45 results match your criteria: "Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies[Affiliation]"
Int J Health Policy Manag
August 2024
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University Blomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: Few low- or middle-income countries (LMICs) have prioritized the expansion of rehabilitation services. Existing scholarship has identified that problem definition, governance, and structural factors are influential in the prioritization of rehabilitation. The objective of this study was to identify the factors influencing the prioritization and implementation of rehabilitation services in Uganda.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLOS Glob Public Health
August 2024
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
Background: Despite a long history of political discourse around refugee integration, it wasn't until 2016 that this issue emerged as a global political priority. Limited research has examined the evolution of policies of global actors around health service provision to refugees and how refugee integration into health systems came onto the global agenda. This study seeks to fill this gap.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The prolonged presence of Syrian refugees in Jordan has highlighted the need for sustainable health service delivery models for refugees. In 2012, the Jordanian government adopted a policy that granted Syrian refugees access, free of charge, to the national health system. However since 2012, successive policy revisions have limited refugee access.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLOS Glob Public Health
March 2024
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
The Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (QCN) aims to work through learning, action, leadership and accountability. We aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of QCN in these four areas at the global level and in four QCN countries: Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Malawi and Uganda. This mixed method evaluation comprised 2-4 iterative rounds of data collection between 2019-2022, involving stakeholder interviews, hospital observations, QCN members survey, and document review.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLOS Glob Public Health
November 2023
Institute for Global Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
The Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (QCN) is intended to facilitate learning, action, leadership and accountability for improving quality of care in member countries. This requires legitimacy-a network's right to exert power within national contexts. This is reflected, for example, in a government's buy-in and perceived ownership of the work of the network.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlobal Health
October 2023
Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: Tens of millions of children lack adequate care, many having been separated from or lost one or both parents. Despite the problem's severity and its impact on a child's lifelong health and wellbeing, the care of vulnerable children-which includes strengthening the care of children within families, preventing unnecessary family separation, and ensuring quality care alternatives when reunification with the biological parents is not possible or appropriate-is a low global priority. This analysis investigates factors shaping the inadequate global prioritization of the care of vulnerable children.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLOS Glob Public Health
September 2023
Department of Disease Control, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, based in Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Int J Equity Health
May 2023
Johns Hopkins International Injury Research Unit, Health Systems Program, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street Suite E8527, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Background: There is a large and growing unmet need for rehabilitation - a diverse category of services that aim to improve functioning across the life course - particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Yet despite urgent calls to increase political commitment, many low- and middle-income country governments have dedicated little attention to expanding rehabilitation services. Existing policy scholarship explains how and why health issues reach the policy agenda and offers applicable evidence to advance access to physical, medical, psychosocial, and other types of rehabilitation services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet
May 2023
Centre of Excellence in Women and Child Health, Aga Khan University, Nairobi, Kenya.
Despite major achievements in child survival, the burden of neonatal mortality has remained high and even increased in some countries since 1990. Currently, most neonatal deaths are attributable to being born preterm, small for gestational age (SGA), or with low birthweight (LBW). Besides neonatal mortality, these conditions are associated with stillbirth and multiple morbidities, with short-term and long-term adverse consequences for the newborn, their families, and society, resulting in a major loss of human capital.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet
May 2023
Centre of Excellence in Women and Child Health, Aga Khan University, Nairobi, Kenya.
Nat Food
September 2022
Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC, USA.
Over the past 50 years, food systems worldwide have shifted from predominantly rural to industrialized and consolidated systems, with impacts on diets, nutrition and health, livelihoods, and environmental sustainability. We explore the potential for sustainable and equitable food system transformation (ideal state of change) by comparing countries at different stages of food system transition (changes) using food system typologies. Historically, incomes have risen faster than food prices as countries have industrialized, enabling a simultaneous increase in the supply and affordability of many nutritious foods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLOS Glob Public Health
February 2023
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Recent calls for global health decolonization suggest that addressing the problems of global health may require more than 'elevating country voice'. We employed a frame analysis of the diagnostic, prognostic, and motivational framings of both discourses and analyzed the implications of convergence or divergence of these frames for global health practice and scholarship. We used two major sources of data-a review of literature and in-depth interviews with actors in global health practice and shapers of discourse around elevating country voice and decolonizing global health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
January 2023
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: 'Resilience', 'self-reliance' and 'increasing country voice' are widely used terms in global health. However, the terms are understood in diverse ways by various global health actors. We analyse how these terms are understood and why differences in understanding exist.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Policy
November 2022
Johns Hopkins University, Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Washington, DC, USA.
A growing literature uses least-cost diets to evaluate how effectively a food system supports access to nutritious foods. We identify the cost of meeting nutrient requirements for whole households in rural Malawi from and the nutrient-level drivers thereof. From 2013 to 2017, we can identify a household least-cost diet only 60% of the time with an average cost of $2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
November 2022
Faculty of Environment and Information Studies, Keio University, Fujisawa, Japan.
Standardized cross-cultural databases of the arts are critical to a balanced scientific understanding of the performing arts, and their role in other domains of human society. This paper introduces the Global Jukebox as a resource for comparative and cross-cultural study of the performing arts and culture. The Global Jukebox adds an extensive and detailed global database of the performing arts that enlarges our understanding of human cultural diversity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Healthy Longev
October 2022
Institute of Criminology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Lancet Healthy Longev
August 2022
Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: Globally, 1 in 6 people aged 60 years and older experience elder abuse in the community annually, with potentially severe physical and mental health, financial, and social consequences. Yet, elder abuse remains a low global priority. We aimed to identify the factors accounting for the low global political priority of elder abuse.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet
May 2022
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and Paul H Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Health issues vary in the amount of attention and resources they receive from global health organisations and national governments. How issues are framed could shape differences in levels of priority. We reviewed scholarship on global health policy making to examine the role of framing in shaping global health priorities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
June 2022
Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA; Johns Hopkins University, Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies, 1740 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC 20036, USA. Electronic address:
Background: Child sexual abuse (CSA) is widespread. Few countries, however, prioritize the issue. The United Kingdom is an exception, ranked first in its response to the issue in a 2019 country comparison.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Health Policy Manag
August 2022
Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Healthcare (Basel)
October 2021
Department of Health Policy, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Background: When COVID-19 emerged in China in late 2019, most Chinese university students were home-quarantined to prevent the spread of the virus, considering the great impact of the lockdown on young people habits and their psychological well-being. This study explored the prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and its associated factors among Chinese university students who are isolated at home during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Method: 4520 participants from five universities in China were surveyed by online questionnaire and the PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version (PCL-C) was adopted as a screening instrument.
Global Health
September 2021
Usher Institute, University of Edinburgh, Old Medical School, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, EH8 9AG, UK.
Background: In the nearly half century since it began lending for population projects, the World Bank has become one of the largest financiers of global health projects and programs, a powerful voice in shaping health agendas in global governance spaces, and a mass producer of evidentiary knowledge for its preferred global health interventions. How can social scientists interrogate the role of the World Bank in shaping 'global health' in the current era?
Main Body: As a group of historians, social scientists, and public health officials with experience studying the effects of the institution's investment in health, we identify three challenges to this research. First, a future research agenda requires recognizing that the Bank is not a monolith, but rather has distinct inter-organizational groups that have shaped investment and discourse in complicated, and sometimes contradictory, ways.
Lancet
September 2021
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, Rome, Italy.
J Nutr
December 2021
Friedman School of Nutrition Science & Policy, Tufts University, Boston, MA, USA.
Background: Where families eat together from a common dish, the shared meal must be nutrient dense enough in each nutrient to meet the needs of the highest-need member.
Objectives: This study aimed to develop an aggregate household nutrient requirement benchmark that satisfies all members' needs in a context in which meals are shared and to illustrate how that metric could inform food and nutrition policy making.
Methods: We merged nationally representative survey data for Malawi in 2010, 2013, and 2016-2017 with individual nutrient requirements and local food composition data to compute the adequacy of each household's aggregate consumption given its demographic composition and primary occupation.