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Primary Health Care: Good News for Global Maternal and Child Health

Thirty years ago, representatives of 134 WHO member states convened in Alma- Ata to discuss global health issues and the potential of primary health care to address huge needs. The Alma-Ata Declaration advocated the implementation of primary care health systems as a central strategy to achieve “Health for All by 2000” noting that an estimated 2 billion of the world’s people lacked access to health care at that time. This declaration met with significant resistance from various interest groups in 1978 but fortunately, its central strategy has gained momentum in recent years. The Lancet, in its September 13-16, 2008 issue, has revisited Alma-Ata with an editorial and extensive comments and articles.

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Water, Water Everywhere, BUT….

A “Perspective,” published in the New England Journal of Medicine (359.8: 783-786, 2008), highlights the persisting, devastating global impact of preventable water-related diseases. Most of the 1.1 billion people who regularly lack access to sufficient, clean water live in low-income countries but recent natural disasters remind us that populations in any corner of the globe can be affected.

Who is working on these problems and where? If those working on producing sources of safe water and those involved in measuring its health impact post weblogs briefly describing their work, a productive dialogue might be generated on this website. If you are not directly involved in this field, spread the word to colleagues who are.

We hope to hear from you.

Richard Hamilton

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On the Mother-Child Website...

The www.mother-child.org website has just undergone an extensive revision in an effort to provide a clear, concise image of our basic premises and purpose. We believe that these revisions will improve your access to the site’s facilities thereby helping you to achieve your objectives in research. So it’s a good time for us to question our own motives and methods in developing and promoting this website.

Specifically, we need your responses to the following questions:

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A COUPLE OF FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES

GLOBAL HEALTH LEADERSHIP AWARDS: CALL FOR APPLICATIONS

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Arsenic Contamination of Drinking Water

Arsenic contamination of the drinking water used by millions of people in Asia and elsewhere in the Developing World presents a major potential public health crisis.

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How might research be mobilized to curb the costly global epidemic of obesity

In developing countries where Western influence has promoted a lifestyle of little physical activity and high calorie foods, cases of obesity have tripled in the past 20 years.Hassan P et al.

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CHILD DEVELOPMENT IN LOW INCOME COUNTRIES - A RESEARCH CHALLENGE

A series of 3 papers on child development in developing countries indicate that developmental potential is being lost in more than 200 million children in low income countries1,2,3.

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POSTNATAL CARE: An obvious global health priority

A policy brief has been disseminated recently by the Population Reference Bureau in Washington (www.prb.org).

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Vaccination Schedules for Pre-Term Infants

Bonhoeffer et al (Arch Dis Childh 91:929-935, 2006) suggest that vaccinations scheduled at 2, 3 and 4 months after birth for pre

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Does Breast Feeding Make you Smarter?

In an extensive metaanalysis published in the BMJ (333:945-948, 2006) Der et al provide c

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