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As disparities in health care continue to widen between wealthy and impoverished nations, an increasing number of medical professionals are committing themselves to the growing field of global health. Caring for the World assembles the stories, experience, and advice of prominent global health practitioners in this inspired guidebook for health care workers who are interested in - or already are - improving the lives of people throughout the world.Providing a wealth of valuable resources and information, the authors detail how individuals can find and prepare for global health work as well as how to obtain education and funding from governmental and non-governmental organizations. Skillfully addressing important issues related to working within other countries and cultures, they also provide practical advice on how to understand pandemics and the HIV/AIDS crisis in order to effect change.Accessible, thorough, and concise, Caring for the World is essential reading for anyone interested in global health work, non-governmental organizations, and the current state of global health care.
World health --- Medical personnel --- Medical assistance. --- Public health --- Voluntary health agencies. --- Volunteer workers in medical care. --- Medical care --- Health agencies, Voluntary --- Biomedical organizations --- Charities, Medical --- Medical social work --- International agencies --- Medical assistance --- Public health laws, International --- Assistance, Medical --- Medical technical assistance --- Humanitarian assistance --- Medicine --- Technical assistance --- Health care personnel --- Health care professionals --- Health manpower --- Health personnel --- Health professions --- Health sciences personnel --- Health services personnel --- Healthcare professionals --- Medical manpower --- Professional employees --- Global health --- International health --- Medical geography --- Vocational guidance. --- Employment --- International cooperation. --- International cooperation
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Scale up and implementation of new point-of-care (POC) diagnostics is a global health priority to enable the adoption of new evidence-based POC diagnostics and to replicate and extend the reach of POC diagnostics. Global private and public sector agencies have significantly increased their investment in the development of POC diagnostics to meet the unmet needs of patients in resource-limited settings, particularly disease burdened settings with limited access to laboratory infrastructure. However, previous research has demonstrated that the availability of health technologies in these settings does not always guarantee patient-centered outcomes. The applicability, effectiveness and sustainability of diagnostic technologies is affected by the involvement of all stakeholders during planning and implementation, which must be relevant to each specific context and sensitive to local culture. Factors such as infrastructure, resources, values and characteristics of participants can influence the implementation, scalability and sustainability of health interventions such as POC diagnostics. This book, “Implementation and Scale up of Point of Care (POC) Diagnostics in Resource-Limited Settings”, presents literature reviews and primary research studies focusing on the implementation and scale up of POC diagnostics in resource-limited settings.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- point-of-care-ultrasound --- ultrasound --- implementation --- point of care ultrasound --- augmented reality --- telemedicine --- spatial accessibility --- blood group --- rhesus type --- point-of-care testing --- maternal healthcare --- Upper East Region --- Ghana --- point-of-care ultrasound --- medical education --- syphilis --- maternal mortality --- interrupted time series --- segmented regression analysis --- point-of-care CD4+ t testing --- qualitative survey --- acceptability --- patients --- healthcare providers --- primary healthcare clinics --- HIV self-testing --- scale-up --- key stakeholder --- quality HIV point-of-care-diagnostics --- nominal group technique --- stakeholder engagement --- self-testing --- novel coronavirus disease-19 --- blockchain --- artificial intelligence --- geographical access --- glucose-6-phosphate dioxygenase deficiency --- antenatal care --- upper east region --- schistosomiasis --- barriers to diagnostics --- access to healthcare --- end-user perspectives --- neglected tropical diseases --- Nigeria --- case management --- electronic health information system --- diagnosis --- treatment --- point-of-care --- low and middle income countries --- point-of-care diagnostics --- healthcare services --- COVID-19 era
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Scale up and implementation of new point-of-care (POC) diagnostics is a global health priority to enable the adoption of new evidence-based POC diagnostics and to replicate and extend the reach of POC diagnostics. Global private and public sector agencies have significantly increased their investment in the development of POC diagnostics to meet the unmet needs of patients in resource-limited settings, particularly disease burdened settings with limited access to laboratory infrastructure. However, previous research has demonstrated that the availability of health technologies in these settings does not always guarantee patient-centered outcomes. The applicability, effectiveness and sustainability of diagnostic technologies is affected by the involvement of all stakeholders during planning and implementation, which must be relevant to each specific context and sensitive to local culture. Factors such as infrastructure, resources, values and characteristics of participants can influence the implementation, scalability and sustainability of health interventions such as POC diagnostics. This book, “Implementation and Scale up of Point of Care (POC) Diagnostics in Resource-Limited Settings”, presents literature reviews and primary research studies focusing on the implementation and scale up of POC diagnostics in resource-limited settings.
point-of-care-ultrasound --- ultrasound --- implementation --- point of care ultrasound --- augmented reality --- telemedicine --- spatial accessibility --- blood group --- rhesus type --- point-of-care testing --- maternal healthcare --- Upper East Region --- Ghana --- point-of-care ultrasound --- medical education --- syphilis --- maternal mortality --- interrupted time series --- segmented regression analysis --- point-of-care CD4+ t testing --- qualitative survey --- acceptability --- patients --- healthcare providers --- primary healthcare clinics --- HIV self-testing --- scale-up --- key stakeholder --- quality HIV point-of-care-diagnostics --- nominal group technique --- stakeholder engagement --- self-testing --- novel coronavirus disease-19 --- blockchain --- artificial intelligence --- geographical access --- glucose-6-phosphate dioxygenase deficiency --- antenatal care --- upper east region --- schistosomiasis --- barriers to diagnostics --- access to healthcare --- end-user perspectives --- neglected tropical diseases --- Nigeria --- case management --- electronic health information system --- diagnosis --- treatment --- point-of-care --- low and middle income countries --- point-of-care diagnostics --- healthcare services --- COVID-19 era
Choose an application
Scale up and implementation of new point-of-care (POC) diagnostics is a global health priority to enable the adoption of new evidence-based POC diagnostics and to replicate and extend the reach of POC diagnostics. Global private and public sector agencies have significantly increased their investment in the development of POC diagnostics to meet the unmet needs of patients in resource-limited settings, particularly disease burdened settings with limited access to laboratory infrastructure. However, previous research has demonstrated that the availability of health technologies in these settings does not always guarantee patient-centered outcomes. The applicability, effectiveness and sustainability of diagnostic technologies is affected by the involvement of all stakeholders during planning and implementation, which must be relevant to each specific context and sensitive to local culture. Factors such as infrastructure, resources, values and characteristics of participants can influence the implementation, scalability and sustainability of health interventions such as POC diagnostics. This book, “Implementation and Scale up of Point of Care (POC) Diagnostics in Resource-Limited Settings”, presents literature reviews and primary research studies focusing on the implementation and scale up of POC diagnostics in resource-limited settings.
Humanities --- Social interaction --- point-of-care-ultrasound --- ultrasound --- implementation --- point of care ultrasound --- augmented reality --- telemedicine --- spatial accessibility --- blood group --- rhesus type --- point-of-care testing --- maternal healthcare --- Upper East Region --- Ghana --- point-of-care ultrasound --- medical education --- syphilis --- maternal mortality --- interrupted time series --- segmented regression analysis --- point-of-care CD4+ t testing --- qualitative survey --- acceptability --- patients --- healthcare providers --- primary healthcare clinics --- HIV self-testing --- scale-up --- key stakeholder --- quality HIV point-of-care-diagnostics --- nominal group technique --- stakeholder engagement --- self-testing --- novel coronavirus disease-19 --- blockchain --- artificial intelligence --- geographical access --- glucose-6-phosphate dioxygenase deficiency --- antenatal care --- upper east region --- schistosomiasis --- barriers to diagnostics --- access to healthcare --- end-user perspectives --- neglected tropical diseases --- Nigeria --- case management --- electronic health information system --- diagnosis --- treatment --- point-of-care --- low and middle income countries --- point-of-care diagnostics --- healthcare services --- COVID-19 era
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