An epidemic of Ebola virus disease (EVD) beginning in 2013 has claimed an estimated 11 310 lives in West Africa. As the EVD epidemic subsides, it is important for all who participated in the emergency Ebola response to reflect on strengths and weaknesses of the response. Such reflections should take into account perspectives not usually included in peer-reviewed publications and after-action reports, including those from the public sector, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), survivors of Ebola, and Ebola-affected households and communities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Despite evidence supporting Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) as a strategy to improve pediatric care in countries with high child mortality, its implementation faces challenges related to lack of or poor post-didactic training supervision and gaps in necessary supporting systems. These constraints lead to health care workers' inability to consistently translate IMCI knowledge and skills into practice. A program providing mentoring and enhanced supervision at health centers (MESH), focusing on clinical and systems improvement was implemented in rural Rwanda as a strategy to address these issues, with the ultimate goal of improving the quality of pediatric care at rural health centers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Public Health Policy
July 2005
Native American populations have long experienced excess morbidity and mortality attributable to alcohol. Historically, alcohol was introduced to the Native American population by European settlers, and was used to help those settlers get land and goods from the Indian population. In modern times, alcohol beverage makers and distributors continue to supply and market their products to Native American populations in amounts and manners that contribute to continuing health and safety problems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlike the well-developed system of ethical priority-setting that physicians and bioethicists have developed in the field of organ transplantation, public health lacks a standardized and publicly recognized system for making ethical resource allocation decisions. Such a system would be useful for the purpose of countering prejudice-based arguments that tend to hinder the progress of public health programs aimed at marginalized groups. By examining organ transplantation priority-setting criteria as they relate to public health issues, this article seeks to stimulate debate about the varieties of criteria that should and should not be used in public health decision-making.
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