PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

What makes a public health campaign successful?

New study analyzes “Exemplars in Global Health” across 19 countries to find common themes in public health success

2024-05-09
(Press-News.org) The highest performing countries across public health outcomes share many drivers that contribute to their success. That’s the conclusion of a new study published May 9  in the open-access journal PLOS Global Public Health by Dr. Nadia Akseer, an Epidemiologist-Biostatistician at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and co-author of the study and colleagues in the Exemplars in Global Health (EGH) program.

In recent years, the EGH program has begun to identify and study positive outliers when it comes to global health programs around the world, with an aim of uncovering not only which health interventions work, but also how they have been successfully delivered. The identified outliers have had exceptional success relative to the economic status of the countries in which they take place.

In the new study, the researchers systematically analyzed 31 previous EGH studies across six topics, including under-five child mortality, childhood stunting, community health workers (CHW), vaccine delivery, COVID-19 response, and newborn and maternal mortality reduction. The studies included data from 19 countries in Africa, Latin America, Asia, and the Caribbean. The EGH team looked for common themes and findings in these countries that resulted in programmatic success.

In general, the drivers that were seen most often in EGH positive outliers could be grouped into eight themes: efficient data systems, effective leadership, effective stakeholder coordination, a capacitated workforce, intentional women’s empowerment, a conducive national policy environment, sustainable financing, and outreach. These themes align with previous efforts aimed at identifying drivers of global health improvements and with the World Health Organization’s Health Systems Framework.

The authors say that the new findings reinforce a set of cross-cutting principles that should influence national health policies and strategies. “We hope that by summarizing the common factors among the countries who have been able to maximize impact, findings from this study can aid funders, policymakers, and other stakeholders in understanding strategies to achieve optimal outcomes across health and human development,” they write.

Dr Akseer adds, "In analyzing 19 countries globally, Exemplars in Global Health found that those achieving some of the greatest progress in public health all focused on similar priorities. By sharing key lessons on how they improved, our hope is that we can help country leaders, funders, and global partners craft evidence-based policies that best allocate resources— and, in doing so, enhance health outcomes around the world.”

#####

In your coverage please use this URL to provide access to the freely available article in PLOS Global Public Health: https://journals.plos.org/globalpublichealth/article?id=10.1371/journal.pgph.0003000        

Citation: Akseer N, Phillips DE, on behalf of the Exemplars in Global Health Partner Network (2024) Drivers of success in global health outcomes: A content analysis of Exemplar studies. PLOS Glob Public Health 4(5): e0003000. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0003000

Author Countries: United States

Funding: This meta-analysis of completed research studies was funded by Gates Ventures, Seattle, WA, which was involved in the conception of the study, the critical review of findings and the decision to publish. Funding was provided to the first author, NA, doing business as Modern Scientist Global, Inc., via contract.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Manganese sprinkled with iridium: a quantum leap in green hydrogen production

Manganese sprinkled with iridium: a quantum leap in green hydrogen production
2024-05-09
As the world is transitioning from a fossil fuel-based energy economy, many are betting on hydrogen to become the dominant energy currency. But producing “green” hydrogen without using fossil fuels is not yet possible on the scale we need because it requires iridium, a metal that is extremely rare. In a study published May 10 in Science, researchers led by Ryuhei Nakamura at the RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science (CSRS) in Japan report a new method that reduces the amount of iridium needed for the reaction by 95%, without altering the rate of hydrogen production. This breakthrough could revolutionize our ability to produce ecologically ...

Topological Phonos: Where vibrations find their twist

2024-05-09
An international team of researchers has discovered that the quantum particles responsible for the vibrations of materials—which influence their stability and various other properties—can be classified through topology. Phonons, the collective vibrational modes of atoms within a crystal lattice, generate disturbances that propagate like waves through neighboring atoms. These phonons are vital for many properties of solid-state systems, including thermal and electrical conductivity, neutron scattering, and quantum phases like charge density waves and superconductivity. The spectrum of phonons—essentially ...

A fragment of human brain, mapped

A fragment of human brain, mapped
2024-05-09
A cubic millimeter of brain tissue may not sound like much. But considering that tiny square contains 57,000 cells, 230 millimeters of blood vessels, and 150 million synapses, all amounting to 1,400 terabytes of data, Harvard and Google researchers have just accomplished something enormous.    A Harvard team led by Jeff Lichtman, the Jeremy R. Knowles Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology and newly appointed dean of science, has co-created with Google researchers the largest synaptic-resolution, 3D reconstruction of a piece of human brain to date, showing in vivid detail each cell and its web of neural connections in a piece of human ...

Quantum breakthrough sheds light on perplexing high-temperature superconductors

Quantum breakthrough sheds light on perplexing high-temperature superconductors
2024-05-09
Superfast levitating trains, long-range lossless power transmission, faster MRI machines — all these fantastical technological advances could be in our grasp if we could just make a material that transmits electricity without resistance — or ‘superconducts’ — at around room temperature. In a paper published in the May 10 issue of Science, researchers report a breakthrough in our understanding of the origins of superconductivity at relatively high (though still frigid) temperatures. The findings concern a class of superconductors that has puzzled scientists since 1986, called ‘cuprates.’ “There was tremendous excitement when ...

Vilcek Foundation appoints Dr. Jedd Wolchok to Board of Directors

Vilcek Foundation appoints Dr. Jedd Wolchok to Board of Directors
2024-05-09
The Vilcek Foundation has announced the appointment of Dr. Jedd Wolchok to the board of directors, effective May 1, 2024. Wolchok is the Meyer Director of the Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center and a professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York.  “Jan, Marica, and I are delighted to welcome Jedd to the Vilcek Foundation board,” says Vilcek Foundation President Rick Kinsel. “We look to our board of directors for insight and perspective on our projects and programs: Jedd is not only a leader in immunotherapy and oncology, but an academic and scientific mentor, and a philanthropist in his own right. We are honored and grateful to have him ...

Local health equity and social impact entrepreneurs invited to apply for grants, training

2024-05-09
DALLAS, May 09, 2024 — A recent study revealed that, in the United States, local Black and Latino entrepreneurs receive just 2.6% of all venture capital investment.[1]  To help bridge that gap and while addressing health inequities in these local communities, the American Heart Association, celebrating 100 years of lifesaving service, is offering financial grants and expert business consulting to local social health impact entrepreneurs who are focused on achieving health equity. As the Association commemorates one hundred years of lifesaving service as the world’s leading nonprofit ...

The beginning of becoming a human

The beginning of becoming a human
2024-05-09
“Debates on when human life begins are rooted deep in philosophical history. However, until recently they have been limited by the state of technology.” BUFFALO, NY- May 9, 2024 – A new review paper was published in advance by Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science), entitled, “The beginning of becoming a human.” According to birth certificates, the life of a child begins once their body comes out of the mother’s womb. In this new review, researchers Polina A. Loseva and Vadim N. Gladyshev from Harvard Medical School pose ...

Veterinary educator receives national award

Veterinary educator receives national award
2024-05-09
The American Association of Veterinary Medical Colleges has named India Lane the winner of the 2024 Billy E. Hooper Award for Distinguished Service. Lane, associate dean for academic and student affairs at the University of Tennessee College of Veterinary Medicine (UTCVM), has helped transform academic veterinary medical education not only at the college but throughout the profession. The national award recognizes an individual whose leadership and vision have made a significant contribution to academic veterinary medicine. Throughout ...

Deep learning-based whole-body PSMA PET/CT attenuation correction utilizing Pix-2-Pix GAN

Deep learning-based whole-body PSMA PET/CT attenuation correction utilizing Pix-2-Pix GAN
2024-05-09
“We have developed a Pix-2-Pix GAN model to perform attenuation correction on whole-body PSMA [prostate-specific membrane antigen] PET images with 18F-DCFPyL.” BUFFALO, NY- May 9, 2024 – A new research paper was published in Oncotarget's Volume 15 on May 7, 2024, entitled, “Deep learning-based whole-body PSMA PET/CT attenuation correction utilizing Pix-2-Pix GAN.” The sequential PET/CT studies oncology patients can undergo during their treatment follow-up course is limited ...

Association between neighborhood deprivation and DNA methylation in an autopsy cohort

Association between neighborhood deprivation and DNA methylation in an autopsy cohort
2024-05-09
“[...] our study identified one CpG site (cg26514961, PLXNC1 gene) that was significantly associated with neighborhood deprivation in brain tissue.” BUFFALO, NY- May 9, 2024 – A new research paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 16, Issue 8, entitled, “The association between neighborhood deprivation and DNA methylation in an autopsy cohort.” Previous research has found that living in a disadvantaged neighborhood is associated with poor health outcomes. Living in disadvantaged neighborhoods may alter inflammation and immune response in the ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

“The models were right”: Astronomers find ‘missing’ matter

UBC scientists propose blueprint for 'universal translator' in quantum networks

Some of your AI prompts could cause 50 times more CO2 emissions than others

Pandora’s microbes – The battle for iron in the lungs

Unlocking the secrets of gene therapy delivery: New insights into genome ejection from AAV vectors

Scientists use AI to make green ammonia even greener

Remaking psychiatry with biological testing

Caution required when heading soccer balls

Intermittent fasting comparable to traditional diets for weight loss

Community based mentoring in Sierra Leone for pregnant adolescents and their babies doubles survival rates

Positive life outlook may protect against middle-aged memory loss, 16-year study suggests

Scientists find three years left of remaining carbon budget for 1.5°C

Anti-aging drug Rapamycin extends lifespan as effectively as eating less

Babies can sense pain before they can understand it

Consensus statement on universal chemosensory testing calls for better standardization, infrastructure, and education in the field

Two-part vaccine strategy generates a stronger, longer-lasting immune boost against HIV

How lottery-style bottle returns could transform recycling

Researchers with UTHealth Houston School of Public Health awarded $5 million to study cancer risk among firefighters in Texas

C-Path’s translational therapeutics accelerator announces new grant award for drug development project in type 1 diabetes

What is a brain age gap, and how may it affect thinking and memory skills?

Food insecurity, neighborhood, lack of social support, linked to worse stroke recovery

Scientists discover new approach to gene therapy

A statement on the Supreme Court decision

Low social support and a tendency to compare yourself to others may be associated with problematic social media use, per study of 403 Italian adolescents

Which therapy works best for knee arthritis?

Seeing through a new LENS allows brain-like navigation in robots

Organ sculpting cells may hold clues to how cancer spreads

Wildfires that keep us inside might drive the spread of infectious disease, per study of the U.S. West Coast wildfires of 2020

Catching excitons in motion—ultrafast dynamics in carbon nanotubes revealed by nano-infrared spectroscopy

New research proposes framework to define and measure the biology of health

[Press-News.org] What makes a public health campaign successful?
New study analyzes “Exemplars in Global Health” across 19 countries to find common themes in public health success