HEALTH CARE: LESSONS FROM

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "HEALTH CARE: LESSONS FROM"

Transcription

1 HEALTH CARE: LESSONS FROM CHINA AND CUBA Richard G. Younge, MD, MPH New York, New York Health has improved in Cuba and China during the past quarter of a century. Some of the improvements in health occurred as economic conditions improved in both countries, but there are other similarities of health care delivery in China and Cuba. Collective activity plays an important role in health care in both nations; both do health planning centrally, but local communities control the daily activities of the health services that they use. Techniques that have improved health in underdeveloped nations might be applied in underserved areas of the United States. capita wealth. Cuba's population is more concentrated in urban areas than China's. For these reasons, some aspects of China's and Cuba's health systems have developed differently. Internists and pediatricians provide most of the medical care in Cuba, whereas in China, nonphysicians predominate. Traditional and folk medicine play a more important role in China than in Cuba. Health policy makers in the United States can learn from the health care systems in China and Cuba. Both countries' health care systems suggest some approaches to improving health in the United States. Health improved in China and Cuba as social and economic conditions improved. Collective activity plays an important role in health in both countries. Both allocate health resources and set health Requests for reprints should be addressed to Dr Richard G. Younge, The Council's Center for Problems of Living, 1727 Amsterdam Avenue, New York, NY goals centrally, but health programs are planned and implemented locally. Health care in China and Cuba has these similarities despite the many differences between the two nations. Before the revolution in 1959, Cuba had two developed industries: sugar and tourism; existing modem health resources were concentrated in Havana. Most of Cuba's physicians left after the revolution. On the other hand, China, a rural, agrarian society, had little industrial development before its revolution in 1949 and had insignificant modern medical resources. China has 100 times the population of Cuba but lower per IMPROVED HEALTH IN CHINA AND CUBA Cuba and China have made significant advances in health status during the past quarter century. Cuba's health statistics compare favorably with nations which have greater economic resources. ' In the years since the July 1959 Revolution, Cuba has eliminated malaria.2 The infant mortality rate has declined from 36.4 per 1,000 live births in 1967 to 19.4 per 1,000 live births in The maternal mor- JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, VOL. 74, NO. 4,

2 tality rate from all causes declined from per 100,000 live births in 1969 to 47.4 per 100,000 live births in Improvements in the mortality rate due to toxemias of pregnancy and maternal hemorrhage contributed significantly to the decline. Maternal mortality due to toxemias of pregnancy went from 35.0 per 100,000 live births to 4.2 per 100,000 live births during this period. Mortality due to maternal hemorrhage dropped from 31.7 per 100,000 live births to 1.4 per 100,000 live births between 1960 and The success of the health system in China has been described by several authors.4 5 Health statistics from Shanghi show a decline in infectious disease morbidity and mortality. Cancer, heart disease, and chronic lung disease, which are the health problems of more industrialized nations, have become more prevalent.6 HEALTH AND SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS Some of the progress in improving health in China and Cuba results from improvements in the people's economic status and a more equitable distribution of goods and services. Both governments have committed themselves to elevate all the people to an acceptable standard of living. As this has been done, health has improved. Similar improvements in living conditions contributed to the decline of the tuberculosis mortality rate in the United States during the pre-antibiotic era.7 In China and Cuba, improved nutrition, safe water supplies, vector control, and new housing construction have helped to reduce the burden of infectious diseases. Even though the standard of living remains well below that of more industrialized nations, the basic needs of food, clothing, and housing are being met. Cuba's efforts to improve nutrition have included the development and expansion of the dairy, citrus, and fishing industries. Before 1959 fish was not a significant protein source in spite of the fact that Cuba is surrounded by ocean. The dairy industry has grown enough to ensure that all school-age children can receive one liter of milk a day. A recent nutrition campaign encouraged pregnant and lactating women to increase their consumption of dairy products. Cuba has developed new breeds of cattle that are more adapted to tropical climates. Despite all of the improvements, Cuban health planners fear that recent, poor crop yields may slow improvements in nutrition. China's health workers see population growth as a major obstacle to continued improvements in the standard of living. Since 1949 the population has doubled; now one billion people live in China. If the rate of population growth does not slow, the progress in health made since the revolution may be slowed. Strict incentives to limit family size may prevent threatened worsening of food and housing shortages if zero population growth occurs by the year POPULAR PARTICIPATION IN HEALTH IN CHINA One of the principles of health work in China has been the "mass line." This concept holds that the people working together with motivation and knowledge of basic skills can make great advances in health despite shortages of technology and professional medical workers. During the Great Proletarian Health Movement millions of people mobilized to eliminate the four pests: flies, rats, mosquitoes, and sparrows. (Sparrows received a reprieve because they are not a major source of disease.) The people involved in this public health campaign used simple techniques to eliminate the pests and their breeding grounds. Mass campaigns such as this helped to eliminate major sources of disease and provided a vehicle for health education. Intensive effort by many compensated for the health resources that China lacked. As infectious disease has become less prevalent, emphasis on the mass line has decreased. Integration of technology into the health system and professional training now receive relatively more effort.8 Despite this shift in policy, the people remain China's greatest health resource. China's urban municipalities are subdivided into districts, and these districts contain several neighborhoods (also called streets or urban communes). Each neighborhood has about 50,000 residents. Lane committees, which represent 1,500 to 5,000 people, are the basic political units of the neighborhoods. Lane committees organize primary medical care as well as other public health and social welfare functions. Lane committees select the residents who receive training to be medical workers at the "lane health station." At the health station the medical workers do immunizations, treat minor complaints, and teach people about nutrition, disease prevention, and contraception. The Health Station is visited 392 JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, VOL. 74, NO. 4, 1982

3 by a physician once or twice a week; the medical worker provides primary medical care the rest of the time. The lane committee ensures that pregnant women receive prenatal care and that children have periodic health maintenance. Health initiatives planned by the lane committee and medical workers include sanitation, pest control, and campaigns to encourage the use of contraceptives. Chinese workers generally receive primary health care at their work place. The workers participate in the management of factory health services through their trade unions. In Harbin, a northeastern industrial center, the hospital for chronic diseases of workers has a patient committee that investigates complaints about the care. These problems are referred to the trade union, which administers the hospital, for resolution. Health services in rural areas are the responsibility of commune production teams and brigades. Communes are self-governing politico-economic units with 5,000 to 50,000 residents. They are divided into 10 to 30 production brigades, each of which contains several production teams. Production brigades operate small health clinics similar in function to the lane health stations. The medical workers in the health stations are elected by the members of the brigade. The lay medical workers and their neighbors plan and carry out health programs for the brigade. Throughout China, posters remind people that maintaining good health is part of their responsibility to society. In the lanes, factories, and production brigades, people meet to discuss health issues. At these public meetings an individual who failed to have his children immunized or who created a sanitation problem might be publically criticized. People who need assistance with a health problem can often get the help they need from their production brigade, trade union, or lane committee. POPULAR PARTICIPATION IN HEALTH-CUBA The Committees for the Defense of the Revolution (CDR) were established in Cuba during the years after the revolution. Originally they organized neighborhood patrols to protect residents from counterrevolutionary sabotage. CDRs, located throughout urban and rural Cuba, now have important health responsibilities. They organize community health activities such as immunization, sanitation, and health education. They play an important role in case finding for the local health providers. One CDR in Havana proudly displays a chart that shows several CDRs in that section of the city as having the best record of blood donation, another task of the organization. Most Cuban adults participate in CDR activities. The Federation of Cuban Women (FMC), to which more than 75 percent of Cuban women belong, sponsors women's health activities. The FMC organizes health education programs about contraceptives, and it coordinates Cuba's day-care programs for the children of working mothers. Polyclinics are the primary health units of the Cuban health system. The Ministry of Public Health has taken several steps during the past five years to upgrade the quality of health services at these polyclinics. They recognized that many people chose to receive health care episodically in municipal hospital emergency rooms. People preferred the emergency room because that was where the best trained physicians worked. Many polyclinics, especially those in rural areas, had physicians with only one year of postdoctoral training. They were fulfilling their one year of required clinical service before starting residency training. Patients did not see the same physician each time they went to the polyclinic, but they were no worse off seeing a different physician each time they went to the emergency room. The reorganization of primary care services is called Medicine in the Community. Since the inception of the program in 1977, pediatric, internal medicine, and obstetricgynecology residents spend part of their time working in the polyclinics. Each municipality will have at least one teaching polyclinic associated with a hospital based residency program. Clinical faculty at the polyclinics organize conferences for the residents and supervise their work. The fact that specialists train at the polyclinics has helped to improve the polyclinic's image. Primary care teams have been established at all polyclinics so that patients see the same physician each time they visit. Each primary care team (internist, pediatrician, obstetrician-gynecologist, nurse, and dentist) has a geographic sector of the polyclinic catchment area for which they have responsibility. These sectors have from 3,000 to 5,000 residents. Within each sector are several FMCs and CDRs. Frequently, representatives of the FMC and CDR, the polyclinic administration, and members of the health care team meet to discuss the health needs of the sector. The pri- JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, VOL. 74, NO. 4,

4 mary care team's work area has maps of the sector with stick pins indicating cases of tuberculosis, low birth weight, diarrheal disease, and other health problems. These maps graphically remind the team of its responsibility for the health care of a specific community. Their contacts with the community organizations ensures that the health care team stays in touch with the needs of the sector. A team with a social worker, a hygenist, an epidemiologist, and a psychiatrist serves the entire polyclinic catchment area. They help the primary care teams and community representatives to plan health programs to address the needs of the.sectors. Without the participation of the people in China's Great Patriotic Health Movement or the work of the Cuban CDRs and FMCs, some of the striking successes of these countries' health systems, such as the virtual elimination of syphilis in China or the almost complete immunization of Cuban children a- gainst polio, would have been impossible. PLANNING FOR HEALTH Two levels of health planning can be identified in China and Cuba. Strategic health planning defines problems, allocates resources, establishes goals, and evaluates progress towards the goals. Tactical planning develops specific programs to achieve health goals. In both countries national or provincial authorities do the general or strategic planning. Local health facilities and community organizations work together to do the tactical planning. Both nations had a concentration of health resources in urban areas before their revolutions. The strategic health planners identified this problem and promoted construction of new health facilities in rural areas and assignment of health practitioners to rural areas. Central planning also identified and quantified health problems such as low birth weight, poor nutrition, and high incidence of communicable disease. Goals for improvement were set centrally, but community organizations such as lane committees, production brigades, or CDRs developed and carried out specific plans to reach the goals. Reliance on the local organizations to plan and to execute activities encourages community participation by placing day-to-day operation of health programs in the hands of those people who will be using the programs. It allows the community some degrees of freedom to set priorities and to tailor programs to meet their own needs. Allocating resources, identifying problems, and setting goals centrally encourages equal distribution of resources and availability of services throughout the country. The structure of health service reporting and accountability in Cuba supports central strategic planning and local control of health and other institutions.9 The administrators of a municipal hospital or polyclinic report to the Municipal Assembly of Popular Power, which consists of delegates elected from districts throughout the municipality. Anyone, Communist Party member or not, may run for election to the assembly. The delegates are elected by secret ballot, and by law there must be at least two candidates from every district. Delegates represent about 1,000 people. They meet frequently with their constituents to discuss decisions made by the Municipal Assembly and to hear the needs of the people in the district. The Standing Committee and the Health Committee of the Municipal Assembly oversee administrative decisions concerning programs, personnel, and day-to-day policy in the polyclinics and hospitals in the municipality. The polyclinics and hospitals in the municipality also report to the provincial Ministry of Health on the progress being made towards meeting provincial and national health goals. In Cuba, the Ministries of Health are primarily strategic planning and norm setting agencies. They provide the technical support and advice that the health facility may need to plan its activities. The Municipal Popular Power Assembly and the Provincial Popular Power Assembly control the administration of health services. Goals are set nationally, but local interests retain control of the day-to-day function of health facilities. China, with its huge population, does most of its strategic health planning in the provinces. Provincial health departments collect data and set specific targets. The national ministry sets only broad goals for health. For example, a national health goal is to slow the rate of population growth. Seeking to slow the rate of population growth, China wishes, at the same time, to preserve the cultural heritage of its national minority groups. Tibetan and Mongolian ethnic groups are the -largest of these minorities. Provinces and regions with large national minority populations have less stringent population control programs. Centralized norm setting and strategic planning with local con- 394 JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, VOL. 74, NO. 4,1982

5 trol of health services administration and tactical planning in Cuba and China contrast with the health planning system in the United States. Within one area there may be health services that rely on any one of several levels of government-federal, state, or local-for their mandate, strategic planning, and evaluation. Some health services do not do any strategic health planning or evaluation. The health services may be accountable to one of the levels of government, a board of directors, a community board, or to no one for their dayto-day operations. Administrative responsibility may not be in the same hands as those responsible for planning and evaluation. Not infrequently, the administrators and planners work under different sets of assumptions and incentives. The United States did not have a written statement of health goals until In view of the fact that health care costs account for about one tenth of the gross national product, it is amazing that nothing has ever been written stating what we hoped to get for the money. The Health Systems Agencies, which are an attempt to let local community representatives plan health services, may not survive the current administration. LESSONS FROM CHINA AND CUBA China and Cuba demonstrate that significant progress can be made in spite of scarce resources. Certain areas of the United States demonstrate that a relative abundance of medical resources do not guarantee good health statistics. This suggests that planning for a more equitable distribution of medical and other resources in a society has a positive effect on health. Making health a collective effort enhances the work of the health care system. In China and Cuba, community organization around health has been successful at promoting primary and preventive health services -and health education. Popular participation, local control of health services administration, and central strategic planning are closely linked concepts. Local control and administration of health services can facilitate popular participation by providing mechanisms in which people can become involved to improve their health. In the absence of central strategic health planning, national problems such as maldistribution of health workers may go unaddressed. Local planners sometimes fail to identify health problems because they look at a small part of the national health picture or because they lack the tools to collect and analyze the data. In both nations the functions of the central government are to train health workers, to build health facilities, to ensure that health resources are fairly distributed, to collect health data, and to set and evaluate progress towards goals. These are the very functions that our federal government now seeks to cut back. China and Cuba have successfully addressed the health problems associated with underdevelopment. Now, as we observe their response to their newly emerging health problems-cardiovascular disease, accidents, chronic lung disease, and malignancy-we can learn new approaches to these problems for our own communities. Acknowledgements My thanks to Ms. Sue Forte, Mr. Walter Isaacs, Mr. John O'Connor, and Ms. Ann Umemoto for their helpful suggestions in the preparation of this manuscript. Literature Cited 1. Roemer Ml. Health development and political policy: The lesson of Cuba. J Health Polit Policy Law 1980; 4: Report of the Director, Quadrennial, Washington DC, Pan American Health Organization, Informe Anual, Havana, Ministry of Public Health, 1980, pp 14, Sidel VW, Sidel R. Serve the People: Observations on Medicine in the People's Republic of China. Boston: Beacon Press, Horn JS. Away With All Pests. An English Surgeon in People's China, New York: Monthly Review Press, Sidel VW, Sidel R. The delivery of medical care in China. Sci Am 1974; 230: Dubos R. Mann Adapting. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1965, pp Blendon RJ. Public Health versus personal medical care: The dilemma of post-mao China. N Engl J Med 1981; 304: Navarro V. Worker's and community participation and democratic control in Cuba. Int J Health Serv 1980; 10: US Department of Health and Human Services, Public Health Service. Healthy People: The Surgeon General's Report on Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, Washington DC: US Government Printing Office, JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, VOL. 74, NO. 4,

In , WHO technical cooperation with the Government is expected to focus on the following WHO strategic objectives:

In , WHO technical cooperation with the Government is expected to focus on the following WHO strategic objectives: VANUATU Vanuatu, a Melanesian archipelago of 83 islands and more than 100 languages, has a land mass of 12 189 square kilometres and a population of 234 023 in 2009 (National Census). Vanuatu has a young

More information

WORLD HEALTH! ORGANIZATION PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION. regional committee. directing council. i 2

WORLD HEALTH! ORGANIZATION PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION. regional committee. directing council. i 2 i 2 directing council PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION regional committee WORLD HEALTH! ORGANIZATION XX Meeting Washington, D.C. September-October 1971 XXIII Meeting Provisional Agenda Item 14 CD20/21

More information

Chicago Department of Public Health

Chicago Department of Public Health Annual Report 2010 Message from the Mayor Throughout Chicago s history, public health challenges have been faced and met- starting in 1835, when leaders of the Town of Chicago formed a Board of Health

More information

Health Bill* diseases of the arteries and kidneys are. public health departments and the provision. With this object in view the Honorable

Health Bill* diseases of the arteries and kidneys are. public health departments and the provision. With this object in view the Honorable Vol. 34 The Proposed Canadian National Health Bill* J. J. HEAGERTY, I.S.O., M.D., C.M., D.P.H. Chairman, Advisory Committee on Health Insurance, Department of Pensions and National Health, Ottawa, Canada

More information

THe liga InAn PRoJeCT TIMOR-LESTE

THe liga InAn PRoJeCT TIMOR-LESTE spotlight MAY 2013 THe liga InAn PRoJeCT TIMOR-LESTE BACKgRoUnd Putting health into the hands of mothers The Liga Inan project, TimorLeste s first mhealth project, is changing the way mothers and midwives

More information

INDONESIA S COUNTRY REPORT

INDONESIA S COUNTRY REPORT The 4 th ASEAN & Japan High Level Officials Meeting on Caring Societies: Support to Vulnerable People in Welfare and Medical Services Collaboration of Social Welfare and Health Services, and Development

More information

Minister. Secretaries of State. Department of Planning and Health Information. Department of Human Resources Development

Minister. Secretaries of State. Department of Planning and Health Information. Department of Human Resources Development KINGDOM OF CAMBODIA NATION RELIGION KING 1 Minister Secretaries of State Cabinet Under Secretaries of State Directorate General for Admin. & Finance Directorate General for Health Directorate General for

More information

Xl. PUBLIC HEALTH PERSONAL HEALTH

Xl. PUBLIC HEALTH PERSONAL HEALTH Xl. PUBLIC HEALTH The delivery of public health services in Wisconsin varies greatly across the state. Fifteen cities have full-service health departments. The remainder of the state is served by a combination

More information

Ontario County Public Health Revision Date:

Ontario County Public Health Revision Date: Priority: Prevent Chronic Diseases Focus Area 1: Reduce Obesity in Children and Adults Do the suggested intervention(s) address a disparity? Yes No *Objective 1.0.1 Targeting Geneva area (low income) and

More information

George Bernard Shaw. Irish dramatist & socialist ( )

George Bernard Shaw. Irish dramatist & socialist ( ) If you have an apple and I have an apple and we exchange apples then you and I will still each have one apple. But if you have an idea and I have an idea and we exchange these ideas, then each of us will

More information

2.1 Communicable and noncommunicable diseases, health risk factors and transition

2.1 Communicable and noncommunicable diseases, health risk factors and transition 1. CONTEXT 1.1 Demographics In 2010, American Samoa had an estimated population of 65 896. Based on 2010 population estimates, around 35% of the population is below 15 years of age, while 4% is above 65

More information

DELAWARE FACTBOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

DELAWARE FACTBOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY DELAWARE FACTBOOK EXECUTIVE SUMMARY DaimlerChrysler and the International Union, United Auto Workers (UAW) launched a Community Health Initiative in Delaware to encourage continued improvement in the state

More information

Jordan Country Profile

Jordan Country Profile Jordan Country Profile Jordan is a Southwest Asian country, bordered by Syria to the north, Iraq to the northeast, Saudi Arabia to the east and south and Palestine to the west. All these border lines add

More information

CINDI / Countrywide Integrated Non-Communicable Disease Intervention Bulgaria

CINDI / Countrywide Integrated Non-Communicable Disease Intervention Bulgaria CINDI / Countrywide Integrated Non-Communicable Disease Intervention Bulgaria Title in original language: СИНДИ /Интервенционна програма за интегрирана профилактика на хронични незаразни болести Which

More information

UNICEF LAO PDR TERMS OF REFERENCE OF NATIONAL CONSULTANT (NOC) COMMUNICATION FOR DEVELOPMENT (C4D) IN IMPROVING ROUTINE IMMUNIZATION

UNICEF LAO PDR TERMS OF REFERENCE OF NATIONAL CONSULTANT (NOC) COMMUNICATION FOR DEVELOPMENT (C4D) IN IMPROVING ROUTINE IMMUNIZATION UNICEF LAO PDR TERMS OF REFERENCE OF NATIONAL CONSULTANT (NOC) COMMUNICATION FOR DEVELOPMENT (C4D) IN IMPROVING ROUTINE IMMUNIZATION UNICEF H&NH Outcome: UNICEF H&N OP #: 3 UNICEF Work Plan Activity: Objective:

More information

2013 Lien Conference on Public Administration Singapore

2013 Lien Conference on Public Administration Singapore Dean Jack H. Knott Price School of Public Policy University of Southern California 2013 Lien Conference on Public Administration Singapore It s great to be here. I want to say how honored I am to participate

More information

Physician Compensation in 1997: Rightsized and Stagnant

Physician Compensation in 1997: Rightsized and Stagnant Special Report: Physician Compensation Physician Compensation in 1997: Rightsized and Stagnant Sue Cejka The new but unpopular buzzwords stagnation and rightsizing are invading the discussion of physician

More information

MARSHALL ISLANDS WHO Country Cooperation Strategy

MARSHALL ISLANDS WHO Country Cooperation Strategy MARSHALL ISLANDS WHO Country Cooperation Strategy 2018 2022 OVERVIEW The Marshall Islands covers 181 square kilometres in the Pacific Ocean and comprises 29 atolls and five major islands. The population

More information

MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL WELFARE STRATEGY OF THE HEALTH PROMOTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA

MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL WELFARE STRATEGY OF THE HEALTH PROMOTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND SOCIAL WELFARE STRATEGY OF THE HEALTH PROMOTION IN THE REPUBLIC OF SRPSKA BANJA LUKA, DECEMBER 1999 I GENERAL OBJECTIVES AND PRINCIPLES The health promotion, in the sense of this

More information

In , WHO technical cooperation with the Government is expected to focus on the following WHO strategic objectives:

In , WHO technical cooperation with the Government is expected to focus on the following WHO strategic objectives: TONGA Tonga is a lower-middle-income country in the Pacific Ocean with an estimated population of 102 371 (2005), of which 68% live on the main island Tongatapu and 32% are distributed on outer islands.

More information

RWANDA S COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER PROGRAM r

RWANDA S COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER PROGRAM r RWANDA S COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER PROGRAM r Summary Background The Rwanda CHW Program was established in 1995, aiming at increasing uptake of essential maternal and child clinical services through education

More information

3. Expand providers prescription capability to include alternatives such as cooking and physical activity classes.

3. Expand providers prescription capability to include alternatives such as cooking and physical activity classes. Maternal and Child Health Assessment 2015 In 2015, the Minnesota Department of Health conducted a Maternal and Child Health Needs Assessment for the state of Minnesota. Under the direction of a community

More information

Areas of Focus Statements of Purpose and Goals

Areas of Focus Statements of Purpose and Goals April 2012 Page 1 Exhibit A-13-d Areas of Focus Statements of Purpose and Goals With respect to the areas of focus policy statements, TRF notes that 1. The goals of Future Vision are to increase efficiency

More information

USAID/Philippines Health Project

USAID/Philippines Health Project USAID/Philippines Health Project 2017-2021 Redacted Concept Paper As of January 24, 2017 A. Introduction This Concept Paper is a key step in the process for designing a sector-wide USAID/Philippines Project

More information

Hendrick Medical Center. Community Health Needs Assessment Implementation Plan

Hendrick Medical Center. Community Health Needs Assessment Implementation Plan Hendrick Medical Center Community Health Needs Assessment Implementation Plan - 2014-2016 Hendrick Medical Center Community Health Needs Assessment Implementation Plan - 2014-2016 Overview: Hendrick Medical

More information

Health. Business Plan to Accountability Statement

Health. Business Plan to Accountability Statement Health Business Plan 1997-1998 to 1999-2000 Accountability Statement This Business Plan for the three years commencing April 1, 1997 was prepared under my direction in accordance with the Government Accountability

More information

Doctors in Action. A Call to Action from the Surgeon General to Support Breastfeeding

Doctors in Action. A Call to Action from the Surgeon General to Support Breastfeeding Doctors in Action A Call to Action from the Surgeon General to Support Breastfeeding Across the US, most mothers hope to breastfeed; it is an action that mothers can take to protect their infants and their

More information

The Local Health Department

The Local Health Department Vol. 40 The Local Health Department Services and Responsibilities Draft of a proposed official statement of the American Public Health Association * FOREWORD THE American Public Health Assocition, in preparing

More information

AREAS OF FOCUS POLICY STATEMENTS

AREAS OF FOCUS POLICY STATEMENTS ENGLISH (EN) AREAS OF FOCUS POLICY STATEMENTS With respect to the areas of focus policy statements, The Rotary Foundation notes that 1. The goals of the Foundation are to increase efficiency in grant processing

More information

Community Analysis Summary Report for Clinical Care

Community Analysis Summary Report for Clinical Care Community Analysis Summary Report for Clinical Care BACKGROUND ABOUT THE HEALTHY COMMUNITY STUDY The Rockford Health Council (RHC) exists to build and improve community health in the region. To address

More information

FINAL REPORT FOR DINING FOR WOMEN

FINAL REPORT FOR DINING FOR WOMEN Organization Information a. Organization Name: One Heart World-Wide b. Program Title: Implementing a Network of Safety around mothers and newborns in Western Nepal c. Grant Amount: $50,000 USD d. Contact:

More information

HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS

HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS Health Policy Policy guidelines for health service provision and development have also been provided in the Constitutions of different administrative period. The following

More information

Community Health Improvement Plan

Community Health Improvement Plan Community Health Improvement Plan Methodist Le Bonheur Germantown Hospital Methodist Le Bonheur Healthcare (MLH) is an integrated, not-for-profit healthcare delivery system based in Memphis, Tennessee,

More information

Health and Nutrition Public Investment Programme

Health and Nutrition Public Investment Programme Government of Afghanistan Health and Nutrition Public Investment Programme Submission for the SY 1383-1385 National Development Budget. Ministry of Health Submitted to MoF January 22, 2004 PIP Health and

More information

Promoting Reproductive, Maternal, Neonatal, Child, and Adolescent Health in Mozambique

Promoting Reproductive, Maternal, Neonatal, Child, and Adolescent Health in Mozambique Promoting Reproductive, Maternal, Neonatal, Child, and Adolescent Health in Mozambique An Investment Case for the Global Financing Facility POLICY Brief November 2017 Overview To accelerate progress on

More information

Maternal and Child Health North Carolina Division of Public Health, Women's and Children's Health Section

Maternal and Child Health North Carolina Division of Public Health, Women's and Children's Health Section Maternal and Child Health North Carolina Division of Public Health, Women's and Children's Health Section Raleigh, North Carolina Assignment Description The WCHS is one of seven sections/centers that compose

More information

How can the township health system be strengthened in Myanmar?

How can the township health system be strengthened in Myanmar? How can the township health system be strengthened in Myanmar? Policy Note #3 Myanmar Health Systems in Transition No. 3 A WPR/2015/DHS/003 World Health Organization (on behalf of the Asia Pacific Observatory

More information

AmericanJournal of Public Health

AmericanJournal of Public Health AmericanJournal of Public Health and THE NATION'S HEALTH Volume 40 September, 1950 Number 9 Public Health Administration in Latin America* M. E. BUSTAMANTE, M.D., DR.P.H. Secretary General, Pan American

More information

Health Promotion and Nursing in Cuba

Health Promotion and Nursing in Cuba Health Promotion and Nursing in Cuba Debra Whisenant PhD, MSN, MSPH Alice L. March PhD, RN, FNP, CNE University of Alabama Learning Objectives Upon completion of this presentation the participant will

More information

Précis WORLD BANK OPERATIONS EVALUATION DEPARTMENT WINTER 1999 N U M B E R 1 7 6

Précis WORLD BANK OPERATIONS EVALUATION DEPARTMENT WINTER 1999 N U M B E R 1 7 6 Précis WORLD BANK OPERATIONS EVALUATION DEPARTMENT WINTER 1999 N U M B E R 1 7 6 Meeting the Health Care Challenge in Zimbabwe HE WORLD BANK HAS USUALLY DONE THE RIGHT thing in the Zimbabwe health sector,

More information

HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS

HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS HEALTH POLICY, LEGISLATION AND PLANS Health Policy Policy guidelines for health service provision and development have also been provided in the Constitutions of different administrative period. The following

More information

WIC supports exclusive breastfeeding

WIC supports exclusive breastfeeding Six Steps You CAN Have a Breastfeeding- Friendly WIC Site OUR GOAL IS TO INCREASE EXCLUSIVE BREASTFEEDING NWA Six Steps to Achieve Breastfeeding Goals for WIC Clinics and the Surgeon General s Call to

More information

GOVERNMENT RESOLUTION OF MONGOLIA Resolution No. 246 Ulaanbaatar city

GOVERNMENT RESOLUTION OF MONGOLIA Resolution No. 246 Ulaanbaatar city GOVERNMENT RESOLUTION OF MONGOLIA 14.12.05 Resolution No. 246 Ulaanbaatar city Adoption of the National Programme on Integrated Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable diseases The Government of Mongolia

More information

MPH-Public Health Practice Program Curriculum

MPH-Public Health Practice Program Curriculum MPH-Public Health Practice Program Curriculum The MPH in Public Health Practice requires 42 credits or 14, 3-credit courses. The credits are split into 3 types of courses: 1. Required Core Courses (15

More information

ESSENTIAL NEWBORN CARE: INTRODUCTION

ESSENTIAL NEWBORN CARE: INTRODUCTION ESSENTIAL NEWBORN CARE: INTRODUCTION Essential Newborn Care Implementation Toolkit 2013 The Introduction defines Essential Newborn Care and provides an overview of Newborn Care in South Africa and how

More information

Sixth Pillar: Health

Sixth Pillar: Health 6 th Pillar: Health Sixth Pillar: Health Overview of Current Situation Human health is one of the main pillars of a strong society and an inherent human right. An individual of sound health has the ability

More information

Mandated Services: What Services MUST Local Health Departments Provide? Aimee Wall UNC School of Government

Mandated Services: What Services MUST Local Health Departments Provide? Aimee Wall UNC School of Government Rather, Mandated Services: What Services MUST Local Health Departments? Aimee Wall UNC School of Government 1 State law provides that a county shall provide public health services. 0F What does this mandate

More information

THE STATE OF ERITREA. Ministry of Health Non-Communicable Diseases Policy

THE STATE OF ERITREA. Ministry of Health Non-Communicable Diseases Policy THE STATE OF ERITREA Ministry of Health Non-Communicable Diseases Policy TABLE OF CONTENT Table of Content... 2 List of Acronyms... 3 Forward... 4 Introduction... 5 Background: Issues and Challenges...

More information

Engaging Medical Associations to Support Optimal Infant and Young Child Feeding:

Engaging Medical Associations to Support Optimal Infant and Young Child Feeding: Engaging Medical Associations to Support Optimal Infant and Young Child Feeding: Lessons Learned From Alive & Thrive The Bangladesh Minister of Health signs a pledge to support IYCF. Alive & Thrive is

More information

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION

WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION FIFTY-THIRD WORLD HEALTH ASSEMBLY A53/14 Provisional agenda item 12.11 22 March 2000 Global strategy for the prevention and control of noncommunicable diseases Report by the Director-General

More information

Executive Summary. Rouselle Flores Lavado (ID03P001)

Executive Summary. Rouselle Flores Lavado (ID03P001) Executive Summary Rouselle Flores Lavado (ID03P001) The dissertation analyzes barriers to health care utilization in the Philippines. It starts with a review of the Philippine health sector and an analysis

More information

Healthy Patients/Engaged Patients

Healthy Patients/Engaged Patients Healthy Patients/Engaged Patients PRESENTED BY: SUE LING LEE RN, MPA KENNETH FELDMAN, PHD, FACHE CHCANYS 2015 STATEWIDE CONFERENCE AND CLINICAL FORUM FACULTY DISCLOSURE It is the policy of the AAFP that

More information

Ontario Public Health Standards, 2008

Ontario Public Health Standards, 2008 Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care Ontario Public Health Standards, 2008 The Ontario Public Health Standards are published as the guidelines for the provision of mandatory health programs and services

More information

Community Health Needs Assessment for Corning Hospital: Schuyler, NY and Steuben, NY:

Community Health Needs Assessment for Corning Hospital: Schuyler, NY and Steuben, NY: Community Health Needs Assessment for Corning Hospital: Schuyler, NY and Steuben, NY: November 2012 Approved February 20, 2013 One Guthrie Square Sayre, PA 18840 www.guthrie.org Page 1 of 18 Table of Contents

More information

Terms of Reference Kazakhstan Health Review of TB Control Program

Terms of Reference Kazakhstan Health Review of TB Control Program 1 Terms of Reference Kazakhstan Health Review of TB Control Program Objectives 1. In the context of the ongoing policy dialogue and collaboration between the World Bank and the Government of Kazakhstan

More information

The Art and Science of Evidence-Based Decision-Making Epidemiology Can Help!

The Art and Science of Evidence-Based Decision-Making Epidemiology Can Help! The Art and Science of Evidence-Based Decision-Making Epidemiology Can Help! Association of Public Health Epidemiologists in Ontario The Art and Science of Evidence-Based Decision-Making Epidemiology Can

More information

Public Health and Managed Care. December 8 and 16, 2015

Public Health and Managed Care. December 8 and 16, 2015 Public Health and Managed Care December 8 and 16, 2015 Where We re Going Structure of Public Health in Illinois What Public Health Brings to Managed Care Some Similarities and Differences Some Public Health

More information

Juba Teaching Hospital, South Sudan Health Systems Strengthening Project

Juba Teaching Hospital, South Sudan Health Systems Strengthening Project Juba Teaching Hospital, South Sudan Health Systems Strengthening Project Date: Prepared by: May 26, 2017 Dr. Taban Martin Vitale and Richard Anyama I. Demographic Information 1. City & State: Juba, Central

More information

2012 Community Health Needs Assessment

2012 Community Health Needs Assessment 2012 Community Health Needs Assessment University Hospitals (UH) long-standing commitment to the community spans more than 145 years. This commitment has grown and evolved through significant thought and

More information

Improving Quality of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Care in Uganda. Dr. Jesca Nsungwa Sabiiti, Uganda MOH September 2018

Improving Quality of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Care in Uganda. Dr. Jesca Nsungwa Sabiiti, Uganda MOH September 2018 Improving Quality of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Care in Uganda Dr. Jesca Nsungwa Sabiiti, Uganda MOH September 2018 RMNCAH in Uganda: Selected Indicators 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 UGANDA TRENDS IN MATERNAL,

More information

Patient empowerment in the European Region A call for joint action

Patient empowerment in the European Region A call for joint action Zsuzsanna Jakab, WHO Regional Director for Europe Patient empowerment in the European Region - A call for joint action First European Conference on Patient Empowerment Copenhagen, Denmark, 11 12 April

More information

The Syrian Arab Republic

The Syrian Arab Republic World Health Organization Humanitarian Response Plans in 2015 The Syrian Arab Republic Baseline indicators* Estimate Human development index 1 2013 118/187 Population in urban areas% 2012 56 Population

More information

Navigating an Enhanced Rural Health Model for Maryland

Navigating an Enhanced Rural Health Model for Maryland Executive Summary HEALTH MATTERS: Navigating an Enhanced Rural Health Model for Maryland LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE MID-SHORE COUNTIES To access the Report and Accompanied Technical Reports go to: go.umd.edu/ruralhealth

More information

Contracting Out Health Service Delivery in Afghanistan

Contracting Out Health Service Delivery in Afghanistan Contracting Out Health Service Delivery in Afghanistan Dr M.Nazir Rasuli General director Care of Afghan Families,CAF. Kathmando Nepal 12 Jun,2012 Outline 1. Background 2. BPHS 3. Contracting with NGOs,

More information

Reducing Harm and Healthcare Costs: A Review Of A Physician's Unlimited License To Practice

Reducing Harm and Healthcare Costs: A Review Of A Physician's Unlimited License To Practice Reducing Harm and Healthcare Costs: A Review Of A Physician's Unlimited License To Practice Generally, physicians are licensed under what is termed an "unlimited" license. Underlying the intent of unlimited

More information

care, commitment and communication for a healthier world

care, commitment and communication for a healthier world care, commitment and communication for a healthier world National Center for Global Health and Medicine 2 Since the foundation of the organization in 1986, we have been providing international cooperation

More information

HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Victorian Certificate of Education 2013 SUPERVISOR TO ATTACH PROCESSING LABEL HERE STUDENT NUMBER Letter Figures Words HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Written examination Wednesday 6 November 2013 Reading

More information

Leveraging Existing Laboratory Capacity towards Universal Health Coverage: A Case of Zambian Laboratory Services

Leveraging Existing Laboratory Capacity towards Universal Health Coverage: A Case of Zambian Laboratory Services Medical Journal of Zambia, Vol. 43 (2): pp 88-93 (2016) ORIGINAL ARTICLE Leveraging Existing Laboratory Capacity towards Universal Health Coverage: A Case of Zambian Laboratory Services 1,2* 3 4 1 3 ML

More information

Good practice in the field of Health Promotion and Primary Prevention

Good practice in the field of Health Promotion and Primary Prevention Good practice in the field of Promotion and Primary Prevention Dr. Mohamed Bin Hamad Al Thani Med Cairo February 28 th March 1 st, 2017 - Cairo - Egypt 1 Definitions Promotion Optimal Life Style Change

More information

Model Community Health Needs Assessment and Implementation Strategy Summaries

Model Community Health Needs Assessment and Implementation Strategy Summaries The Catholic Health Association of the United States 1 Model Community Health Needs Assessment and Implementation Strategy Summaries These model summaries of a community health needs assessment and an

More information

COMMONWEALTH OF THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS WHO Country Cooperation Strategy

COMMONWEALTH OF THE NORTHERN MARIANA ISLANDS WHO Country Cooperation Strategy COMMONWEALTH OF THE NORTHERN MARIA ISLANDS WHO Country Cooperation Strategy 2018 2022 OVERVIEW The Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands is one of five inhabited United States island territories.

More information

Uzbekistan: Woman and Child Health Development Project

Uzbekistan: Woman and Child Health Development Project Validation Report Reference Number: PVR-331 Project Number: 36509 Loan Number: 2090 September 2014 Uzbekistan: Woman and Child Health Development Project Independent Evaluation Department ABBREVIATIONS

More information

In , WHO technical cooperation with the Government is expected to focus on the same WHO strategic objectives.

In , WHO technical cooperation with the Government is expected to focus on the same WHO strategic objectives. PAPUA NEW GUINEA Papua New Guinea, one of the most diverse countries in the world and the largest developing country in the Pacific, is classified as a low-income country. PNG s current population is estimated

More information

JOINT FAO/WHO FOOD STANDARDS PROGRAMME

JOINT FAO/WHO FOOD STANDARDS PROGRAMME E Agenda Item 6, 7, 8, 9, 10(a) CRD 12 JOINT FAO/WHO FOOD STANDARDS PROGRAMME FAO/WHO COORDINATING COMMITTEE FOR ASIA 18th Session Tokyo, Japan, 5 9 November 2012 Replies to CL 2012/14-ASIA (Submitted

More information

( ) Page: 1/8. Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures SUBSIDIES

( ) Page: 1/8. Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures SUBSIDIES 24 April 2017 (17-2223) Page: 1/8 Committee on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures Original: English SUBSIDIES REPLIES TO QUESTIONS 1 POSED BY THE UNITED STATES REGARDING THE NEW AND FULL NOTIFICATION

More information

Survey of the Existing Health Workforce of Ministry of Health, Bangladesh

Survey of the Existing Health Workforce of Ministry of Health, Bangladesh Original article Abstract Survey of the Existing Health Workforce of Ministry of Health, Bangladesh Belayet Hossain M.D. 1, Khaleda Begum M.D. 2 1. Professor, Department of Economics, University of Chittagong,

More information

McLaren Health Plan Quality Improvement Update 2014

McLaren Health Plan Quality Improvement Update 2014 McLaren Health Plan Quality Improvement Update 2014 Since the incorporation of McLaren Health Plan (MHP) in November 1997, the staff has continued to utilize their extensive clinical and administrative

More information

Appendix. We used matched-pair cluster-randomization to assign the. twenty-eight towns to intervention and control. Each cluster,

Appendix. We used matched-pair cluster-randomization to assign the. twenty-eight towns to intervention and control. Each cluster, Yip W, Powell-Jackson T, Chen W, Hu M, Fe E, Hu M, et al. Capitation combined with payfor-performance improves antibiotic prescribing practices in rural China. Health Aff (Millwood). 2014;33(3). Published

More information

Making an impact on the public's health and wellbeing in England: Emerging Approaches and Lessons

Making an impact on the public's health and wellbeing in England: Emerging Approaches and Lessons Making an impact on the public's health and wellbeing in England: Emerging Approaches and Lessons Professor Kevin Fenton Snr. Advisor, Health and Wellbeing Public Health England Director of Health and

More information

National Programme for Family Planning and Primary Health Care

National Programme for Family Planning and Primary Health Care Government of Pakistan Ministry of Health PHC Wing National Programme for Family Planning and Primary Health Care The Lady Health Workers Programme 2008 Background and Objectives The Lady Health Workers

More information

Lecture Topics Include:

Lecture Topics Include: http://ocw.jhsph.edu/ Lecture Topics Include: http://ocw.jhsph.edu/topics.cfm Evaluating Therapies in Observational Studies: HAART to Heart Lessons from HIV/ AIDS This lecture addresses the evaluation

More information

King County City Health Profile Seattle

King County City Health Profile Seattle King County City Health Profile Seattle Shoreline Kenmore/LFP Bothell/Woodinville NW Seattle North Seattle Kirkland North Ballard Fremont/Greenlake NE Seattle Kirkland Redmond QA/Magnolia Capitol Hill/E.lake

More information

Continuing Certain Medicaid Options Will Increase Costs, But Benefit Recipients and the State

Continuing Certain Medicaid Options Will Increase Costs, But Benefit Recipients and the State January 2005 Report No. 05-03 Continuing Certain Medicaid Options Will Increase Costs, But Benefit Recipients and the State at a glance Florida provides Medicaid services to several optional groups of

More information

Assessing Health Needs and Capacity of Health Facilities

Assessing Health Needs and Capacity of Health Facilities In rural remote settings, the community health needs may seem so daunting that it is difficult to know how to proceed and prioritize. Prior to the actual on the ground assessment, the desktop evaluation

More information

n engl j med 372;23 nejm.org june 4,

n engl j med 372;23 nejm.org june 4, The NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL of MEDICINE Perspective june 4, 2015 INTERNATIONAL HEALTH CARE SYSTEMS Delivering Community-Based Primary Care in a Universal Health System James Macinko, Ph.D., and Matthew J.

More information

Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance in West Virginia

Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance in West Virginia Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome Surveillance in West Virginia Christina Mullins, Director Office of Maternal, Child and Family Health Bureau for Public Health West Virginia Department of Health and Human

More information

PROCLAMATION. "BC AWARE 2016: Be Secure, Be Aware, days" (January 25- February 5, 2016)

PROCLAMATION. BC AWARE 2016: Be Secure, Be Aware, days (January 25- February 5, 2016) "BC AWARE 2016: Be Secure, Be Aware, days" (January 25- February 5, 2016) Cybercrime threatens the privacy and security of all citizens and organizations in British Columbia; and cybercriminal activity

More information

AVAILABLE TOOLS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH CORE DATA FUNCTIONS

AVAILABLE TOOLS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH CORE DATA FUNCTIONS CHAPTER VII AVAILABLE TOOLS FOR PUBLIC HEALTH CORE DATA FUNCTIONS This chapter includes background information and descriptions of the following tools FHOP has developed to assist local health jurisdictions

More information

Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRNs)

Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRNs) - 4 - Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRNs) - 5 - Advanced Practice Registered Nurses (APRNs) APRNs are registered nurses who have at a minimum completed graduate coursework (masters degree), passed

More information

AMERICAN SAMOA WHO Country Cooperation Strategy

AMERICAN SAMOA WHO Country Cooperation Strategy AMERICAN SAMOA WHO Country Cooperation Strategy 2018 2022 OVERVIEW American Samoa comprises five volcanic islands and two atolls covering 199 square kilometres in the South Pacific Ocean. American Samoa

More information

I. Coordinating Quality Strategies Across Managed Care Plans

I. Coordinating Quality Strategies Across Managed Care Plans Jennifer Kent Director California Department of Health Care Services 1501 Capitol Avenue Sacramento, CA 95814 SUBJECT: California Department of Health Care Services Medi-Cal Managed Care Quality Strategy

More information

SUMMARY OF THE STATE GRANT OPPORTUNITIES IN THE PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT: H.R (May 24, 2010)

SUMMARY OF THE STATE GRANT OPPORTUNITIES IN THE PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT: H.R (May 24, 2010) National Conference of State Legislatures 444 North Capitol Street, N.W., Suite 515 Washington, D.C. 20001 SUMMARY OF THE STATE GRANT OPPORTUNITIES IN THE PATIENT PROTECTION AND AFFORDABLE CARE ACT: H.R.

More information

COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. TMC Hospital Hill

COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT. TMC Hospital Hill COMMUNITY HEALTH NEEDS ASSESSMENT TMC Hospital Hill TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 2 Letter from CEO 3 Purpose of the Report 4 Mission and Vision of Organization 5 Service Area 7 Process to Determine Priority Needs

More information

Linking mhealth to Health Outcomes Marc Mitchell, MD, MS

Linking mhealth to Health Outcomes Marc Mitchell, MD, MS Harvard School of Public Health Linking mhealth to Health Outcomes Marc Mitchell, MD, MS Imagine a world: Where every person has the information they need to keep themselves and their family healthy no

More information

ONTARIO PUBLIC HEALTH STANDARDS

ONTARIO PUBLIC HEALTH STANDARDS ONTARIO PUBLIC HEALTH STANDARDS DRAFT April 30, 2007 The following document, Ontario Public Health Standards, has been produced by the Technical Review Committee. This document is subject to change. Prior

More information

1) What type of personnel need to be a part of this assessment team? (2 min)

1) What type of personnel need to be a part of this assessment team? (2 min) Student Guide Module 2: Preventive Medicine in Humanitarian Emergencies Civil War Scenario Problem based learning exercise objectives Identify the key elements for the assessment of a population following

More information

A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN S RIGHT TO HEALTH

A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN S RIGHT TO HEALTH EXECUTIVE SUMMARY THE STATE OF THE WORLD S MIDWIFERY 2014 A UNIVERSAL PATHWAY. A WOMAN S RIGHT TO HEALTH REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH PREGNANCY CHILDBIRTH POSTNATAL Executive Summary The State of the World s Midwifery

More information

2018 IMPLEMENTATION PLANS. of the 2016 Community Health Needs Assessment

2018 IMPLEMENTATION PLANS. of the 2016 Community Health Needs Assessment 2018 IMPLEMENTATION PLANS of the 2016 Community Health Needs Assessment After examining the range of services currently available, significance, impact ability, relevance to the population served, and

More information

CONCEPT NOTE Community Maternal and Child Health Project Relevance of the Action Final direct beneficiaries

CONCEPT NOTE Community Maternal and Child Health Project Relevance of the Action Final direct beneficiaries CONCEPT NOTE Project Title: Community Maternal and Child Health Project Location: Koh Kong, Kep and Kampot province, Cambodia Project Period: 24 months 1 Relevance of the Action 1.1 General analysis of

More information

offered by the INSTITUT NATIONAL DE SANTÉ PUBLIQUE DU QUÉBEC

offered by the INSTITUT NATIONAL DE SANTÉ PUBLIQUE DU QUÉBEC Services and activities offered by the INSTITUT NATIONAL DE SANTÉ PUBLIQUE DU QUÉBEC The Institut national de santé publique du Québec (INSPQ) was created in 1998 following the adoption of its act of incorporation

More information