Foreign Policy Blogs

Development

Eat more cookies, get more sleep, and World Cup super stars…

Eat more cookies, get more sleep, and World Cup super stars…

Interesting excerpts from what I’ve been reading this past week.  It’s a bit of a mixed bag, but there is one theme that I detect: behaviour is integral to the maintenance and promotion health…but it’s hard to predict, hard to control and hard to change: Dan Heath at Fast Company gives us some reasons, and they don’t include lazyness.  He explains that […]

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Delivering solutions for girls and women

Tomorrow marks the opening of Women Deliver 2010, the largest conference on women and maternal health, held June 7-9 in Washington, DC.  Speakers will include UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, Christiane Amanpour, Helene Gayle, and Melinda Gates, among others.  The 2007 conference brought together more than 2000 participants from 115 countries, and brought emphasis to the importance of […]

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Maternal health inequalities – a personal account

Karin Grepin, one of the best global health bloggers in my humble opinion, has written a very personal account of the recent birth of her son.  Her reflection on her experience deserves a read, in particular the paragraph below: I kept asking myself: what if I lived in a poor country, was a poor woman, and knew […]

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Community health data tools

Continuing on from my post about data sources a few weeks ago…Pia Christiansen at Covering Health has posted a wealth of links to new and existing initiatives for making community health data as accessible and “as useful as weather data”.  Google and Microsoft go head-to-head with applications that fuse maps and data – check out Fusion Tables […]

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Human dignity and Obama's National Security Strategy

Human dignity and Obama's National Security Strategy

President Obama’s new national security strategy, released yesterday, outlines a security approach that is as much about development as defense.  The linking of development to national security marks the Administration’s greater reliance on soft power – in these lean years, a possibly more cost-effective and politically palatable approach to the previous strategies released by the Bush Administration in 2002 and […]

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Challenges of global health governance, and more

Challenges of global health governance, and more

Highlights from my reading this week… The Council on Foreign Relations has released a working paper on “The Challenges of Global Health Governance“.  Viewed in the context of recent rumours about USAID reform and last week’s release of the White House’s National Security Strategy, I think the paper is likely to generate significant discussion.  They write: “…these questions about governance […]

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Watchdogs

Last week I attended the annual meeting of the UN Development Program (UNDP)’s Civil Society Advisory Committee. The significance of this committee for UN accountability merits attention. The UN – and most donor countries, for that matter – spends a good deal of time preaching the importance of civil society. As the line goes, civil […]

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Africa in the spotlight

Africa in the spotlight

The spotlight is on Africa as South Africa gears up for the launch of the continent’s first World Cup, opening June 11th.  To shed some of that light on global health, a few reports have been released this week highlighting the progress and challenges of African social and economic development.  The Africa Progress Panel, chaired by former UN Secretary General […]

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Reductions in child mortality – visually

Reductions in child mortality – visually

Yesterday, I very cynically posted about the success in reducing child mortality rates that has been achieved since 1990.  Gap Minder (a site that has kept me entertained for hours) has a graph that shows child mortality falling – watch it, I promise you won’t be disappointed.

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Who bears the burden?

Who bears the burden?

$4.1 trillion.  That’s how much the world spends on health annually, which, if you divide by an estimated 6 billion people on planet earth, works out to a bit more than $650 per person.  The United States spends the most per capita on health at a little more than $6000; Burundi is the lowest at just under $3 per person. […]

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The paradox of good news

The paradox of good news

Good news in the health world is a funny thing.  For those of us working in the field, it makes us nervous.  After nearly a decade working in HIV, I can uncomfortably say that I’m invested in the bad news: when the New York Times says the AIDS war is falling apart, I hope that people will mobilize.  When […]

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Driving makes you fat, and other public health issues

Driving makes you fat, and other public health issues

Some fascinating things that I’ve read in the last week, related to the social determinants of health and policies to improve public health.  Greg Lindsay at Fast Company charts the linkages between public health and urban sprawl, an association that was once deemed radical.  He writes about Dr. Richard Jackson, former CDC Chief,’s realization that America’s urban […]

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Aligning incentives to cut healthcare costs

I wanted to quickly point out an excellent article in the Economist from a few weeks back, highlighting Kaiser Permanente’s approach to integrated approach to healthcare.  While I find it interesting in the context of the American health insurance debate, I’m most intrigued by the element of aligning incentives.  The Economist writes: Kaiser also aligns […]

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Is China really getting tough?

This week one of China’s former richest men, Huang Guangyu of Chinese appliance giant Gome Electronics, was sentenced to 14 years in jail for bribery and insider dealing. This follows rejection of the appeal of former Rio Tinto executives, who some believed had received unreasonably harsh sentences for bribing so-far unnamed government officials. Is China […]

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New Blog Coming Soon

Welcome to the Foreignpolicyblogs.com blog, the latest addition to the Foreign Policy Blogs network.

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