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Publications
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Improving the implementation of health workforce policies through governance: a review of case studies
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Maternal Health Care Utilization Among HIV-Positive Female Adolescents in Kenya
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Moving towards a sector-wide approach (SWAp) for health in fragile states
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Addressing gender equality in agricultural value chains
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Roads & Boundaries
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Agrobusiness au Burkina Faso
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Irrigation et pauvreté : le cas de l’Office du Niger au Mali
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Bulletin 395 – Learning and earning
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Bulletin 394 – Facilitating pro-poor business
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Le développement des chaînes de valeur au Mali
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Demystifying Carbon Markets
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The Risks of Inclusion
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Bulletin 393 – HIV-positive adolescents in Kenya
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Versluierde pijn
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Facilitating North-South partnerships for sustainable agriculture
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The rough road to gender equitable growth: the case of Café de Mujer Guatemala
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Policies and practices of countries that are experiencing a crisis in human resources for health: tracking survey
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Integrating sexual health services into primary care: an overview of health systems issues and challenges in developing countries
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Chocolate Forever
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A realist synthesis of randomised control trials involving use of community health workers for delivering child health interventions in low and middle income countries
A key constraint to saturating coverage of interventions for reducing the burden of childhood illnesses in Low and Middle Income Countries (LMIC) is the lack of human resources. Community health workers (CHW) are potentially important actors in bridging this gap. Evidence exists on effectiveness of CHW in management of some childhood illnesses (IMCI). However, we need to know how and when this comes to be. We examine evidence from randomized control trials (RCT) on CHW interventions in IMCI in LMIC from a realist perspective with the aim to see if they can yield insight into the working of the interventions, when examined from a different perspective.