Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Weekend Reading

Friday, February 3rd, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

This week on the MHTF blog:

  1. HSPH students Hannah Ratcliffe and Elena Chopyak write about their experiences with MHTF partners during the Winter Session
  2. Submit your nominations for the Women Deliver 50
  3. Maternal health articles in the February WHO Bulletin
  4. New report suggests malaria incidence is greater than previously thought

Some reading for the weekend:

  1. Tanzanian president writes on maternal and child health
  2. Gender disparities for child mortality in India
  3. An analysis of maternal health in Liberia
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IHME Report Says that Malaria Interventions are Working, but the Problem is Bigger than We Thought

Friday, February 3rd, 2012 by KateMitch

A newborn sleeps under a bed net in rural Jharkhand, India. Photo by Kate Mitchell




“You learn in medical school that people exposed to malaria as children develop immunity and rarely die from malaria as adults. What we have found in hospital records, death records, surveys, and other sources shows that just is not the case,” said Dr. Christopher Murray, Director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and lead author of a new study on global malaria mortality.


A new report from IHME published in the Lancet yesterday, Global malaria mortality between 1980 and 2010: a systematic analysis, shows that malaria is responsible for almost twice the number of deaths worldwide than previously believed.


According to the press release about the new study, “IHME researchers say that deaths from malaria have been missed by previous studies because of the assumption that the disease mainly kills children under 5. IHME found that more than 78,000 children aged 5 to 14, and more than 445,000 people ages 15 and older died from malaria in 2010, meaning that 42% of all malaria deaths were in people aged 5 and older.”


The study did not look specifically at the number of pregnant women dying of malaria or the relationship between malaria and maternal morbidity and mortality, but it did show that far more adults are dying from malaria than we previously believed. It is safe to assume that the number of pregnant women dying from malaria is likely also largely underreported.


The good news from the study is that the number of malaria deaths has fallen rapidly in recent years—likely due to the ramping up of efforts to combat the disease. Researchers pointed to the scale-up of insecticide-treated bed nets and artemisinin-combination treatments (ACTs) as major factors in the drop of malaria deaths.


Unfortunately, malaria prevention, screening and treatment among pregnant women remains low, despite clear evidence of effective interventions and significant investment in this area—and it is not clear whether malaria deaths are, in fact, falling for this segment of the population.


The Maternal Health Task Force is exploring opportunities to bring together maternal and newborn health professionals with malaria experts in order to discuss the challenge of low coverage of malaria prevention for pregnant women and how we might work together to ensure that malaria deaths are on the decline for pregnant women as well as the general population.


As our work in this area develops, we will keep you posted here on the MHTF Blog.



Related reading:

Check out the data visualizations that accompany the new study–and explore global trends in malaria mortality between 1980 and 2010.


Read the Washington Post coverage of the new study here.


In an Op-ed in the New York Times on Wednesday, Paul Farmer shares four reasons why it is imperative that the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria continues to get the support it needs.


This study, An Autopsy Study of Maternal Mortality in Mozambique: The Contribution of Infectious Diseases, showed that in a tertiary hospital in Mozambique, at least half of maternal deaths were linked to an infectious disease—and highlighted the importance of implementing malaria prevention strategies such as intermittent preventive treatment and insecticide treated bed nets.


For more information on malaria in pregnancy, visit the Malaria in Pregnancy Consortium website.  Be sure to check out their interactive map of research projects relating to malaria in pregnancy, here.

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Maternal Health Featured Prominently in February WHO Bulletin

Wednesday, February 1st, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

In the February 2012 issue of the Bulletin of the World Health Organization, maternal health is prominently featured with seven (half!) of the articles directly or very closely touching on maternal health. Just a few years ago, this focus on maternal health in such a prominent journal would have nearly unthinkable. However, given the attention to maternal health to and hard work of our colleagues, partners and allies throughout the world, voices of mothers and their advocates are now heard loudly on the global scene.

 

The seven articles feature maternal health issues including:

  1. A CEDAW decision on human rights and maternal mortality
  2. Fistula treatment in Sierra Leone
  3. Population control and human rights
  4. Access to facilities in Timor-Leste
  5. Health systems and maternal health in the Philippines
  6. Female genital cutting in west Africa
  7. Perinatal mental disorders
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Call for Nominations: Women Deliver 50, Inspiring Ideas & Solutions to Deliver for Girls & Women

Monday, January 30th, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

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The following originally appeared on Women Deliver’s blog. It is posted here with permission.

 

Every year, in conjunction with International Women’s Day, Women Deliver celebrates the progress made on behalf of girls and women worldwide. Our Women Deliver 100 list in 2011, which featured 100 of the most inspiring people who have delivered for girls and women, was covered by over 100 traditional and new media sources. This year, to continue the momentum, we are spotlighting the top 50 inspiring ideas and solutions that deliver for girls and women. We would love to hear what you think are the most innovative, impactful, and promising advancements in overcoming gender inequality.

 

These advancements could have been made by an individual, governments, the private sector, or civil society, but they must have helped to improve the condition of girls and women around the world, in one or more of the following 5 categories:

  • Technologies and Innovations
  • Educational Initiatives
  • Health Modernization
  • Advocacy and Awareness Campaigns
  • Leadership and Empowerment Programs

 

Examples of inequities that the solutions may have addressed include, but are not limited to: Violence Against Women; Sex Trafficking; Child Marriage; Political Processes; Maternal Health; Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights; HIV/AIDS, Lesbian; Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Rights; Economic Inequity; or Female Genital Mutilation.

 

NOMINATIONS MUST BE SUBMITTED NO LATER THAN FEBRUARY 10, 2012.

 

Once all nominations have been received, a selection committee of experts and advocates from leading global NGOs and foundations will choose 25 per category. Voting opens on February 20th, and the Top 50 (10 winners per category) will be announced on International Women’s Day. The winners from each category will be featured prominently on Women Deliver’s website, through the selection committee’s social media portals, and at the Women Deliver 2013 conference in Kuala Lumpur.

 

Criteria:

  • Advancements may include projects, programs, technologies, initiatives, or campaigns launched anywhere in the world
  • Solution or Idea must have been implemented in the last five years
  • Can be grassroots or global in scale (example: community initiative or global technology)
  • If the solution has been ongoing for more than a year, please provide quantitative and qualitative data that demonstrates results
  • If the idea is in the early stages of implementation, please include an explanation of why it will be effective
  • Please provide website (if applicable) and references

 

Selection Committee:

-Chair: Jill Sheffield, Founder and President of Women Deliver
-Jimmie Briggs, Founder and Executive Director of Man Up
-Cory Heyman, Chief Program Officer at Room to Read
-Josh Nesbit, CEO of Medic Mobile
-Amie Newman, Communications Officer and Editor of the Impatient Optimist at the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
-Lyric Thompson, Special Assistant to the President at the International Center for Research on Women
-Michael Tirrell, Communications Manager for Media and Public Affairs at Marie Stopes International

 

Click here to make a nomination. Thank you in advance for you submissions!

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Weekend Reading

Friday, January 27th, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

This week on the MHTF blog:

  1. We posted a number of opportunities: a Fellowship at PRB; submit an abstract for the American Public Health Association Annual Meeting; and internships with the UCSF Safe Motherhood Program
  2. Maternal health in marginalized communities in India
  3. HSPH students spend their winter term with MHTF partners
  4. Bill Gates’ Annual Letter and the poorest of the poor
  5. We welcomed new staff members to the MHTF team

Some reading for the weekend:

  1. Cote d’Ivoire abandons free health care scheme
  2. Who is (or isn’t) participating in India’s JSY program?
  3. PMTCT coverage at different health facilities in four African countries
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New Appointments at the Maternal Health Task Force

Friday, January 27th, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

Anne M. Austin and Kate Mitchell are the two most recent additions to the Maternal Health Task Force team. Anne will lead the MHTF’s new research, monitoring and evaluation efforts as Deputy Director for Research, Monitoring and Evaluation, while Kate will keep the MHTF’s cutting-edge knowledge management system content-rich and timely as the Managing Editor.

 

Born in Indonesia to a Norwegian mother and American father, and raised in Nigeria, Kenya and Saudi Arabia, Anne Austin brings a personal and professional global perspective to the MHTF. She holds a BA from Emory University, a MPH from the Rollins School of Public Health, and a ScD from the Harvard School of Public Health’s in Global Health and Population Studies and was named a Pritzker Fellow two years in a row.

 

Anne has conducted extensive research in areas that make her exceptionally well-suited to lead the MHTF’s innovative implementation research agenda on the quality of maternal health care. Her technical and analytical skills will enable the MHTF to contribute significantly to the global challenge of systematizing proven interventions to improve maternal health outcomes especially in high-burden settings. Among her studies, Anne has looked at maternal and child health trends in Egypt, analyzed global policy approaches to child nutrition, analyzed couple concordance on attitudes towards abortion and knowledge of abortion, and managed a unique CDC study on the prevention of malaria in pregnancy.

 

Kate returns to the MHTF where she began as a Knowledge Management Assistant in the project’s first phase, cataloguing and tagging the first on-line library exclusive to maternal health as well as helping to establish and populate the MHTF’s social media platforms. She left the MHTF when she was named a Clinton Fellow at the America India Foundation. Over the course of year, she worked in Jamshedpur, Jharkhand and Kolkata in West Bengal investigating the implementation of the Janani Suraksha Yojana conditional cash transfer program. She also designed and facilitated workshops for community health workers on community involvement in maternal and newborn health programs. Kate runs her own maternal health blog and is a frequent contributor to others. She holds a BA from Florida International University and an MPH from Boston University School of Public Health.

 

The MHTF is pleased to welcome Anne Austin, and to welcome back Kate Mitchell to the team! To learn more about Anne, Kate and the rest of the MHTF staff, click here.

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Gates Annual Letter Focuses on Poorest of the Poor

Thursday, January 26th, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

Today, Bill Gates published his annual letter, which this year focuses on improving the lives of the poorest of the poor through innovations in agriculture and promoting global health issues, including vaccines, polio, HIV/AIDS, and family planning.

 

On family planning, Gates writes:

Globally, more than 200 million women say they don’t want to have a child within the next two years but aren’t using contraceptives. If families that wanted to wait a longer period between births or have fewer children had access to the right tools, two things would happen. First, those families would have an easier time facing the challenges of poverty. Second, as national population growth rates came down gradually, governments would be able to better meet the needs of all their people.

 

A significant number of women indicate that they would use modern family planning tools if they were available. Unfortunately, the funding to buy these tools, to make them cheaper, and to provide high-quality information to poor families has been lacking.

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Winter Session Win-Win: Harvard School of Public Health Students Matched with Maternal Health Organizations Around the World

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012 by ablanc

In a recent blog post, Ana Langer, Director of the Maternal Health Task Force (MHTF) at the Women and Health Initiative (W&HI) at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH), explained that the MHTF partners have been “virtually unanimous in calling for more educational opportunities for those interested in maternal health”.

The W&HI and the MHTF are meeting this call to provide more educational opportunities in a number of different ways—including scholarships for maternal health professionals in developing countries to attend scientific and technical meetings, a reiteration of the Young Champions for Maternal Health fellowship program, and the Field Experience in Maternal Health winter session course for graduate students at the Harvard School of Public Health.

The concept of the Field Experience in Maternal Health winter session course is to link highly trained and motivated HSPH graduate students with MHTF partner organizations working in developing countries–creating a “win-win” situation. Based on the needs of the organizations and the skills of the students, students are paired with organizations to spend three weeks working on a focused project during the January winter session. The course provides students with an opportunity to apply their skills and knowledge to maternal health issues in countries facing complex maternal health challenges. Examples of student projects include collecting data, conducting site visits and interviews, completing a needs assessment, developing a draft proposal or report, or launching a new activity or service. As a result of this collaboration, the partner organization projects are strengthened and a young professional gains  important experience working in the field of maternal health.

The first cohort of Harvard School of Public Health Field Experience in Maternal Health winter session students has just completed their field assignments. See below for a list of their placement countries and host organizations!

To learn more about the students’ work at their various project sites, check back soon! Over the next couple of weeks, the students will be sharing photos, stories, and lessons from their field assignments here on the MHTF Blog.

If you are a graduate student at Harvard School of Public Health and are interested in applying for the Field Experience in Maternal Health winter session next year, visit the Women and Health Initiative site in August 2012 for information on how and when to apply. You can also subscribe to the MHTF Blog and we will be sure to update you. (Just enter your email address in the right panel and click subscribe!)

If your organization is interested in hosting a Harvard School of Public Health graduate student next winter, please fill out this form and return it to Elizabeth Claise at eclaise@hsph.harvard.edu.

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The Need to Reach Marginalized Populations

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

The progress made on maternal health since the creation of the Millennium Development Goals has been uneven both between and within countries. However, the data coverage, particularly for maternal mortality ratios (MMR), within countries cannot always tells us the full story.

 

India’s MMR decreased by nearly 60% between 1990 and 2008 according to UN data. However, some estimates suggest that certain populations have an MMR over twice its country-wide MMR of 230 maternal death per 100,000 live births. A new paper published this month in BMC Public Health explores maternal experience of marginalized women in Karnataka, India.

 

Adamson et al. write:

This population-based study found that institutional deliveries in rural areas of Mysore District had increased from 51% to 70% between the years of 2002 and 2008. Additionally, it showed that while significantly more mothers were seeking antenatal care and delivering in institutional settings, large disparities continued to exist in the uptake of maternal health services among different castes. Mothers belonging to OBC or general castes were almost twice as likely to have an institutional birth as compared to SC/ST

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Present Your Work at the APHA Annual Meeting

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012 by Christopher Lindahl

The deadline of February 6th. is fast approaching to submit abstracts for the American Public Health Association’s Annual Meeting. This year’s meeting will be held in San Francisco, CA in October 2012.

 

Last year’s conference in Washington featured a number of sessions on maternal and child health.

 

Visit APHA’s Annual Meeting website to learn more about presenting and attending this year’s meeting.

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