نتایج جستجو برای: low and middle income countries lmics

تعداد نتایج: 16997327  

Journal: :WHO South-East Asia journal of public health 2013
Shamsuzzoha B Syed Katharine A Allen Adnan A Hyder

This paper presents a multidimensional approach to examining the urban evidence-policy interface in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), and applies this approach to a case study from Pakistan. Key features of urban health policy and the significance of the evidence-policy interface in rapidly changing LMICs are articulated; characteristics of evidence that has been successfully incorporat...

J.M. Nduko , M.C. Mwende, W.N. Wanjala,

Emerging economies have often poor hygiene practices in traditional milk and dairy production all over the world. Therefore, pathogenic bacteria in milk pose major public health concerns especially for those communities who still consume raw milk. Escherichia coli and coliforms are often used as indicator microorganisms, so their presence in food implies poor hygiene and sanitary practices. The...

2015
A. Khan M. Prince C. Brayne A. M. Prina Takeru Abe

INTRODUCTION Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a growing public health problem around the world, yet there is little information on the prevalence of head injury in low and middle income countries (LMICs). We utilised data collected by the 10/66 research group to investigate the lifetime prevalence of head injury in defined sites in low and middle income countries, its risk factors and its relati...

2016
Yulia Shenderovich Manuel Eisner Christopher Mikton Frances Gardner Jianghong Liu Joseph Murray

BACKGROUND Rates of youth violence are disproportionately high in many low- and middle-income countries [LMICs] but existing reviews of risk factors focus almost exclusively on high-income countries. Different search strategies, including non-English language searches, might be required to identify relevant evidence in LMICs. This paper discusses methodological issues in systematic reviews aimi...

2015
A Beane T Stephens AP De Silva M Adikaram S De Alwis P Athapattu C Sigera L Peiris S Siriwardana KSA Jayasinghe A Dondorp R Haniffa

Introduction Early recognition and prevention of deterioration of ward patients can improve patient outcomes and reduce critical care admissions [1]. In low and middle income countries (LMICs), with often minimal access to critical care therapies, the benefit may be even greater. However training to assist ward nurses develop acute care skills remains limited in such settings. As part of the NI...

Journal: :Journal of Global Health Economics and Policy 2021

There is a growing concern of low representation researchers from low-middle-income countries (LMICs) in the publication global health research high-impact peer-reviewed journals. Nobody denies that developing world generally face several obstacles to publishing their research. In this viewpoint, we share some barriers have observed our experience working both academia and practice middle-incom...

2017
Hilde Stevens Isabelle Huys

Access to essential medicines is problematic for one third of all persons worldwide. The price of many medicines (i.e., drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics) is unaffordable to the majority of the population in need, especially in least-developed countries, but also increasingly in middle-income countries. Several innovative approaches, based on partnerships, intellectual property, and pricing, are...

2016
Isabelle Romieu Barrie Margetts Simón Barquera Fabio da Silva Gomes Marc Gunter Nahla Hwalla Ellen Kampman Michael Leitzmann Nancy Potischman Nadia Slimani Este Vorster Walter C. Willett Pattanee Winichagoon Martin Wiseman

The rapid changes in nutritional patterns and ways and conditions of life occurring in in low– and middle–income countries (LMICs) are likely to be adversely affecting the incidence and survival rates of most cancers. These rapid changes raise challenges and opportunities in research on nutrition and cancer worldwide, and highlight the need for an integrated approach to determine global strateg...

2018
Rebecca Sommerville Ashleigh F Brown Melissa Upjohn

The majority of horses, donkeys and mules (equids) are in low- and middle-income countries, where they remain a key source of labour in the construction, agriculture and tourism industries, as well as supporting households daily through transporting people and staple goods. Globally, approximately 600 million people depend on working equids for their livelihood. Safeguarding the welfare of thes...

When the Japanese government adopted Western medicine in the late nineteenth century, it left intact the infrastructure of primary care by giving licenses to the existing practitioners and by initially setting the hurdle for entry into medical school low. Public financing of hospitals was kept minimal so that almost all of their revenue came from patient charges. When social health insurance (S...

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