Category: H. Global Health
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In the run-up to World AIDS day, an Optimist column on focusing on prevention over treatment.
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The role of cheap diagnostic tests in strengtheing the ability of patients to hold doctors to account –my FP column.
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A Shot in the Dark, for Foreign Policy, cheers the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization's supply side initiatives but suggests the need for a greater focus on the demand side –getting parents to bring their kids to get vaccinated.
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The Best Things in Life are (Nearly) Free is a CGD Working Paper. The health of the world’s population—including those in the poorest countries—has improved more in the past 100 years than ever before. The improvement is largely a result of the development and spread of cheap, effective technologies (such as vaccines). Other factors, such as…
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Worried about spiralling US health costs? Outsource care to Thailand. This week's Optimist column.
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A column about corruption perceptions, the gap between perceptions and reality, and the better ways of thinking about the development challenge of bribery.
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An FP column on the wonders of oral rehydration therapy.
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FP column: there are cheaper ways of keeping people alive in poor countries than earthquake-proofing buildings.
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A Cheaper Way to Better Healthcare is a short article written for the McKinsey publication What Matters. The article concludes that strong health outcomes don't take a lot of money –they take targeted interventions in prevention and some very cheap cures.
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Crisis? What Crisis? is an unpublished short paper. It asks if a sense of despair regarding the state of development worldwide can be justified, or if the record suggests grounds for greater optimism.