Deze pagina is alleen beschikbaar in het Engels.
Publications
-
Women’s information centres and networks: a global perspective
Informal social networks and togetherness among women have been approved forms of organization since time immemorial. Women everywhere have formed themselves formally and informally into networks to demand services and promote networks of survival and mutual help to accomplish their reproductive and productive roles.
-
Patient contact is the major determinant in incident leprosy: implications for future control
-
Seroprevalence rates of antibodies to phenolic glycolipid-I among school children as an indicator of leprosy endemicity
-
Gender training: the source book
Gender training: the source book reviews gender training experiences from the point of view of practitioners. Contributors include gender advocates from different geographical regions (South Asia, Middle East, Eastern and Southern Africa and
-
Facilitating innovation for development
Many major issues today – whether sustainable development, waste disposal, negotiations about resource use, rural conflict resolution, natural resource management, clean water supply, food distribution or others – have neither clear problem definitions nor readily available solutions.
-
The epidemiology of Mycobacterium leprae: recent insight.
-
Bulletin 337 – Community financing for health care
This Bulletin presents a case study of a Bolivian primary health care project in which two different types of community financing – direct fees and, subsequently, a prepayment plan – were introduced to help finance health services.
-
Distribution and persistence of Mycobacterium leprae nasal carriage among a population in which leprosy is endemic in Indonesia.
-
Community financing for health care
-
Facing the challenges of HIV/AIDS/STDs
As the hiv/aids epidemic and sexually transmitted diseases (stds) continue to advance worldwide, we are learning ever more about how they affect individuals, households, families, communities, organizations and nations. The individual loss has been enormous, particularly in those countries and regions affected early on. aids is increasingly recognized in developing countries as a serious concern for socioeconomic development as a whole. Its impact is seen in family and community structures and relationships and in sectors as varied as education, employment, health care, social welfare, agriculture and the judiciary.
-
Facing the challenges of HIV/AIDS/STDs
As the hiv/aids epidemic and sexually transmitted diseases (stds) continue to advance worldwide, we are learning ever more about how they affect individuals, households, families, communities, organizations and nations. The individual loss has been enormous, particularly in those countries and regions affected early on. aids is increasingly recognized in developing countries as a serious concern for socioeconomic development as a whole. Its impact is seen in family and community structures and relationships and in sectors as varied as education, employment, health care, social welfare, agriculture and the judiciary. Economic consequences are already apparent. In highly affected countries, the business sector is experiencing increased absenteeism as employees fall ill, care for the sick or attend funerals. Loss of experienced and skilled workers in the formal and informal sectors may lead to lower productivity, savings and investments. In subsistence and small-scale agriculture, loss of labour may result in changes in farming patterns and food shortages.
-
An epidemiological study of leprosy infection by serology and polymerase chain reaction.
-
Financing women’s enterprise
-
Testing and evaluating manuals
The World Health Organization (WHO) has been helping countries make training and learning materials for many years. A specific section has been created for health learning materials (HLM). Many of these materials are meant for health workers in more remote regions, involved in primary health care – people with fewer resources than their colleagues, and often bigger problems.
-
L’Evaluation du manuel de santé
L’OMS a soutenu des programmes de formation et de réalisation de matériels éducatifs dans de nombreux pays en développement depuis plusieurs années. Une section spécialisée a été créée pour le MEPS. Le matériel produit par cette section est destiné au personnel de la santé intervenant dans des régions isolées où il doit donner les soins de santé primaires. Ces agents ont souvent moins de ressources que leurs collègues des grandes villes et souvent plus de contraintes. Récemment, beaucoup de matériels éducatifs a été produit. En réalité la quantité a primé sur la qualité.
-
Power to You(th) Baseline Report – Uganda
Young People’s perspectives and decision-making regarding harmful practices, sexual and gender-based violence and unintended pregnancy.
-
Loss and waste in fish value chains: A review of the evidence from low and middle-income countries
Globally, around 14 percent of food produced is lost from the post- harvest stage up to, but excluding, the retail stage. Highly nutritious material is lost or nutritionally compromised, affecting the diets of millions of people, including in regions where undernutrition and micronutrient deficiencies are endemic (FAO, 2011). The magnitude of the issue led the authors of the Sustainable Development Goals to recommend to “by 2030, halve per capita global food waste at the retail and consumer levels and reduce food losses along production and supply chains, including postharvest losses (Target 12.3)” and a number of new initiatives have been launched in response (United Nations, 2014; FAO, 2015).
-
Working paper series: Strengthening Legal Education in Eastern Indonesia
The SLEEI project aims to strengthen legal education, which is a crucial part of maintaining the rule of law. Many Indonesian citizens cannot realise their rights and continue to face a lack of legal certainty: it is often unclear what laws apply in particular situations and it is hard to predict how the courts or the government will interpret them.
-
Inclusive Business Models for Access to Quality Fish Seed and Technical Assistance
Over the past decade, Ghana’s tilapia farming has experienced tremendous growth in production; however, much of the growth has been driven by large-scale cage farmers around Lake Volta. It remains unclear how this growth is and can be made more inclusive of poor and young women and men.
-
Drones for the delivery of medicines in hard to reach areas
The purpose of this project was to answer the question: What are the pros and cons of using drones for the delivery of medicines in hard to reach areas ? Are there good examples of using drones for that purpose in LMICs? What questions should one ask when deciding to fund this for the health sector?