254 results match your criteria: "Center for Global Development[Affiliation]"
Health Secur
August 2022
Prashant Yadav, PhD, is an Affiliate Professor, Technology and Operations Management, INSEAD, Fontainebleau, France; a Senior Fellow, Center for Global Development, Washington, DC; and a Lecturer, Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Pay levels for public sector workers-and especially teachers-are a constant source of controversy. In many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa, protests and strikes suggest that pay is low, while comparisons to average national income per capita suggest that it is high. This study presents data on teacher earnings from 15 African countries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Care Manag Sci
September 2022
iDSI, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Many countries seek to secure efficiency in health spending through establishing explicit priority setting institutions (PSIs). Since such institutions divert resources from frontline services which benefit patients directly, it is legitimate and reasonable to ask whether they are worth the money. We address this question by comparing, through simulation, the health benefits and costs from implementing two alternative funding approaches - one scenario in which an active PSI enables cost-effectiveness-threshold based funding decisions, and a counterfactual scenario where there is no PSI.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Environ Res Public Health
May 2022
Thompson School of Social Work & Public Health, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA.
In the face of great uncertainty and a global crisis from COVID-19, mathematical and epidemiologic COVID-19 models proliferated during the pandemic. Yet, many models were not created with the explicit audience of policymakers, the intention of informing specific scenarios, or explicit communication of assumptions, limitations, and complexities. This study presents a case study of the roles, uses, and approaches to COVID-19 modeling and forecasting in one state jurisdiction in the United States.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFScience
April 2022
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
COVID-19 has shown that hurdles can be overcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
April 2022
Center for Global Development, Washington, District of Columbia, USA.
Health Policy Technol
June 2022
Center for Global Development, Washington DC 20036, USA.
Introduction: Colombia has been hit particularly hard by the COVID-19 pandemic, being ranked 22nd among 187 countries in deaths per 100,000 people by February 2022. The country has also experienced the worst economic recession in its history, with real GDP contracting 7% in 2020. This paper describes Colombia's pre-pandemic context and the overall effect of the pandemic on health and economic indicators and examines the government's response to COVID-19.
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March 2022
Research and Data Section, UN Women, New York, NY, USA.
Int J Technol Assess Health Care
March 2022
South African Medical Research Council (SAMRC)/Wits Centre for Health Economics and Decision Science - PRICELESS, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
Objectives: While ethics has been identified as a core component of health technology assessment (HTA), there are few examples of practical, systematic inclusion of ethics analysis in HTA. Some attribute the scarcity of ethics analysis in HTA to debates about appropriate methodology and the need for ethics frameworks that are relevant to local social values. The "South African Values and Ethics for Universal Health Coverage" (SAVE-UHC) project models an approach that countries can use to develop HTA ethics frameworks that are specific to their national contexts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFValue Health
March 2022
International Decision Support Initiative, Center for Global Development, London, England, UK. Electronic address:
Objectives: Evidence-informed priority setting, in particular cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA), can help target resources better to achieve universal health coverage. Central to the application of CEA is the use of a cost-effectiveness threshold. We add to the literature by looking at what thresholds have been used in published CEA and the proportion of interventions found to be cost-effective, by type of threshold.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Glob Health
February 2022
Department of International Health, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J R Soc Med
May 2022
Department of Health Policy, The London School of Economics and Political Science, London, Houghton Street, WC2A 2AE, UK.
Objective: To examine the trends and characteristics of opioid-related hospital admissions in England over 10 years, and its burden for the National Health Service and public finances.
Design: Patient-level data from the Hospital Episode Statistics database to examine all opioid-related hospitalisations from 2008 to 2018, stratified by type of opioid admission and patient demographics.
Setting: All National Health Service hospitals in England.
Lancet Reg Health Am
April 2022
Centro de Investigación en Evaluación y Encuestas, Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Cuernavaca, Morelos, México.
Background: Hepatitis C is a preventable and treatable disease that has been declared a public health problem. In 2012, the prevalence of HCV serum anti-bodies in the Mexican adult population aged 20 to 49 years was 0·30%.
Methods: We randomly selected a probabilistic sub-sample of 12,389 adults (20+ years) from adults participating in the National Health and Nutrition Survey (ENSANUT) 2018 who provided a venous blood sample.
EClinicalMedicine
January 2022
Texas Children's Center for Vaccine Development, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
J Int AIDS Soc
December 2021
Center for Law, Health & Society and College of Law and School of Public Health, Georgia State University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Introduction: While pregnant people have been an important focus for HIV research, critical evidence gaps remain regarding prevention, co-infection, and safety and efficacy of new antiretroviral therapies in pregnancy. Such gaps can result in harm: without safety data, drugs used may carry unacceptable risks to the foetus or pregnant person; without pregnancy-specific dosing data, pregnant people face risks of both toxicity and undertreatment; and delays in gathering evidence can limit access to beneficial next-generation drugs. Despite recognition of the need, numerous barriers and ethical complexities have limited progress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Med
December 2021
Department of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
Background: How best to prioritise COVID-19 vaccination within and between countries has been a public health and an ethical challenge for decision-makers globally. We reviewed epidemiological and economic modelling evidence on population priority groups to minimise COVID-19 mortality, transmission, and morbidity outcomes.
Methods: We searched the National Institute of Health iSearch COVID-19 Portfolio (a database of peer-reviewed and pre-print articles), Econlit, the Centre for Economic Policy Research, and the National Bureau of Economic Research for mathematical modelling studies evaluating the impact of prioritising COVID-19 vaccination to population target groups.
Lancet Glob Health
January 2022
Foundation Botnar Board, Geneva, Switzerland.
Latin America has been particularly hard hit by the COVID-19 syndemic, including the associated economic fallout that has threatened the livelihoods of most families. Social protection platforms and policies should have a crucial role in safeguarding individual and family wellbeing; however, the response has been insufficient to address the scale of the crisis. In this Viewpoint, we focus on two policy challenges of the COVID-19 syndemic: rapidly and effectively providing financial support to the many families that lost livelihoods, and responding to and mitigating the increased risk of intimate partner violence (IPV).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWirtschaftsdienst
November 2021
Bruegel, Rue de la Charité 33, 1210 Brussels, Belgium.
BMJ Glob Health
November 2021
University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Health Policy Plan
May 2022
Berman Institute of Bioethics, 1809 Ashland Avenue, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
South Africa's move towards implementing National Health Insurance includes a commitment to establish a health technology assessment (HTA) body to inform health priority-setting decisions. This study sought to analyse health rights cases in South Africa to inform the identification of country-specific procedural values related to health priority-setting and their implementation in a South African HTA body. The focus on health rights cases is motivated in part by the fact that case law can be an important source of insight into the values of a particular country.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Public Health
November 2021
Division of HIV, Infectious Diseases, and Global Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Background: Strategies to control coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) have often been based on preliminary and limited data and have tended to be slow to evolve as new evidence emerges. Yet knowledge about COVID-19 has grown exponentially, and the expanding rollout of vaccines presents further opportunity to reassess the response to the pandemic more broadly.
Main Text: We review the latest evidence concerning 10 key COVID-19 policy and strategic areas, specifically addressing: 1) the expansion of equitable vaccine distribution, 2) the need to ease restrictions as hospitalization and mortality rates eventually fall, 3) the advantages of emphasizing educational and harm reduction approaches over coercive and punitive measures, 4) the need to encourage outdoor activities, 5) the imperative to reopen schools, 6) the far-reaching and long-term economic and psychosocial consequences of sustained lockdowns, 7) the excessive focus on surface disinfection and other ineffective measures, 8) the importance of reassessing testing policies and practices, 9) the need for increasing access to outpatient therapies and prophylactics, and 10) the necessity to better prepare for future pandemics.
Soc Sci Med
April 2022
Department of Health Policy, The London School of Economics and Political Science, London, WC2A 2AE, United Kingdom; Department of Econometrics, Statistics and Applied Economics, Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, 08034, Spain; Center for Research in Health and Economics, University of Pompeu Fabr
Opioid abuse has become a public health concern among many developed countries, with policymakers searching for strategies to mitigate adverse effects on population health and the wider economy. The United Kingdom has seen dramatic increases in opioid-related mortality following the financial crises in 2008. We examine the impact of spending cuts resulting from government prescribed austerity measures on opioid-related hospitalisations and mortality, thereby expanding on existing evidence suggesting a countercyclical relationship with macroeconomic performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLancet Reg Health West Pac
January 2022
Center for Global Development, Washington DC, United States.
Background: The Philippines has the highest cumulative COVID-19 cases and deaths in the Western-Pacific. To explore the broader health impacts of the pandemic, we assessed the magnitude and duration of changes in hospital admissions for 12 high-burden diseases and the utilization of five common procedures by lockdown stringency, hospital level, and equity in patient access.
Methods: Our analysis used Philippine social health insurance data filed by 1,295 hospitals in 2019 and 2020.
J Dev Econ
November 2021
Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, United States of America.
We conduct an adaptive randomized controlled trial to evaluate the impact of a SMS-based information campaign on the adoption of social distancing and handwashing in rural Bihar, India, six months into the COVID-19 pandemic. We test 10 arms that vary in delivery timing and message framing, changing content to highlight gains or losses for either one's own family or community. We identify the optimal treatment separately for each targeted behavior by adaptively allocating shares across arms over 10 experimental rounds using exploration sampling.
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