• Health Innovations

    Dana Hovig

    Chief Executive Officer, Marie Stopes International

    As the world’s eyes turn towards sexual and reproductive health ahead of July’s major Family Planning Summit, experts from Marie Stopes International revealed Impact 2 today, an updated tool which allows organisations to estimate the high level impact of their sexual and reproductive health services in less developed countries*.

    Presented to experts throughout the sexual and reproductive health sector at the Wellcome Trust in London, this innovative tool is the solution to a problem that many family planning organisations face – namely, the difficulty of demonstrating high level outcomes such as maternal lives saved, without having to use expensive surveys and complex mathematical modelling themselves.

  • Lisa Basalla Mwaikambo

    eLearning Coordinator and Knowledge Management (KM) Officer | JHU∙CCP - KM Division

    On April 20, 2012, I attended IntraHealth’s first annual conference on innovation and global health, SwitchPoint 2012. It was a reinvigorating experience! The focus wasn’t on all the global health problems in the world and boiling people down to statistics, but rather on the potential for true co-created solutions – with all of the technological improvements, possibilities, and cultural shifts throughout the world.

  • Elizabeth Futrell

    K4Health, JHU∙CCP | Technical Writer

    Thirty-five million women worldwide use injectable contraceptives such as Depo-Provera (also known as DMPA) to prevent unwanted pregnancy, and this number is projected to grow. In some regions of the world—for example, sub-Saharan Africa—DMPA is the most widely used modern contraceptive method. DMPA is popular among women for many reasons: it is discreet, affordable, highly effective, and convenient, only requiring a reinjection every 13 weeks. Furthermore, because DMPA only contains progestin and not estrogen, breastfeeding women can use it for postpartum family planning.

    DMPA Image

    Despite its many benefits, the scientific community has raised several concerns about DMPA use. In the past, these concerns have included a loss of bone mineral density among users, though research has demonstrated that this loss is reversed once use is discontinued. This winter, a study published in The Lancet Infectious Diseases suggested an increased risk of HIV infection among women who use DMPA. However, after a careful review of the evidence, the WHO issued a statement in February affirming that women with HIV or at high risk of HIV can safely use hormonal contraceptives to prevent pregnancy but that these women should always use male or female condoms to protect against HIV infection.

    For more commentary of the WHO’s statement concerning DMPA, read “WHO Upholds Guidance on Hormonal Contraceptive Use and HIV Risk) by Ruwaida Salem.

  • Debra Dickson

    JHU∙CCP | POPLINE Manager

    Despite increased prevention and control measures "dramatically reducing the malaria burden in many places," in 2010 an estimated 655,000 people died from the disease - most of them African children, according the latest Fact Sheet from the World Health Organization.

    A girl awakens in her bed covered with an anti-malarial mosquito net in Dundube Kadambo, Malawi. The widespread use of bednets is one of several effective measures to cut down on the transmission of malaria. © 2008 Paul Jeffrey, Courtesy of Photoshare

     

    Malaria mortality rates have fallen by more than 25% globally since 2000, and by 33% in the WHO African Region, according to the World Malaria Report 2011but in Africa one child still dies every minute from the disease, accounting for around 90% of all malaria mortality.

    Sustain Gains, Save Lives: Invest in Malaria” is this year’s World Malaria Day Theme as international organizations and ministries of health race to meet the 2015 Millenium Development Goal 6: Halt  and begin to reverse the incidence of malaria and other major diseases.  

    Major efforts from USAID for preventing and treating malaria include:

    • Insecticide-treated mosquito nets
    • Indoor residual spraying
    • Intermittent prevention treatment  for pregnant women
    • Lifesaving drugs

    Interested in finding the latest research about these and other malaria-related topics? Visit K4Health’s POPLINE Database where you can find links to over 4500 documents on the disease. 

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  • Cassandra Mickish

    K4Health, JHU∙CCP | Comm. Specialist

    On April 17, 2012, the preliminary results of the 2011 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) were announced and celebrated. The 2011 BDHS is the sixth national survey designed to provide representative information on demographic and maternal and child health. Data are collected through household and community surveys. The DHS series is conducted regularly in over 80 countries worldwide.  To learn more about the survey design, sampling strategy, and implementation of the 2011 BDHS, read the Preliminary Report.

    Bangladesh On the Move to Better Health Blog Photo

    The preliminary results indicate that Bangladesh is indeed on the move to better health with notable progress in family planning, maternal and child health, and nutrition, but there are also still significant gaps and areas for improvement.

    Fertility continued to decline to 2.3 children per woman in 2011, down from 2.7 in 2007.  Two generations ago, the average woman had six or seven children, but the modern woman now has on average only two.  Social norms are changing, and 82% of women with two children do not want to have any more.  In one of the most densely populated countries in the world, declining fertility is great news.  Families with fewer children are healthier, can more effectively prioritize their resources, and have less impact on the environment. 

  • Ann Jimerson

    Alive & Thrive, FHI 360 | Senior Specialist for Behavior Change

    While working on a U.S.-based project on obesity, I’d had a gratifying experience with concept testing. It confirmed what I’d thought for a long time – that concept testing, or trying a variety of concepts or message approaches with real audience members, can help you hone in on messages that really resonate.

    I wanted to share my excitement and convince my international development colleagues that concept testing could work for them, too. So, I put together a PowerPoint for practitioners like myself, in the business of behavior change.

    Alive and Thrive Image

    Despite a warm reception from my colleagues at a lunchtime presentation, a couple of eager 20-somethings were having trouble keeping their eyes open for the full 40 minutes. I tried again in one of our field offices overseas, but it didn’t really make sense to them because the whole project, focusing on obesity, was so very American. And even with a select, receptive audience (okay, I guess people closer to my demographic could sit through it…), my beautifully animated PowerPoint didn’t work without me there to deliver the story. I had a product, but I had to work pretty hard to sell it.

  • Stephen Goldstein

    K4Health, JHU∙CCP | Senior Consultant

    How does agriculture, education, gender, and combatting poverty affect the health sector in low-income countries? Here are a few innovative infographic examples that show the links from Farming First and USAID.

    What are Infographics?

    Handweeding Infographic

    Infographics are a new,  powerful  internet-based communication medium that  marry pictures and words so people can absorb a host of important information without wading through a multitude of reports.

    In this time where everything is fast paced, information must be quick and easy to digest. Infographics have become an easy way to display key information visually. In one glance, a person can look at an infographic and take away important facts.

    I want to briefly discuss two different infographics and how they express concrete ideas about poverty and international development through the same medium.  Although these examples look at development in different ways—one more focused on agriculture and the other on combatting poverty—there is no doubt that these two sectors, together with education and gender, are interrelated and have a dramatic effect on the health and wellbeing of families in low-income countries.

    Using Infographics to Illustrate Complex Data

    Infographics from Farming First, “the Female Face of Farming,” explore the role of women in agriculture and ask three main questions:

    ·         Why are women so  important to agriculture?

    ·         Where does a gender gap in agriculture exist?

    ·         What are the impacts of the gender gap in agriculture?

  • Jay Liebowitz

    UMUC | Orkand Endowed Chair of Management & Technology

    In 2012, the second edition of the Knowledge Management Handbook: Collaboration and Social Networking (J. Liebowitz, Ed.) and the second edition of Knowledge Management: Theory and Practice (K. Dalkir) will be published.  In spite of these second editions and many other knowledge management articles and books that have been published over the years, misconceptions about knowledge management (KM) still accrue.  What are they and why is this so?

  • Piers Bocock

    K4Health, JHU∙CCP | Project Director

    On April 13, the Global Health Council (GHC) surprised the development community when it cancelled its 2012 conference, an annual event that was an important milestone on the calendar for thousands of development professionals. But even more shocking was the announcement on April 20 that the Global Health Council will close operations within the coming months.

  • Women of the World

    Rebecca Shore

    K4Health, JHU∙CCP | Comm. Specialist

    Throughout my day, because of the work I do in social media, I read a lot. I follow multiple news affiliates, journals, list serves, newsletters, and other readily available news sources. I read about revolutions, wars, poverty, starvation, natural disasters and other devastating things.  Finding happiness in the news can sometimes be a tall feat. Drama and devastation sell newspapers and intrigue audiences.

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