Islamic Relief [to 11 July 2015]

Islamic Relief [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.islamic-relief.org/category/news/

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Identity-based giving: A case study of Islamic Relief
July 8, 2015
The case study on Islamic Relief explores the role that Islamic Relief’s faith identity, faith-based projects and faith-related fundraising mechanisms have enabled the organisation’s continuous growth despite the current financial pressures and squeezed resources experienced by many other civil society organisations.
The full report can be found here.

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 11 July 2015]

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news-stories/press/press-releases

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Press Release
Gaza: One Year After 2014 War, Abject Misery Across Gaza and West Bank
July 08, 2015
PARIS/NEW YORK—One year after the 51-day war in Gaza, neighborhoods destroyed during the fighting have not been rebuilt and hundreds of Palestinians with devastating injuries stemming from the Israeli assault still fill the waiting rooms of the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), many of them needing complex reconstructive surgeries and physical rehabilitation. With the continued blockade and siege of Gaza, it is as if the war had just ended, MSF said.

Press release
Colombia: Humanitarian Needs Increase Amid Escalating Violence
July 08, 2015
BOGOTÁ—Escalated conflict in southwestern Colombia has led to a humanitarian crisis of displacement, restriction on mobility, and lack of access to basic goods and services, including health care, said the international medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) on Wednesday.

Press release
Yemen: Hundreds Wounded in Attacks on Markets and Residential Areas
July 06, 2015
SANA’A, YEMEN/NEW YORK—Medical facilities supported by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) have received hundreds of people wounded in airstrikes and ground shelling across Yemen in recent days, and MSF teams have treated scores of people in several locations, including victims of a July 4 attack on a crowded marketplace in Harad District.

Field News
Jordan: Increasing Numbers of Wounded Syrians Fleeing Barrel Bombs
July 09, 2015
Over the past two weeks, more than 65 war-wounded Syrian patients—most injured by barrel bombs—arrived at the emergency room of Al-Ramtha hospital in northern Jordan, marking a significant spike in the number of patients treated there by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF).

Field news
Russia: New TB Drugs Having Impact Against Resistance
July 08, 2015
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) says a new combination of drugs created to treat extensively drug-resistant tuberculosis (XDR-TB) is having a significant impact on a group of patients in the midst of a two-year treatment to cure their disease.
In 2013, an MSF team in Grozny noticed that a growing number of patients with multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) were not responding to second-line drugs, and there was no alternative medication available in the country to help them.

Field news
Greece: Migrants and Refugees Blocked in Precarious Conditions
July 07, 2015
During the last week, the number of migrants and refugees stranded in the shrubby forests around the village of Idomeni on the border between Greece and the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) increased tenfold. Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) is providing medical consultations, psychological support, and relief items, and is now also planning to reinforce its activities in the area by launching an additional mobile team.

OXFAM [to 11 July 2015]

OXFAM [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressreleases

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Corporate stranglehold on development finance must end in Addis
10 July 2015
The corporate grip on development finance must be loosened if the Finance for Development Conference is going to help mobilize the resources needed to overcome poverty. Oxfam issued this warning ahead of third Finance for Development Conference which is to be held in Addis, Ethiopia from 13 – 16 July.

The Addis Conference is due to agree the financial architecture through which the global community will finance poverty eradication and sustainable development; including how they will raise the estimated additional US$1.5 trillion a year needed to finance the Sustainable Development Goals – a set of universal global goals for eradicating poverty and protecting the planet – which are due to be agreed in New York in September.

Over months of negotiations rich countries have systematically blocked any attempt to rebalance skewed international finance rules that benefit rich countries and companies, but cost the developing world billions of dollars every year. Since 2008, it has been estimated that for every US$1 dollar developing countries gain (through, for example, foreign direct investment or aid) they lose around US$2 dollars (through, for example, tax avoidance and evasion).

Winnie Byanyima, Oxfam International Executive Director said: “Addis risks doing more for the global business communities’ bottom line then it does for the world’s poorest people. Governments must find the vision and leadership to rebalance the rules governing tax, aid and private finance so they work for the many; not just the few. Only then can we hope to mobilize the money needed to overcome poverty and deliver the Sustainable Development Goals.”

Negotiations for Addis are currently at a standstill over the contentious issue of international tax reform. Rich countries are vigorously opposing the establishment of an international tax body that would clamp down on corporate tax dodgers. According to UNCTAD, developing countries lose an estimated US$100 billion a year through just one kind of tax avoidance scheme involving tax havens.

Addis is also set to give the green light to an expanded role for private finance without the checks and balances needed to ensure it delivers for poor people. Private finance has a poor track record; for example, a public private hospital in Lesotho used up 51 percent of the health budget for the entire country and left many rural areas with dangerously low levels of health care coverage.

Byanyima said: “Addis must establish an international tax body where all countries work together to crack down on the corporate tax cheats who are denying developing countries billions of dollars in much needed revenue. Addis must also wake up to the hazards of private finance and put in place the safeguards needed to ensure public money is not squandered on public-private initiatives that have dubious outcomes for poor people.

International finance organizations, such as the World Bank, and national governments will also be announcing funding for a number of development initiatives in Addis.

Byanyima said: “Governments and international institutions should be under no illusions. Pitching up to Addis with funding for a few pet development projects can never be a substitute for the fundamental changes in international finance that are needed pay for a more prosperous, equal and safer world.”

Oxfam is calling for the following steps to be taken in Addis:
:: Creation of an intergovernmental body for cooperation in tax matters that includes all countries, developed and developing, on an equal footing in decision making; and broaden the scope of future tax negotiations to address tax dodging in developing countries.
:: Rich countries re-commit to delivering 0.7 percent of their national income in aid with 50 percent of this aid targeted at the world’s poorest countries within the next five years. They must also ensure climate finance contributions are additional to overseas development aid.
:: Ensure the proper checks and balances are in place to ensure private finance projects reduce poverty and promote sustainable development and ensure that private finance is not promoted as a substitute for overseas aid spending.

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The end of conflict is key to address the serious humanitarian crisis in South Sudan
9 July 2015
On the 4th anniversary of the youngest state in the world, South Sudan is experiencing an unprecedented humanitarian crisis. Almost 8 million people, two-thirds of the total population, are food insecure while more than 2 million people have been forced to flee their homes because of the fighting.

Past recovery conferences show gloomy track record for disaster-hit countries
9 July 2015
Rich countries have paid out less than half the amount they originally pledged to help countries recover from a snapshot of three major humanitarian crises, according to Oxfam.

One year on, a generation in Gaza faces a bleak future under blockade
8 July 2015
One year on from the 2014 Gaza conflict, most people’s lives have not improved and an entire generation of young people face an increasingly bleak future with little hope of jobs, reconstruction or safety, Oxfam said today.

Plan International [to 11 July 2015]

Plan International [to 11 July 2015]
http://plan-international.org/about-plan/resources/media-centre

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07/07/2015:
Plan International welcomes global education commission
7 July 2015: Plan International has welcomed the announcement of a high-level Commission on the Financing of Global Education Opportunities, agreed at the Oslo Summit on Education today.

The Commission, to be chaired by UN Special Envoy for Global Education Gordon Brown, will champion investment in education worldwide. It will seek money to cover the huge shortfall in the financing of global education, and identify ways to deploy currently available resources more effectively.

It is estimated that a total of US$39 billion is needed annually if the world is to achieve the proposed Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) for inclusive and equitable quality education and lifelong learning opportunities for all by 2030…

Women for Women International [to 11 July 2015

Women for Women International [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.womenforwomen.org/press-releases

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10,000 Retrace Steps of Srebrenica Genocide Survivors in Annual March on 20th Anniversary
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
Women for Women International Joins Annual March of Peace from Nezuk to Srebrenica
On the 20th anniversary of the Srebrenica genocide, 10,000 people from around the world are coming together for the Bosnia March of Peace, a 3-day, 75-mile walk to Srebrenica that retraces the steps of survivors who fled the attack. To honor the more than 8,000 people killed, a team of Women for Women International supporters from the United States and Europe will join local staff to march together and meet with women survivors who have rebuilt families and communities destroyed by the tragedy…

ChildFund Alliance [to 11 July 2015]

ChildFund Alliance [to 11 July 2015]
http://childfundalliance.org/news/

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New Secretary General for ChildFund Alliance
The ChildFund Alliance Board is pleased to announce that Meg Gardinier has been appointed as Secretary General. She takes up this role on Monday July 6, 2015.
[undated]
Meg Gardinier is an international, not-for-profit advocate specializing in women and children’s issues. She has over 25 years’ experience in Non-Governmental Organizational development, advocacy, fundraising, strategic leadership and volunteer management.

She joins ChildFund Alliance from the Elevate Children Funders Group, a donor collaborative of 12 foundations committed to preventing violence against children.

Ms Gardinier has held leadership positions including Director of Arigatou International – New York; Managing Director of the U.S. Fund for UNICEF; and Executive Director of the International Catholic Child Bureau – North America. She has also undertaken consultancies for Save the Children and the Global Network of Religions for Children. Ms. Gardinier is a founding member of the Campaign for U.S. Ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child where she is serving as its Volunteer Chair. She is also a board member of End Child Prostitution and Trafficking…

CONCORD [to 11 July 2015]

CONCORD [to 11 July 2015]
European NGO confederation for relief and development
http://www.concordeurope.org/news-room

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CONCORD calls on EU and its Member States to show their leadership in commitment to eradicate global inequality and extreme poverty by 2020
(Brussels, Addis Ababa, 08/07/2015) – As negotiations ahead of the third Financing for Development Conference continue to stall, many including in particular civil society in the EU and globally are looking to the EU to live up to its commitments and show willing to agree an ambitious outcome. True, transformational change in tackling poverty, reforming the global financial system and architecture will only be possible if real ambition is backed up by real action.

GAVI [to 11 July 2015]

GAVI [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.gavialliance.org/library/news/press-releases/

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07 July 2015
Gavi to support rebuilding of immunisation programmes in Ebola-affected countries
Worryingly low immunisation rates risk further deaths as Ebola recedes.
Geneva, 7 July 2015 – Plans to rebuild immunisation services wrecked by the Ebola crisis in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone will form the first stage of Gavi’s Ebola investment support and will ensure that hundreds of thousands of children who either missed out or are at risk of missing out will now receive their vaccinations. Additionally, as part of a coordinated approach to ensure the three countries are stronger and more resilient to infectious disease, Gavi is doubling its long-term support for their health systems through to 2020.

One of the big issues affecting immunisation has been trust in health services. Rumours circulating in the region have falsely claimed that childhood vaccines, such as those protecting against measles, pneumonia and diarrhoea, could be linked to Ebola. This has dealt a severe blow to immunisation coverage, with parents refusing to allow their children to be immunised against common but potentially-fatal conditions, leaving hundreds of thousands of children at risk.

Additionally, hundreds of health workers in the three countries were among the 10,000 people who lost their lives to Ebola during the crisis and many more were forced to abandon their posts as the epidemic took hold. As the three countries begin their return to normality there is now a severe shortage of trained health workers to administer vaccines.

Gavi support will include provision for civil society organisations to work with communities to hold meetings, briefing village chiefs and religious leaders on the importance of immunising children. It will also ensure that there are enough trained health workers to provide the vaccines to the children…

InterAction [to 11 July 2015]

InterAction  [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.interaction.org/media-center/press-releases

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Ruth Messinger Accepts the 2015 Julia Taft Award
Jul 09, 2015
At InterAction’s 2015 Forum, American Jewish World Service CEO Ruth Messinger received the 2015 Julia Taft Award for her tireless leadership as an activist and social change visionary. Messinger was recognized for her efforts to mobilize faith-based communities throughout the U.S. to speak on behalf of oppressed and marginalized people around the globe…

ODI [to 11 July 2015]

ODI [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.odi.org/media

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Why and how a country lens matters for the SDGs
Research reports and studies | July 2015 | Emma Samman
A new research note outlines the importance of using a country-lens to measure SDG progress. Different countries are at different stages of development, and unless this is taken into account in setting targets and assessing progress, we risk creating a set of perverse…

10 things to know about climate change and financing for development
Research reports and studies | July 2015 | Smita Nakhooda, Charlene Watson
10 things to know about climate change and financing for development for the Third International Conference on Financing for Development.

Localising humanitarianism: improving effectiveness through inclusive action
Briefing papers | July 2015 | Steven A. Zyck with Hanna B. Krebs
This paper discusses the role of national and local actors in responding to humanitarian crises and proposes ways to move towards greater national and local humanitarian action.

The hidden costs of the 2014 Gaza– Israeli conflict: adolescent girls’ psycho-social wellbeing
Briefing papers | July 2015 | Nicola Jones and Bassam Abu-Hamad
This briefing shows the psycho-social vulnerabilities and risks faced by Gazan adolescent girls.

Education in emergencies and protracted crises: toward a strengthened response
Research reports and studies | July 2015 | Susan Nicolai, Sébastien Hine and Joseph Wales
This report reviews the challenges of education in emergencies and protracted crises.

Resilience scan 2015 Q1
Bibliography and literature reviews | July 2015 | Thomas Tanner, Aditya Bahadur, Catherine Simonet and Hani Morsi
This ‘resilience scan’ summarises writing and debates in the field during the first quarter of 2015, and an analysis of grey literature since 2014, focusing on developing countries. It comprises insights from experts, social media analysis, and reviews of the academic and grey literature…

MacArthur Foundation [to 11 July 2015]

MacArthur Foundation [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.macfound.org/

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Press release
Statement of MacArthur President Julia Stasch on Developments in Russia
Julia M. Stasch
Published July 8, 2015
“We are disappointed to learn of reports that the MacArthur Foundation is included on a list of organizations that will be recommended by the Federation Council to the Prosecutor General for potential designation as engaged in undesirable activity under recent legislation. This rests on a serious misunderstanding of our activities in Russia.

“Since 1991, the MacArthur Foundation has supported charitable and civic organizations working to improve the lives of Russian citizens, advance higher education in Russia, and help prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.

“Our office in Moscow opened in 1992 and has since been staffed by dedicated Russians who love their country. The MacArthur Foundation is entirely independent of and receives no funding from the United States government. We do not engage in or support political activities.

“We are proud of the impactful work of organizations that we have supported in Russia. In higher education, several independent universities emerged, consolidated, won high placement in international ratings, and seeded a host of civil society initiatives. In turn, these projects enabled gifted practitioners and scholars to engage in research. In the field of human rights, our grantees protected vulnerable Russian citizens and enhanced the public discourse for all Russian people.

“We understand that the publication of this stop list by the Federation Council is not a determination that our activities are undesirable, as that determination rests with the Prosecutor General and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. We further understand the Prosecutor General will now review the list. We are hopeful that, upon review, the Prosecutor General will conclude that our activities have always been in compliance with Russian law.”

Open Society Foundation [to 11 July 2015]

Open Society Foundation [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/termsearch/8175/listing?f[0]=type%3Anews

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Press Releases
Open Society Statement on Developments in Russia
July 9, 2015
LONDON—We regret the action by Russia’s Federation Council yesterday to send to the Prosecutor General a list of 12 organizations, including the Open Society Foundations, to consider banning.

This move comes more than a quarter-century after the Open Society Foundations began work in Russia to support the aspirations of the Russian people.

Since 1987, Open Society has provided support to countless individuals and civil society organizations, including in the fields of science, education, and public health. This record speaks for itself. We are honored to have worked alongside pioneering citizens, educators, and civil society organizations that embody Russian creativity, commitment, and hope.
We are determined to continue to support those who seek our assistance in accordance with our mission and within the limits of the law.

he Rockefeller Foundation Announces Joint Initiative with Obama Administration to Create New Resilience AmeriCorps Program

Rockefeller Foundation [to 11 July 2015]
http://www.rockefellerfoundation.org/newsroom

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The Rockefeller Foundation Announces Joint Initiative with Obama Administration to Create New Resilience AmeriCorps Program
[undated]
NEW YORK—Today, The Rockefeller Foundation announced their latest commitment to building resilience in communities across the country through the launch of Resilience AmeriCorps. The pilot program will be dedicated to recruiting, training, and embedding VISTA members in up to 12 communities nationwide, including some of those in the 100 Resilient Cities network. AmeriCorps VISTA members will support the development of resilience strategies to help communities better manage the unavoidable and avoid the unmanageable. The multi-agency initiative includes the Department of Energy (DOE), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS), and Cities of Service.

The two-year pilot launches later this year, through anticipated support of $1 million, and on July 15, the White House will hold a live-streamed discussion on the important role community service can play in helping vulnerable communities become more resilient to climate change impacts. The event will feature speakers from the Administration, The Rockefeller Foundation, and local communities already working on building resilience. VISTA – Volunteers In Service To America – was founded in 1965 as a national service program to fight poverty in America and in 1993 VISTA was incorporated into the AmeriCorps network of programs.

“Crisis is increasingly part of the 21st century, which is why it is imperative that communities – large and small – place a premium on building resilience. With collaborative efforts across all sectors we can ensure our country is prepared for the inevitable shocks and gnawing stresses so that disruptions no longer become disasters,” said Dr. Judith Rodin, President of the Rockefeller Foundation. “The new Resilience AmeriCorps program will create a new generation of talented individuals who are committed to building resilience, and who can support cities today while deepening the bench for innovative leadership in years to come. Resilience is a journey, not a destination, and the time to embark on it is now.”…

HBV immunization and vaccine coverage among hospitalized children in Cameroon, Central African Republic and Senegal: a cross-sectional study

BMC Infectious Diseases
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcinfectdis/content
(Accessed 11 July 2015)

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Research article
HBV immunization and vaccine coverage among hospitalized children in Cameroon, Central African Republic and Senegal: a cross-sectional study
Claudine Bekondi, Roberta Zanchi, Abdoulaye Seck, Benoit Garin, Tamara Giles-Vernick, Jean Gody, Petulla Bata, Angèle Pondy, Suzie Tetang, Mamadou Ba, Chantal Ekobo, Dominique Rousset, Jean-Marie Sire, Sarah Maylin, Loïc Chartier, Richard Njouom, Muriel Vray BMC Infectious Diseases 2015, 15:267 (12 July 2015)
Abstract
Background
Hepatitis B is a major health concern in Africa. The vaccine against hepatitis B virus (HBV) was introduced into the Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) of Cameroon and Senegal in 2005, and of CAR (Central African Republic) in 2008. A cross-sectional study was conducted to assess HBV immunization coverage following the vaccine’s introduction into the EPI and factors associated with having been vaccinated.
Methods
All hospitalized children, regardless of the reasons for their hospitalization, between 3 months and 6 years of age, for whom a blood test was scheduled during their stay and whose condition allowed for an additional 2 mL blood sample to be taken, and who provided the parent’s written consent were included. All children anti-HBs- and anti-HBc + were tested for HBsAg.
Vaccination coverage was assessed in three different ways: immunization card, maternal recall and serologic anti-HBs profile.
Results
1783 children were enrolled between April 2009 and May 2010. An immunization card was only available for 24 % of the children. The median age was 21 months.
Overall HBV immunization coverage based on immunization cards was 99 %, 49 % and 100 % in Cameroon, CAR and Senegal, respectively (p < 0,001). The immunization rate based on maternal recall was 91 %, 17 % and 88 % in Cameroon, CAR and Senegal, respectively (p < 0,001). According to serology (anti-HBs titer ≥ 10 mUI/mL and anti-HBc-), the coverage rate was 68 %, 13 % and 46 % in Cameroon, CAR and Senegal, respectively (p < 0,001). In Senegal and Cameroon, factors associated with having been vaccinated were: mother’s higher education (OR = 2.2; 95 % CI [1.5–3.2]), no malnutrition (OR = 1.6; 95 % CI [1.1–2.2]), access to flushing toilets (OR = 1.6; 95 % CI [1.1–2.3]), and < 24 months old (OR = 2.1; 95 % CI [1.3–3.4] between 12 and 23 months and OR = 2.7; 95 % CI [1.6–4.4] < 12 months). The prevalence of HBV-infected children (HBsAg+) were 0.7 %, 5.1 %, and 0.2 % in Cameroon, CAR and Senegal, respectively (p < 0.001).
Conclusions
Assessing immunization coverage based on immunization cards, maternal recall or administrative data could be usefully reinforced by epidemiological data combined with immunological profiles. Serology-based studies should be implemented regularly in African countries, as recommended by the WHO. Malnutrition, lack of maternal education and poverty are factors associated with vaccine non-compliance. The countries’ vaccination programs should actively address these problems.

BMC Public Health (Accessed 11 July 2015)

BMC Public Health
http://www.biomedcentral.com/bmcpublichealth/content
(Accessed 11 July 2015)

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Research article
Vaccine coverage and determinants of incomplete vaccination in children aged 12–23 months in Dschang, West Region, Cameroon: a cross-sectional survey during a polio outbreak
Gianluca Russo, Alessandro Miglietta, Patrizio Pezzotti, Rodrigue Biguioh, Georges Bouting Mayaka, Martin Sobze, Paola Stefanelli, Vincenzo Vullo, Giovanni Rezza BMC Public Health 2015, 15:630 (10 July 2015)
Abstract
Background
Inadequate immunization coverage with increased risk of vaccine preventable diseases outbreaks remains a problem in Africa. Moreover, different factors contribute to incomplete vaccination status. This study was performed in Dschang (West Region, Cameroon), during the polio outbreak occurred in October 2013, in order to estimate the immunization coverage among children aged 12–23 months, to identify determinants for incomplete vaccination status and to assess the risk of poliovirus spread in the study population.
Methods
A cross-sectional household survey was conducted in November-December 2013, using the WHO two-stage sampling design. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to obtain information from consenting parents of children aged 12–23 months. Vaccination coverage was assessed by vaccination card and parents’ recall. Chi-square test and multilevel logistic regression model were used to identify the determinants of incomplete immunization status. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05.
Results
Overall, 3248 households were visited and 502 children were enrolled. Complete immunization coverage was 85.9 % and 84.5 %, according to card plus parents’ recall and card only, respectively. All children had received at least one routine vaccination, the OPV-3 (Oral Polio Vaccine) coverage was >90 %, and 73.4 % children completed the recommended vaccinations before 1-year of age. In the final multilevel logistic regression model, factors significantly associated with incomplete immunization status were: retention of immunization card (AOR: 7.89; 95 % CI: 1.08–57.37), lower mothers’ utilization of antenatal care (ANC) services (AOR:1.25; 95 % CI: 1.07–63.75), being the ≥3 rd born child in the family (AOR: 425.4; 95 % CI: 9.6–18,808), younger mothers’ age (AOR: 49.55; 95 % CI: 1.59–1544), parents’ negative attitude towards immunization (AOR: 20.2; 95 % CI: 1.46–278.9), and poorer parents’ exposure to information on vaccination (AOR: 28.07; 95 % CI: 2.26–348.1). Longer distance from the vaccination centers was marginally significant (p = 0.05).
Conclusion
Vaccination coverage was high; however, 1 out of 7 children was partially vaccinated, and 1 out of 4 did not complete timely the recommended vaccinations. In order to improve the immunization coverage, it is necessary to strengthen ANC services, and to improve parents’ information and attitude towards immunization, targeting younger parents and families living far away from vaccination centers, using appropriate communication strategies. Finally, the estimated OPV-3 coverage is reassuring in relation to the ongoing polio outbreak.

British Medical Journal – 11 July 2015

British Medical Journal
11 July 2015(vol 351, issue 8016)
http://www.bmj.com/content/351/8016

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Performance of alternative strategies for primary cervical cancer screening in sub-Saharan Africa: systematic review and meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy studies
BMJ 2015; 351 :h3084 (Published 03 July 2015)
Open Access

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Evidence based community mobilization for dengue prevention in Nicaragua and Mexico (Camino Verde, the Green Way): cluster randomized controlled trial
BMJ 2015; 351 :h3267 (Published 08 July 2015)
Open Access

Epidemics – Volume 13, In Progress (December 2015)

Epidemics
Volume 13, In Progress (December 2015)
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/17554365

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One versus two doses: What is the best use of vaccine in an influenza pandemic?
Original Research Article
Pages 17-27
Laura Matrajt, Tom Britton, M. Elizabeth Halloran, Ira M. Longini Jr.
Abstract
Avian influenza A (H7N9), emerged in China in April 2013, sparking fears of a new, highly pathogenic, influenza pandemic. In addition, avian influenza A (H5N1) continues to circulate and remains a threat. Currently, influenza H7N9 vaccines are being tested to be stockpiled along with H5N1 vaccines. These vaccines require two doses, 21 days apart, for maximal protection. We developed a mathematical model to evaluate two possible strategies for allocating limited vaccine supplies: a one-dose strategy, where a larger number of people are vaccinated with a single dose, or a two-dose strategy, where half as many people are vaccinated with two doses. We prove that there is a threshold in the level of protection obtained after the first dose, below which vaccinating with two doses results in a lower illness attack rate than with the one-dose strategy; but above the threshold, the one-dose strategy would be better. For reactive vaccination, we show that the optimal use of vaccine depends on several parameters, with the most important one being the level of protection obtained after the first dose. We describe how these vaccine dosing strategies can be integrated into effective pandemic control plans.

Psychosocial job characteristics, wealth, and culture: differential effects on mental health in the UK and Thailand

Globalization and Health
http://www.globalizationandhealth.com/
[Accessed 11 July 2015]

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Short report
Psychosocial job characteristics, wealth, and culture: differential effects on mental health in the UK and Thailand
Yiengprugsawan V, Lazzarino AI, Steptoe A, Seubsman S and Sleigh AC Globalization and Health 2015, 11:31 (8 July 2015)
Abstract
Background
Most research on the influence of psychosocial job characteristics on health status has been conducted within affluent Western economies. This research addresses the same topic in a middle-income Southeast Asian country, enabling comparison with a Western benchmark.
Methods
We analysed and compared the Health Survey for England conducted in 2010 and the Thai Cohort Study data at 2005 baseline for workers aged 35–45 years. Multivariate logistic regression was used to assess relationships between psychosocial job characteristics and health, measured as Adjusted Odd Ratios (AOR), controlling for potential covariates in final analyses.
Results
In both UK and Thai working adults, psychological distress was associated with job insecurity (AOR 2.58 and 2.32, respectively), inadequate coping with job demands (AOR 2.57 and 2.42), and low support by employers (AOR 1.93 and 1.84). Job autonomy was associated with psychological distress in the UK samples (AOR 2.61) but no relationship was found among Thais after adjusting for covariates (AOR 0.99). Low job security, inability to cope with job demands, and low employer support were associated with psychological distress both among Thai and UK workers.
Conclusions
Job autonomy was an important part of a healthy work environment in Western cultures, but not in Thailand. This finding could reflect cultural differences with Thais less troubled by individualistic expression at work. Our study also highlights the implications for relevant workplace laws and regulations to minimise the adverse job effects. These public health strategies would promote mental health and wellbeing in the population.

Health Affairs – July 2015

Health Affairs
July 2015; Volume 34, Issue 7
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/current
Focus: Medicaid’s Evolving Delivery Systems

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Health Aid Is Allocated Efficiently, But Not Optimally: Insights From A Review Of Cost-Effectiveness Studies
Eran Bendavid1,*, Andrew Duong2, Charlotte Sagan3 and Gillian Raikes4
Author Affiliations
1Eran Bendavid (ebd@stanford.edu) is an assistant professor in the Department of Medicine at Stanford University, in California.
2Andrew Duong is a research assistant in the Program of Human Biology at Stanford University.
3Charlotte Sagan is a research assistant in the School of Medicine at Stanford University.
4Gillian Raikes is a research assistant in the Program of Human Biology at Stanford University.
*Corresponding author
Abstract
Development assistance from high-income countries to the health sectors of low- and middle-income countries (health aid) is an important source of funding for health in low- and middle-income countries. However, the relationship between health aid and the expected health improvements from those expenditures—the cost-effectiveness of targeted interventions—remains unknown. We reviewed the literature for cost-effectiveness of interventions targeting five disease categories: HIV; malaria; tuberculosis; noncommunicable diseases; and maternal, newborn, and child health. We measured the alignment between health aid and cost-effectiveness, and we examined the possibility of better alignment by simulating health aid reallocation. The relationship between health aid and incremental cost-effectiveness ratios is negative and significant: More health aid is going to disease categories with more cost-effective interventions. Changing the allocation of health aid earmarked funding could lead to greater health gains even without expanding overall disbursements. The greatest improvements in the alignment would be achieved by reallocating some aid from HIV or maternal, newborn, and child health to malaria or TB. We conclude that health aid is generally aligned with cost-effectiveness considerations, but in some countries this alignment could be improved.

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Simulations Show Diagnostic Testing For Malaria In Young African Children Can Be Cost-Saving Or Cost-Effective
Victoria Phillips1,*, Joseph Njau2, Shang Li3 and Patrick Kachur4
Author Affiliations
1Victoria Phillips (vphil01@sph.emory.edu) is an associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at the Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, in Atlanta, Georgia.
2Joseph Njau is a prevention effectiveness fellow in the Global Immunization Division in the Center for Global Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), in Atlanta.
3Shang Li is a health care analyst at Analysis Group, in New York City.
4Patrick Kachur is a medical epidemiologist and chief of the Malaria Branch, Division of Parasitic Disease and Malaria, Center for Global Health, CDC.
*Corresponding author
Abstract
Malaria imposes a substantial global disease burden. It disproportionately affects sub-Saharan Africans, particularly young children. In an effort to improve disease management, the World Health Organization (WHO) recommended in 2010 that countries test children younger than age five who present with suspected malaria fever to confirm the diagnosis instead of treating them presumptively with antimalarial drugs. Costs and concerns about the overall health impact of such diagnostic testing for malaria in children remain barriers to full implementation. Using data from national Malaria Indicator Surveys, we estimated two-stage microsimulation models for Angola, Tanzania, and Uganda to assess the policy’s cost-effectiveness. We found that diagnostic testing for malaria in children younger than five is cost-saving in Angola. In Tanzania and Uganda the cost per life-year gained is $5.54 and $94.28, respectively. The costs projected for Tanzania and Uganda are less than the WHO standard of $150 per life-year gained. Our results were robust under varying assumptions about cost, prevalence of malaria, and behavior, and they strongly suggest the pursuit of policies that facilitate full implementation of testing for malaria in children younger than five.