IRCT [to 2 May 2015]

IRCT [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.irct.org/
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News
IRCT provides UNCAT with recommendations on right to rehabilitation
29 April 2015
As part of the 54th session of the UN Committee against Torture, the IRCT held an expert briefing and discussion on the right to rehabilitation for torture victims. The briefing aimed at providing a venue for the Committee to examine practical examples of experiences and challenges in implementing the right to rehabilitation for torture victims. In 2012, the Committee had issued General Comment #3, in which it expressed its authoritative interpretation of the scope of the right to rehabilitation, and continues to enhance the promotion of this right throughout its work…

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Over 4,000 women and girls victims of torture supported by La Luz Fund in 2014
29 April 2015
In 2014, with support of the La Luz Fund, 16 IRCT members treated more than 3,000 women and 1,200 children subjected to torture and sexual violence.
The La Luz Fund supports work aimed at women and girls who are oppressed or in danger of being victims of human rights abuses because they belong to a vulnerable group, whether it is based on belief, ethnicity, sexual orientation or other minority group status…
…The grants were distributed to centres in 14 countries, seeking to empower and heal female victims. Five centres in Sub-Saharan Africa received the largest portion of the grants, totalling €47,000, while four centres in Asia were granted a total of €42,620. Three centres in the MENA region received grants amounting to €26,000, and two centres in both Latin America and Europe were awarded a total of €17,000 and €11,992, respectively.
Victims received medical services tailored to their individual needs, including examinations, clinical tests and medicine, provided free of charge. Taking into account the different cultural contexts, the centres also provided psychological assistance, offering both individual and group counselling.

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 2 May 2015]

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news-stories/press/press-releases

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Press releases
Yemen: Population Flees Haradh as Attacks Continue
April 27, 2015
SANA’A, YEMEN – At least 11 people have been killed and 67 injured since April 21 during constant airstrikes and shelling in Haradh district, northwestern Yemen, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said today.

Field News
Yemen: Crisis Update, April 27, 2015
April 30, 2015
The conflict in Yemen currently has the country divided between the Houthi movement, supported by former president Saleh, which controls the north of the country (including the capital Sana’a) and continues its southward advance, and an anti-Houthi coalition based mainly in the South. President Hadi of the transitional government fled to Saudi Arabia in March.

South Sudan: Perpetual Displacement as Conflict Continues
April 27, 2015
Continuing violence in South Sudan’s Upper Nile State is leading to more death and displacement, the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said today. Many of those affected are already displaced and living in dire conditions. MSF calls on all parties to the South Sudanese conflict to allow for necessary humanitarian access to all parts of the country.

MSF Sending More Medical and Relief Teams to Assist Victims of the Nepal Earthquake
April 26, 2015
A 7.8-magnitude earthquake shook the Kathmandu Valley before noon on Saturday, April 25. Although the full extent of the damage is still unknown, initial reports say houses and buildings collapsed in Kathmandu and surrounding areas. Tremors were also strongly felt in northern India, in the states of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh.

MSF Sending Medical, Non-Medical Teams to Assist Victims of Nepal Earthquake
April 25, 2015
The international medical humanitarian medical organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is sending four teams of medical and non-medical staff to Nepal to assist those affected by the earthquake. The teams will leave from Bihar state in India, which is close to the border with Nepal and where MSF has been working since 2007. MSF will also send 3000 kits non-food items and medical kits to Nepal.

OXFAM [to 2 May 2015]

OXFAM [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressreleases

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Oxfam trucks in aid to Nepal by land for the first time from India
30 April 2015
Three trucks carrying tarpaulins, foam sheets, water containers, chlorine tablets and solar lamps have left Gorkhpur and another two have departed Kolkata with water filters and latrine construction materials.

Airport bottleneck and fuel shortages hampering aid efforts in Nepal
29 April 2015
A bottleneck of people and supplies at Nepal’s Kathmandu airport combined with nationwide fuel shortages, blocked roads and difficult terrain is hampering the efforts of aid agencies and emergency services to reach earthquake survivors.

40 years of exile: Sahrawi refugees abandoned by the international community
28 April 2015
The Western Sahara harbors one of the longest standing but yet unknown humanitarian disasters in recent history. Today, marking 40 years since the start, the UN Security Council is about to discuss the stalemate.

Oxfam to help at least 350,000 hit by Nepal earthquake
27 April 2015
Oxfam today stepped up its relief effort to help an initial 350,000 people hit by the earthquake in Nepal, providing clean water, toilets and shelter to thousands of people.

One month on, humanitarian situation in Yemen deteriorating, as conflict spirals out of control
27 April 2015
One month into the crisis, Oxfam warns that power stations in Yemen are almost out of fuel, phone networks are suffering extensive damage, and the banking system is at a standstill. The escalation in violence has also damaged the water infrastructure leaving millions of Yemenis without clean water.

SOS-Kinderdorf International [to 2 May 2015]

SOS-Kinderdorf International [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.sos-childrensvillages.org/about-sos/press/press-releases
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At SOS Child Friendly Space Nepali children draw out earthquake trauma
01.05.2015 – An SOS Child Friendly Space in Bhaktapur is giving Nepali children whose families have lost everything in the earthquake a safe haven in which to play, relax and express their trauma through drawing and other activities. More

ODI [to 2 May 2015]

ODI [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.odi.org/media

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European Report on Development 2015: combining finance and policies to implement a transformative post-2015 development agenda
Research reports and studies | May 2015
This report analyses the considerable changes in the Financing For Development landscape since the 2002 Monterrey Consensus.

Failing Adolescents: Social Control, Political Economy & Human Development in post-war Sri Lanka
resource | April 2015 | Sarala Emmanuel, Kusala Wettasinghe, Fiona Samuels, Sivaprashanthi Thambaiah, Indrani Rajendran, Ananda Galappatti
Drawing on a study from two war-affected villages in Sri Lanka, this paper examines the multi-faceted challenges that adolescents face in communities attempting to retain and redefine boundaries, identities, and social and moral regulation in a post-war context.

Do digital information and communications technologies increase the voice and influence of women and girls?
Research reports and studies | April 2015 | Tam O’Neil and Clare Cummings
Part of two-year Learning and Evidence Project on Women’s Voice and Leadership in Decision-Making, this rapid evidence review looks at interventions that aim to build women and girls’ voice and influence through their use of digital information and communication…

Support to women and girls’ leadership: a rapid review of the evidence
Research reports and studies | April 2015 | Tam O’Neil and Georgia Plank, with Pilar Domingo
Part of a two-year Learning and Evidence Project on Women’s Voice and Leadership in Decision-Making, this rapid evidence review looks at interventions that aim to build women and/or girls’ leadership.

Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian Action (ALNAP) [to 2 May 2015]

Active Learning Network for Accountability and Performance in Humanitarian Action (ALNAP) [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.alnap.org/

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WORTH A REREAD
Responding to earthquakes 2008 – Learning from earthquake relief and recovery operations
July 2008 :: 40pp Cosgrave, J
Full report
This paper summarises lessons from 30 years of humanitarian response to earthquakes. It assumes that readers are already familiar with the more general lessons in the aid sector, such as the key roles of needs assessment, effective coordination, accountability, and consultation with the affected population. The main intended audiences are operational decision-makers and relief programme managers working in the response to sudden-onset natural disasters.

American Journal of Infection Control – May 2015

American Journal of Infection Control
May 2015 Volume 43, Issue 5, p423-546, e1-e17
http://www.ajicjournal.org/current

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Cleaning and disinfecting environmental surfaces in health care: Toward an integrated framework for infection and occupational illness prevention
Margaret M. Quinn, Paul K. Henneberger, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), National Occupational Research Agenda (NORA) Cleaning and Disinfecting in Healthcare Working Group
p424–434
Published online: March 17, 2015
Open Access
Preview
The Cleaning and Disinfecting in Healthcare Working Group of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, National Occupational Research Agenda, is a collaboration of infection prevention and occupational health researchers and practitioners with the objective of providing a more integrated approach to effective environmental surface cleaning and disinfection (C&D) while protecting the respiratory health of health care personnel.

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Planning and response to Ebola virus disease: An integrated approach
Philip W. Smith, Kathleen C. Boulter, Angela L. Hewlett, Christopher J. Kratochvil, Elizabeth J. Beam, Shawn G. Gibbs, John-Martin J. Lowe, Michelle M. Schwedhelm
p441–446
Preview
The care of patients with Ebola virus disease (EVD) requires the application of critical care medicine principles under conditions of stringent infection control precautions. The care of patients with EVD requires a number of elements in terms of physical layout, personal protective apparel, and other equipment. Provision of care is demanding in terms of depth of staff and training. The key to safely providing such care is a system that brings many valuable skills to the table, and allows communication between these individuals.

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Influenza vaccination uptake and its socioeconomic determinants in the older adult Iranian population: A national study
Parisa Taheri Tanjani, Mehran Babanejad, Farid Najafi
e1–e5
Published online: March 20, 2015
Preview
The relationship between socioeconomic status and influenza vaccine uptake has a different pattern in different societies. The objective of this study was to assess the socioeconomic factors influencing influenza vaccination uptake in the older adult Iranian population.

BMC Health Services Research (Accessed 2 May 2015)

BMC Health Services Research
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmchealthservres/content
(Accessed 2 May 2015)

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Research article
Workforce interventions to improve access to emergency contraception pills: a systematic review of current evidence in low- and middle-income countries and recommendations for improving performance
Angela Dawson, Nguyen-Toan Tran, Elizabeth Westley, Viviana Mangiaterra, Mario Festin
BMC Health Services Research 2015, 15:180 (26 April 2015)

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Research article
HIV service delivery models towards ‘Zero AIDS-related Deaths’: a collaborative case study of 6 Asia and Pacific countries
Masami Fujita, Krishna C Poudel, Kimberly Green, Teodora Wi, Iyanthi Abeyewickreme, Massimo Ghidinelli, Masaya Kato, Mean Vun, Seng Sopheap, Khin San, Phavady Bollen, Krishna Rai, Atul Dahal, Durga Bhandari, Peniel Boas, Jessica Yaipupu, Petchsri Sirinirund, Pairoj Saonuam, Bui Duong, Do Nhan, Nguyen Thu, Masamine Jimba
BMC Health Services Research 2015, 15:176 (24 April 2015)

Clinical trialist perspectives on the ethics of adaptive clinical trials: a mixed-methods analysis

BMC Medical Ethics
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcmedethics/content
(Accessed 2 May 2015)

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Research article
Clinical trialist perspectives on the ethics of adaptive clinical trials: a mixed-methods analysis
Laurie J Legocki, William J Meurer, Shirley Frederiksen, Roger J Lewis, Valerie L Durkalski, Donald A Berry, William G Barsan, Michael D Fetters BMC Medical Ethics 2015, 16:27 (3 May 2015)

BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth (Accessed 2 May 2015)

BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcpregnancychildbirth/content
(Accessed 2 May 2015)

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Research article
Impact of a community-based perinatal and newborn preventive care package on perinatal and neonatal mortality in a remote mountainous district in Northern Pakistan
Zahid A Memon, Gul N Khan, Sajid B Soofi, Imam Y Baig, Zulfiqar A Bhutta BMC Pregnancy & Childbirth 2015, 15:106 (30 April 2015)
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Research article
Effect of an integrated maternal health intervention on skilled provider’s care for maternal health in remote rural areas of Bangladesh: a pre and post study
Nafisa Huq, Anisuddin Ahmed, Nafis Haque, Moyazzam Hossaine, Jamal Uddin, Faisal Ahmed, MA Quaiyum BMC Pregnancy & Childbirth 2015, 15:104 (28 April 2015)

BMC Public Health (Accessed 2 May 2015)

BMC Public Health
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcpublichealth/content
(Accessed 2 May 2015)

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Research article
Factors associated with appropriate home management of uncomplicated malaria in children in Kassena-Nankana district of Ghana and implications for community case management of childhood illness: a cross-sectional study
Soter Ameh, Paul Welaga, Caroline W Kabiru, Wilfred Ndifon, Bassey Ikpeme, Emmanuel Nsan, Angela Oyo-Ita
BMC Public Health 2015, 15:458 (2 May 2015)

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Research article
Current state and trends of access to sanitation in Ethiopia and the need to revise indicators to monitor progress in the Post-2015 era
Abebe Beyene, Tamene Hailu, Kebede Faris, Helmut Kloos
BMC Public Health 2015, 15:451 (2 May 2015)

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Research article
Factors associated with stunting among children according to the level of food insecurity in the household: a cross-sectional study in a rural community of Southeastern Kenya
Chisa Shinsugi, Masaki Matsumura, Mohamed Karama, Junichi Tanaka, Mwatasa Changoma, Satoshi Kaneko
BMC Public Health 2015, 15:441 (30 April 2015)

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Research article
Adherence to multiple micronutrient powder among young children in rural Bangladesh: a cross-sectional study
Mirak Angdembe, Nuzhat Choudhury, Mohammad Haque, Tahmeed Ahmed
BMC Public Health 2015, 15:440 (30 April 2015)

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Research article
The feasibility of community mobilisation for child injury prevention in rural Nepal: a programme for female community health volunteers
Puspa Pant, Bharat Budhathoki, Matthew Ellis, Dharma Manandhar, Toity Deave, Julie Mytton BMC Public Health 2015, 15:430 (28 April 2015)

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Research article
Knowledge and attitude towards rape and child sexual abuse – a community-based cross-sectional study in Rural Tanzania
Muzdalifat Abeid, Projestine Muganyizi, Siriel Massawe, Rose Mpembeni, Elisabeth Darj, Pia Axemo
BMC Public Health 2015, 15:428 (28 April 2015)

BMC Research Notes (Accessed 2 May 2015)

BMC Research Notes
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcresnotes/content
(Accessed 2 May 2015)
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Research article
Palliative care in South Asia: a systematic review of the evidence for care models, interventions, and outcomes
Taranjit Singh, Richard Harding BMC Research Notes 2015, 8:172 (30 April 2015)

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Research article
Uptake of influenza vaccination in pregnancy amongst Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women: a mixed-methods pilot study
Kerry-Ann F O’Grady, Melissa Dunbar, Linda G Medlin, Kerry K Hall, Maree Toombs, Judith Meiklejohn, Lisa McHugh, Peter D Massey, Amy Creighton, Ross M Andrews BMC Research Notes 2015,
Abstract (provisional)
Background
Influenza infection during pregnancy causes significant morbidity and mortality. Immunisation against influenza is recommended during pregnancy in several countries however, there are limited data on vaccine uptake, and the determinants of vaccination, in pregnant Australian Aboriginal and/or Torres Islander women. This study aimed to collect pilot data on vaccine uptake and attitudes towards, and perceptions of, maternal influenza vaccination in this population in order to inform the development of larger studies.
Methods
A mixed-methods study comprised of a cross-sectional survey and yarning circles (focus groups) amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women attending two primary health care services. The women were between 28 weeks gestation and less than 16 weeks post-birth. These data were supplemented by data collected in an ongoing national Australian study of maternal influenza vaccination. Aboriginal research officers collected community data and data from the yarning circles which were based on a narrative enquiry framework. Descriptive statistics were used to analyse quantitative data and thematic analyses were applied to qualitative data.
Results
Quantitative data were available for 53 women and seven of these women participated in the yarning circles. The proportion of women who reported receipt of an influenza vaccine during their pregnancy was 9/53. Less than half of the participants (21/53) reported they had been offered the vaccine in pregnancy. Forty-three percent reported they would get a vaccine if they became pregnant again. Qualitative data suggested perceived benefits to themselves and their infants were important factors in the decision to be vaccinated but there was insufficient information available to women to make that choice.
Conclusions
The rates of influenza immunisation may continue to remain low for Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander women during pregnancy. Access to services and recommendations by a health care worker may be factors in the lower rates. Our findings support the need for larger studies directed at monitoring and understanding the determinants of maternal influenza vaccine uptake during pregnancy in Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women. This research will best be achieved using methods that account for the social and cultural contexts of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander communities in Australia.

Bulletin of the World Health Organization – Volume 93, Number 5, May 2015

Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Volume 93, Number 5, May 2015, 285-360
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/93/5/en/

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EDITORIALS
Knowledge for effective action to improve the health of women, children and adolescents in the post-2015 era: a call for papers
Flavia Bustreo & Robin Gorna
doi: 10.2471/BLT.15.156521

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Research
Surveys of measles vaccination coverage in eastern and southern Africa: a review of quality and methods used
Reinhard Kaiser, Messeret E Shibeshi, Jethro M Chakauya, Emelda Dzeka, Balcha G Masresha, Fussum Daniel & Nestor Shivute
Abstract
Objective
To assess the methods used in the evaluation of measles vaccination coverage, identify quality concerns and provide recommendations for improvement.
Methods
We reviewed surveys that were conducted to evaluate supplementary measles immunization activities in eastern and southern Africa during 2012 and 2013. We investigated the organization(s) undertaking each survey, survey design, sample size, the numbers of study clusters and children per study cluster, recording of immunizations and methods of analysis. We documented sampling methods at the level of clusters, households and individual children. We also assessed the length of training for field teams at national and regional levels, the composition of teams and the supervision provided.
Findings
The surveys were conducted in Comoros, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia and Zimbabwe. Of the 13 reports we reviewed, there were weaknesses in 10 of them for ethical clearance, 9 for sample size calculation, 6 for sampling methods, 12 for training structures, 13 for supervision structures and 11 for data analysis.
Conclusion
We recommend improvements in the documentation of routine and supplementary immunization, via home-based vaccination cards or other records. For surveys conducted after supplementary immunization, a standard protocol is required. Finally, we recommend that standards be developed for report templates and for the technical review of protocols and reports. This would ensure that the results of vaccination coverage surveys are accurate, comparable, reliable and valuable for programme improvement.

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Research
A multimedia consent tool for research participants in the Gambia: a randomized controlled trial
Muhammed Olanrewaju Afolabi, Nuala McGrath, Umberto D’Alessandro, Beate Kampmann, Egeruan B Imoukhuede, Raffaella M Ravinetto, Neal Alexander, Heidi J Larson, Daniel Chandramohan & Kalifa Bojang
Abstract
Objective
To assess the effectiveness of a multimedia informed consent tool for adults participating in a clinical trial in the Gambia.
Methods
Adults eligible for inclusion in a malaria treatment trial (n = 311) were randomized to receive information needed for informed consent using either a multimedia tool (intervention arm) or a standard procedure (control arm). A computerized, audio questionnaire was used to assess participants’ comprehension of informed consent. This was done immediately after consent had been obtained (at day 0) and at subsequent follow-up visits (days 7, 14, 21 and 28). The acceptability and ease of use of the multimedia tool were assessed in focus groups.
Findings
On day 0, the median comprehension score in the intervention arm was 64% compared with 40% in the control arm (P = 0.042). The difference remained significant at all follow-up visits. Poorer comprehension was independently associated with female sex (odds ratio, OR: 0.29; 95% confidence interval, CI: 0.12–0.70) and residing in Jahaly rather than Basse province (OR: 0.33; 95% CI: 0.13–0.82). There was no significant independent association with educational level. The risk that a participant’s comprehension score would drop to half of the initial value was lower in the intervention arm (hazard ratio 0.22, 95% CI: 0.16–0.31). Overall, 70% (42/60) of focus group participants from the intervention arm found the multimedia tool clear and easy to understand.
Conclusion
A multimedia informed consent tool significantly improved comprehension and retention of consent information by research participants with low levels of literacy.

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Systematic Reviews
Strategies to increase the demand for childhood vaccination in low- and middle-income countries: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Mira Johri, Myriam Cielo Pérez, Catherine Arsenault, Jitendar K Sharma, Nitika Pant Pai, Smriti Pahwa & Marie-Pierre Sylvestre
Abstract
Objective
To investigate which strategies to increase demand for vaccination are effective in increasing child vaccine coverage in low- and middle-income countries.
Methods
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, Cochrane library, POPLINE, ECONLIT, CINAHL, LILACS, BDSP, Web of Science and Scopus databases for relevant studies, published in English, French, German, Hindi, Portuguese and Spanish up to 25 March 2014. We included studies of interventions intended to increase demand for routine childhood vaccination. Studies were eligible if conducted in low- and middle-income countries and employing a randomized controlled trial, non-randomized controlled trial, controlled before-and-after or interrupted time series design. We estimated risk of bias using Cochrane collaboration guidelines and performed random-effects meta-analysis.
Findings
We identified 11 studies comprising four randomized controlled trials, six cluster randomized controlled trials and one controlled before-and-after study published in English between 1996 and 2013. Participants were generally parents of young children exposed to an eligible intervention. Six studies demonstrated low risk of bias and five studies had moderate to high risk of bias. We conducted a pooled analysis considering all 11 studies, with data from 11 512 participants. Demand-side interventions were associated with significantly higher receipt of vaccines, relative risk (RR): 1.30, (95% confidence interval, CI: 1.17–1.44). Subgroup analyses also demonstrated significant effects of seven education and knowledge translation studies, RR: 1.40 (95% CI: 1.20–1.63) and of four studies which used incentives, RR: 1.28 (95% CI: 1.12–1.45).
Conclusion
Demand-side interventions lead to significant gains in child vaccination coverage in low- and middle-income countries. Educational approaches and use of incentives were both effective strategies.

Diabetes in an emergency context: the Malian case study

Conflict and Health
[Accessed 2 May 2015]
http://www.conflictandhealth.com/

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Case study
Diabetes in an emergency context: the Malian case study
Besançon S, Fall IS, Doré M, Sidibé A, Hagon O, Chappuis F and Beran D Conflict and Health 2015, 9:15 (1 May 2015)
Abstract
Background
The World Health Organization proposes 6 building blocks for health systems. These are vulnerable to challenges in many contexts. Findings from a 2004 assessment of the health system in Mali for diabetes care found many barriers were present for the management and care of this condition. Following this assessment different projects to strengthen the healthcare system for people living with diabetes were undertaken by a local NGO, Santé Diabète.
Case description
In March 2012, following a Coup in Bamako, the northern part of Mali was occupied and cut-off from the rest of the country. This had a major impact on the health system throughout the country. Due to the lack of response by humanitarian actors, Santé Diabète in close collaboration with other local stakeholders developed a humanitarian response for patients with diabetes. This response included evacuation of children with Type 1 diabetes from northern regions to Bamako; supplies of medicines and tools for management of diabetes; and support to people with diabetes who moved from the north to the south of the country.
Discussion
It has been argued that diabetes is a good tracer for health systems and based on Santé Diabète’s experience in Mali, diabetes could also be used as a tracer in the context of emergencies. One lesson from this experience is that although people with diabetes should be included as a vulnerable part of the population they are not considered as such. Also within a complex emergency different “diabetes populations” may exist with different needs requiring tailored responses, such as internally displaced people versus those still in conflict areas. From Santé Diabète’s perspective, the challenge was changing the ways it operated from a development NGO to an emergency NGO. In this role it could rely on its knowledge of the local situation and its function as part of the post-conflict situation.
Conclusion
The lessons learnt from this experience by Santé Diabète in Mali may be useful for other NGOs and the humanitarian response in general in addressing the challenge of managing non communicable diseases and diabetes in conflict and disaster situations in countries with weak health systems.

Health care: the challenge to deal with uncertainty and value judgment

Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation
http://www.resource-allocation.com/
(Accessed 2 May 2015)

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Commentary
Health care: the challenge to deal with uncertainty and value judgment
Marcos Bosi Ferraz
Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation 2015, 13:8 (1 May 2015)
Abstract (provisional)
The exponential increase of knowledge in the life sciences field, more specifically in health sciences, in the past few years has brought additional levels of complexity when deciding and implementing strategies in the health care system. A predominantly paternalistic way to decide about available options to maintain or improve individual or collective health has been moving to a shared-decision model considering the empowered patient. In spite of the reduction of uncertainty when making health and health care decisions due to the advancement in scientific methods, and, in spite of the asymmetry of information, knowledge and power to make decisions, we are progressively recognizing the importance of individuals, the target of the intervention, to express their preferences and to take an active role in the decision making process. Health care stakeholders, recognizing the scarcity of resources available and the fortunate ever increasing amount of applicable knowledge and its corresponding interventions to improve the population quantity and quality of life, should stimulate society to address and discuss health care issues that will guide critical choices and define health care priorities based mostly on judgment and the best evidence available.

Cost-effectiveness of live oral attenuated human rotavirus vaccine in Tanzania

Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation
http://www.resource-allocation.com/
(Accessed 2 May 2015)

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Research
Cost-effectiveness of live oral attenuated human rotavirus vaccine in Tanzania
Ruhago GM, Ngalesoni FN, Robberstad B and Norheim OF Cost Effectiveness and Resource Allocation 2015, 13:7 (28 April 2015)
Abstract (provisional)
Background
Globally, diarrhoea is the second leading cause of morbidity and mortality, responsible for the annual loss of about 10% of the total global childhood disease burden. In Tanzania, Rotavirus infection is the major cause of severe diarrhoea and diarrhoeal mortality in children under five years. Immunisation can reduce the burden, and Tanzania added rotavirus vaccine to its national immunisation programme in January 2013. This study explores the cost effectiveness of introducing rotavirus vaccine within the Tanzania Expanded Programme on Immunisation (EPI).
Methods
We quantified all health system implementation costs, including programme costs, to calculate the cost effectiveness of adding rotavirus immunisation to EPI and the existing provision of diarrhoea treatment (oral rehydration salts and intravenous fluids) to children. We used ingredients and step down costing methods. Cost and coverage data were collected in 2012 at one urban and one rural district hospital and a health centre in Tanzania. We used Disability Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) as the outcome measure and estimated incremental costs and health outcomes using a Markov transition model with weekly cycles up to a five-year time horizon.
Results
The average unit cost per vaccine dose at 93% coverage is US$ 8.4, with marked difference between the urban facility US$ 5.2; and the rural facility US$ 9.8. RV1 vaccine added to current diarrhoea treatment is highly cost effective compared to diarrhoea treatment given alone, with incremental cost effectiveness ratio of US$ 112 per DALY averted, varying from US$ 80–218 in sensitivity analysis. The intervention approaches a 100% probability of being cost effective at a much lower level of willingness-to-pay than the US$609 per capita Tanzania gross domestic product (GDP).
Conclusions
The combination of rotavirus immunisation with diarrhoea treatment is likely to be cost effective when willingness to pay for health is higher than USD 112 per DALY. Universal coverage of the vaccine will accelerate progress towards achievement of the child health Millennium Development Goals.

Development in Practice – Volume 25, Issue 4, 2015

Development in Practice
Volume 25, Issue 4, 2015
http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/cdip20/current

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Increasing access to rural maternal health services in Zambia through demand-side interventions
Cathy Green, Miniratu Soyoola, Mary Surridge, Abdul Razak Badru, Dynes Kaluba, Paula Quigley & Tendayi Kureya
pages 450-464
DOI:10.1080/09614524.2015.1027148
Published online: 24 Apr 2015
Abstract
This paper examines a demand-side intervention that significantly increased access to maternal health services in rural Zambia in a context where skilled birth attendance rates had been stagnant for over two decades. Aspects of the intervention design that were crucial to the programme’s success were the participatory and adult learning-centred approach used to mobilise intervention communities, the use of a community volunteer model, and the design’s sensitivity and responsiveness to underlying social factors and problems. The demand-side intervention is already being scaled up in six districts, and is highly suitable for national level scale-up.

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Co-producing a post-trafficking agenda: collaborating on transforming citizenship in Nepal
Open access
DOI:10.1080/09614524.2015.1029436
Nina Laurie*, Diane Richardson, Meena Poudel, Shakti Samuha & Janet Townsend
pages 465-477
Published online: 24 Apr 2015
Abstract
This article discusses how a new agenda on post-trafficking is gaining momentum through academic and activist anti-trafficking collaborations focused on co-producing knowledge with women who have returned from trafficking situations. Co-production of this nature is important as the issues raised by post-trafficking scenarios are largely ignored in anti-trafficking strategies, and the stigmatisation and poverty which women in these circumstances encounter means they rarely have a voice in policy-making. Drawing on research in Nepal, we present four types of co-produced data around transforming citizenship post-trafficking, and reflect on the strategies for generating and using them for advocacy purposes.

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Farmer-to-farmer extension: opportunities for enhancing performance of volunteer farmer trainers in Kenya
DOI:10.1080/09614524.2015.1029438
Evelyne Kiptot* & Steven Franzel
pages 503-517
Published online: 24 Apr 2015
Abstract
Farmer-to-farmer extension (FFE) is playing a complementary role to formal extension services in facilitating the spread of agricultural technologies and improving farmers’ capacities. The effectiveness and sustainability of such programmes depend on volunteer farmer trainers (VFTs) having technical skills and overcoming process-related challenges that hinder them from achieving the desired outcomes. This article uses quantitative and qualitative data collected from seven sites to explore the challenges experienced by VFTs as they share their knowledge on livestock feed innovations in a dairy development project in Kenya. Sustainable opportunities for enhancing VFTs’ performance are discussed.

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Intersection of disability and gender: multi-layered experiences of Ethiopian women with disabilities
DOI:10.1080/09614524.2015.1031085
Hisayo Katsui* & Mina C. Mojtahedi
pages 563-573
Published online: 24 Apr 2015
Abstract
This article explores the intersection of disability and gender through the experiences of Ethiopian women with disabilities using household chores as an example. As these women are often hidden at home, little literature is available on them. Thus this article aims to highlight the lived experiences of women with disabilities who are or have been at home. The interviewed women introduce peer support as an important means to increase their self-esteem and face stigma in their daily lives in a positive manner through dialogue and negotiation. The paper further suggests employing women with disabilities as a means to enable them to play a significant role in development cooperation by changing the status quo towards equality.