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Mashup Score: 2Global development assistance for early childhood care and education in 134 low- and middle-income countries, 2007–2021 - 13 hour(s) ago
Introduction Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) often dedicate limited domestic funds to expand quality early childhood care and education (ECCE), making complementary international donor support potentially important. However, research on the allocation of international development assistance for ECCE has been limited. Methods We analysed data from the Creditor Reporting System on aid projects to assess global development assistance for ECCE in 134 LMICs from 2007 to 2021. By employing keyword-searching and funding-allocation methods, we derived two estimates of ECCE aid: a lower-bound estimate comprising projects primarily focusing on ECCE and an upper-bound estimate comprising projects with both primary and partial ECCE focus, as well as those that could benefit ECCE but did not include ECCE keywords. We also assessed aid directed to conflict-affected countries and to ECCE projects integrating COVID-19-related activities. Results Between 2007 and 2021, the lower-bound ECCE aid
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Mashup Score: 0Data for whom? Experiences and perceptions of a perinatal eRegistry in two hospitals in Mtwara region, Tanzania - 13 hour(s) ago
Introduction Digital data systems have the potential to improve data quality and provide individual-level information to understand gaps in the quality of care. This study explored experiences and perceptions of a perinatal eRegistry in two hospitals in Mtwara region, Tanzania. Drawing from realist evaluation and systems thinking, we go beyond a descriptive account of stakeholders’ experiences and provide insight into key structural drivers and underlying social paradigms. Methods We carried out 6 weeks of focused ethnographic observations at the labour wards of the two hospitals and 29 semi-structured qualitative interviews with labour ward staff, as well as with administrative and managerial stakeholders at hospital, district and regional levels. Multi-stage reflexive thematic data analysis was carried out. Results We provide an in-depth account of the day-to-day functioning of the eRegistry in the two hospitals, including both aspects of positive change and key challenges with its i
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Mashup Score: 0Health impact and cost-effectiveness of vaccination using potential next-generation influenza vaccines in Thailand: a modelling study - 3 day(s) ago
Introduction Thailand was one of the first low- and middle-income countries to publicly fund seasonal influenza vaccines, but the lack of predictability in the timing of epidemics and difficulty in predicting the dominant influenza subtypes present a challenge for existing vaccines. Next-generation influenza vaccines (NGIVs) are being developed with the dual aims of broadening the strain coverage and conferring longer-lasting immunity. However, there are no economic evaluations of NGIVs in Thailand. Methods We estimated the health impact and cost-effectiveness of NGIVs in Thailand between 2005 and 2009 using a combined epidemiological and economic model. We fitted the model to data on laboratory-confirmed influenza cases and then simulated the number of influenza infections, symptomatic cases, hospitalisations and deaths under different vaccination scenarios based on WHO-preferred product characteristics for NGIVs. We used previous estimates of costs and disability adjusted life years
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Mashup Score: 0Probing the past: historical case study analysis to inform more just and sustainable global health partnerships in education - 3 day(s) ago
Introduction Disparities of power between high-income (HICs) and low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have long characterised the structures of global health, including knowledge production and training. Historical case study analysis is an often-overlooked tool to improve our understanding of how to mitigate inequalities. Methods Drawing from the contemporary experience of collaborators from Canada and Ethiopia, we chose to examine the historical relationship between Ethiopian Emperor Haile Selassie and Canadian Jesuit Lucien Matte as a case study for international collaborations based on the model of an ‘invited guest’. We used critical historical context and qualitative content analysis methodologies to assess written correspondence between them from the 1940s to the 1970s and drew from postcolonial theory to situate this case study in a broader context. Results The respectful and responsive relationship that developed between Emperor Haile Selassie and Lucien Matte reveals impo
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Mashup Score: 0
### Summary box As the world recovers from the impact of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, countries in Africa are grappling with yet another worrisome challenge: the ongoing outbreaks of the Mpox virus (formerly known as monkeypox). The Mpox virus was first discovered in 1958 among laboratory monkeys in Denmark1; however, it was not until 1970 that the first case in humans was reported in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Since then, the Mpox virus has been endemic in most parts of East, Central and West Africa. This commentary underlines the perils of neglecting Mpox, exploring three key factors that have contributed to its re-emergence and spread. ### Caught between clade I and clade II—shifting epidemiology of the Mpox virus The Mpox virus, originally driven by zoonotic spill-over via infected monkeys, and later human-to-human …
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Mashup Score: 2Seven core competencies and conditions for equitable partnerships and power sharing in community-based participatory research - 4 day(s) ago
Equitable health research requires actively engaging communities in producing new knowledge to advocate for their health needs. Community-based participatory research (CBPR) relies on the coproduction of contextual and grounded knowledge between researchers, programme implementers and community partners with the aim of catalysing action for change. Improving coproduction competencies can support research quality and validity. Yet, frameworks and guidance highlighting the ideal competencies and conditions needed for all research partners to contribute meaningfully and equitably are lacking. This paper aims to advance CBPR by laying out seven core competencies and conditions that can promote power sharing in knowledge production, application and dissemination at the individual, community, organisational and systems levels. Competencies were developed through an iterative process, that synthesised pre-existing literature and frameworks with a wide range of tacit knowledge from researchers
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Mashup Score: 4
Only a third of tuberculosis (TB) cases in Nigeria in 2020 were diagnosed and notified, in part due to low detection and under-reporting from the private health sector. Using a standardised patient (SP) survey approach, we assessed how management of presumptive TB in the private sector aligns with national guidelines and whether this differed from a study conducted before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. 13 SPs presented a presumptive TB case to 511 private providers in urban areas of Lagos and Kano states in May and June 2021. Private provider case management was compared with national guidelines divided into three main steps: SP questioned about cough duration; sputum collection attempted for TB testing; and non-prescription of anti-TB medications, antibiotics and steroids. SP visits conducted in May–June 2021 were directly compared to SP visits conducted in the same areas in June–July 2019. Overall, 28% of interactions (145 of 511, 95% CI 24.5% to 32.5%) were correctly managed ac
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Mashup Score: 1
Introduction Achieving universal health coverage (UHC) through an effective health financing system is a challenge for many low-income countries. Learning is key to success due to many uncertainties and unknowns. Using the case of translating strategic health purchasing into policy and practice in Burkina Faso, our study seeks to understand how policy learning can shape policy processes and outcomes. Methods We used a qualitative case study design and Dunlop and Radaelli’s conceptualisation of policy learning to identify which modes of learning did or did not occur, what helped or hindered them and the resulting policy outcomes. Dunlop and Radaelli frame policy learning as epistemic, reflexive, negotiative or hierarchical. We collected data through documentary review and in-depth individual interviews with 21 key informants. We analysed the data manually using pattern-matching techniques. Results The introduction of strategic health purchasing in Burkina Faso was initially seen as an o
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Mashup Score: 1
Background In many resource-limited settings, understaffed hospitals rely on patients’ families to provide care during admission. These care tasks are often performed informally, untrained and unsupported. The WHO has called for innovative approaches to tackle health worker shortages globally. Family participation interventions could be such an innovation, but current family participation should be understood before implementation. This review explored the barriers and facilitators family caregivers experience participating in resource-limited adult hospital care. Methods For this qualitative systematic review, MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL and the Global Health Library were searched from inception to 17 February 2023. Studies were included if they described experiences of family caregivers participating in hospital-like environments, were performed in a low- or middle-income country and included qualitative data. Open coding was performed, followed by thematic analysis. The risk of bias was
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Mashup Score: 0Flexible ngo-donor coordination in aid interventions to strengthen resilience: the case of Lebanon’s primary healthcare system - 9 day(s) ago
Introduction With shifts in international aid, international donors have increasingly regarded non-governmental organisations (NGOs) as capable of providing alternative public service arrangements. As funding flows to NGOs, particularly in contexts where both actors work towards strengthening health system resilience, NGO-donor relationships evolve. However, despite calls to investigate the contribution of relationships between actors within health systems, including NGOs and their donors, to health system resilience, empirical research is limited. Understanding these relationships is crucial for comprehending their role in fostering resilient health systems. This research fills this gap, by examining how NGO-donor coordination contributes to health system resilience in Lebanon. Methods This research focuses on Lebanon’s primary health system, primarily managed by NGOs through contracts and heavily funded by donors. It examines NGOs operating under the national primary healthcare netwo
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Global development assistance for early childhood care and education in 134 low- and middle-income countries, 2007-2021 https://t.co/TE3s60b3Dl