloud Business Unit at Cisco, asserted that the essential goal of cloud computing was to capture and share knowledge. Cloud-based systems make it possible to collect and share tremendous amounts of data. This sharing capability in turn creates new opportunities for collaboration among diverse stakeholders.

  • Angela Nash-Mercado

    JHU∙CCP | Senior Content Manager

    Last week, nearly 4,000 delegates from 56 countries came together for the 4th annual mHealth Summit to share approaches and discuss how to advance the field of mHealth to improve health outcomes. For the global health community this particular summit was a milestone because for the first time a global health track was included in the program.

  • Jarret Cassaniti

    JHU∙CCP | Communications Specialist

    A K4Health blog post from April 2012 touched on the difficulty of bringing proven mHealth interventions to scale. The mHealth Summit this month showed that the mHealth community is still struggling to break free from “pilot-itis”, the feeling that success in mHealth is limited to very small experimental projects with unclear funding for scale-up.

  • K4Health Highlights

    Laura Raney

    FHI 360 | Senior Technical Officer
    Reshma Akhter

     

    Reshma Akhter, an 8-year-old from the Rayerbazar slums of Dhaka, Bangladesh, breaks through the ribbon during a race. She is one of 150 students attending the Gana Unnayan Pathshala School established by Hunger Project volunteers Shanti Rebaru & Tajima Majumdar in July 2003. Investing in women and girls is an essential component to economic development and building strong communities. In recognition of this, The Hunger Project-Bangladesh celebrates September 30th every year as National Girl Child Day.

    © 2004 Syed Ziaul Habib Roobon, Courtesy of Photoshare

    Are you a gender focal person in your organization looking to access programmatic evidence, tools for gender and health advocacy? Perhaps you are a program manager seeking to view guidance on integrating gender in HIV/AIDS, family planning, maternal health and youth programs or access gender training curricula and materials. Maybe you are a donor who wants to learn about key issues in gender mainstreaming and gender integration. Well, there is a new one-stop shop for you! The newly revised Interagency Gender Working Group (IGWG) Gender and Health Toolkit  is now available.

    The Knowledge for Health (K4Health) project recently updated this electronic toolkit with input from leading gender experts. The result is a collection of carefully selected practical tools and instruments to help make programs and health systems more equitable and effective. Designed to move health practitioners, program mangers and policy makers from awareness and commitment to direct application and practice, the toolkit is a treasure trove of applied resources. This new IGWG Gender and Health Toolkit is a companion to the IGWG website and has the same goal: improvement of reproductive health/HIV/AIDS outcomes and sustainable development through the promotion of gender equity within population, health, and nutrition programs. 

  • Jarret Cassaniti

    JHU∙CCP | Communications Specialist

    A blog post about global citizenship recently caught my eye. The article didn’t mention religion, music, science or even human rights, the things I usually identify with universal culture. Neither did the author mention corporate symbols of global life: McDonalds, Coca-Cola or Nike. Instead, Sean Dubberke at RW3 CultureWizard described the role that instant communication plays in the lives of so many of us and suggested that use of a mobile communication device is now a requirement for global citizenship.

  • Erica Nybro

    MEASURE DHS, JHU∙CCP | Senior Research Associate

    It’s not possible to carry hundreds of DHS (Demographic and Health Surveys) reports to every meeting, or even sort through all of those PDFs on your laptop. Many program managers and policymakers in developing countries don’t have a full library of DHS reports or reliable access to an Internet connection to visit the MEASURE DHS website. Yet the expectation is that policy- and program-related decisions be data-driven, based on the evidence provided through research like the Demographic and Health Surveys.

    The MEASURE DHS Mobile App

    The MEASURE DHS Mobile App

    Luckily the rapidly growing use of mobile phones, including smart phones, has opened up a new channel for reaching DHS data users, both in Washington, DC, and in developing countries across the world. According to Pingdom, 15% of Africa’s internet browsing in May 2012 came from mobile devices, an increase of more than 150% from 2010. Now these users have an easy tool for accessing the most basic DHS information: the MEASURE DHS Mobile app.

    MEASURE DHS mobile provides national-level data for 25 key indicators across 90 countries, including fertility, family planning use, vaccination, childhood mortality, nutrition, HIV testing and prevalence, maternal health, ITN use, and some basic background data such as literacy, education, and access to electricity. The data can be viewed in a chart or a table to compare across countries or over time in countries that have had more than one DHS survey. These key indicators can also be viewed on a map.

  • Jarret Cassaniti

    JHU∙CCP | Communications Specialist

    In previous blog posts, I’ve written about the importance of continuous learning and how eLearning, mLearning, and blended learning allow training to be delivered through new and innovative ways to audiences with limited access to traditional education. Training tools using these methods include quick courses, refreshers, checklists, FAQs, references, and job aids.

    App for Contraceptive Eligibility

    The App for Contraceptive Eligibility, available for Android.

    A job aid is a repository for information, processes, or perspectives, external to the individual, which supports work and activity and directs, guides, and enlightens performance (Rossett and Gauier-Downes, 1991).

    On my trip last month to Abuja, Nigeria, I had the opportunity to test a mobile job aid with family planning providers. The Application for Contraceptive Eligibility (ACE) mobile phone app was developed by my K4Health colleagues in fall 2011 for Android phones and updated in May 2012. A new update is scheduled for 2013.

    Testing the usability of the app centered on determining if it was easy to learn how to operate, identifying problems to inform improvements, and exploring additional features. Scenarios were crafted depicting fictional family planning clients such as the one below:

    Imagine you are helping a family planning client decide on an appropriate contraceptive method. She has heard good things about hormonal implants and wants to use this method herself. Her medical history reveals the following: She is 35 years old, has 3 children between the ages of 2 and 7, and has high blood pressure. Use the ACE app to check whether she is medically eligible to use implants.

  • Allison Bland

    JHU∙CCP | Communications Specialist

    Bridging, straddling, and closing the “digital divide” are recurring themes in international development, where the Internet is seen as a portal to health, economic, educational, and social benefits. With an Internet connection on a mobile phone, tablet, or PC, users can tap into eLearning resources, access health information, and exchange knowledge.

    Internet Cable Map

    Map of Internet cables

    While the potential resources that can be gained from Internet access are enormous, Internet users in developing countries still stand on the other side of a deep divide that has not been bridged by devices and wireless signals. The speed divide is one component of Internet access that doesn’t end with physical access to a PC and Internet connection.

  • Stephen Goldstein

    JHU∙CCP | Senior Consultant

    November 25th is the UN’s International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women.  At least one woman in every three has been beaten, coerced into sex, or otherwise abused in her lifetime (see my previous blog post, U.S. Puts Gender-Based Violence Front and Center).  

  • K4Health Highlights

    Elsie Minja-Mwaniki

    JHU∙CCP | Communications Specialist

    K4Health is excited to announce the addition of a Case Studies tab on the Knowledge Management for Health and Development Toolkit. The new tab features a collection of two- to four-page stories that document knowledge management (KM) activities and programs. The purpose of these case studies is to supplement the tools and resources in the Knowledge Management for Health and Development Toolkit with real life experiences.  

    Collected, written, and reviewed by members of the Global Health Knowledge Collaborative, these case studies highlight activities that are relevant and useful to KM practitioners. They also offer information about strategies, challenges, successes, lessons learned, and recommendations for others

    The following case studies are now available:

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