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CNN, The Independent, VOA News Examine Technology, Health Systems In Developing Countries
CNN examines the increasing numbers of health workers using cell phone technology to monitor diseases in the developing world. The article features EpiSurveyor - "a free, open- application designed for personal digital assistants" that can be downloaded onto cell phones, so that officials can "gather data directly from the site of the outbreak and send it electronically back to headquarters for faster analysis," CNN writes.
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New Studies Show Nursing Workforce Critical To Success Of Health Reform
Health Affairs unveiled a series of six studies examining the nursing workforce in the context of health reform. The papers were released at a forum presented by Health Affairs and the Center to Champion Nursing in America (CCNA) that featured a lively discussion among policy-makers, nursing leaders and researchers, and health reform experts. The Center is a joint initiative of AARP, the AARP Foundation and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
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FDA Seeks Public Input On Transparency
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration will host a daylong meeting on June 24, 2009. During this meeting, the FDA will seek recommendations on how to make information on FDA activities and decision-making useful, understandable, and more accessible to the public. The meeting is scheduled for 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. EDT at the National Transportation Safety Board Conference Center, 429 L"Enfant Plaza, S.W., Washington, D.C., 20594.
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Boston Globe Examines U.S. Global Health Strategy

The Boston Globe examines the U.S. strategy towards global health aid. "President George W. Bush scored major advances in his administration"s worldwide campaign against AIDS," and "[t]he Obama administration believes it can leverage Bush"s successes into an assault against a much broader array of diseases that afflict poor countries," writes the Globe. Last month Obama pledged a total of $63 billion over six years for global health projects that he said would maintain current HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis campaigns, "while increasing and enhancing" U.S. efforts "to combat diseases that claim the lives of 26,000 children each day." The Boston Globe reports that Obama"s plan "would still fall well short of the Institute of Medicine"s recommendation last month of an increase to $15 billion a year for global health aid alone. The budget is just one of the frustration among those agitating for Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to take ambitious steps." According to Jack Lew, deputy secretary of state, the U.S. can use the health delivery systems it has built for more than 3 million HIV-positive people to treat pregnant women and children with other, often fatal, medical problems. Lew said, "It"s not glamorous to treat diarrheal diseases in small children, but we know it saves a lot of lives," adding, "If you"ve got somebody who"s coming into a facility that treats mothers with antiretroviral drugs, you"ve already got the capacity to treat their children. ò€¦ If the capacity is there, it ought to be relatively easy to expand the scope of services provided." The Globe reports that an audit conducted for Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) asserted that in some countries with very active PEPFAR programs "doctors and nurses are being drawn into HIV/AIDS care "at the expense of primary and maternal health, [leading to] the unintended consequence of weakening a country"s overall health infrastructure."" According to the Globe, a Council on Foreign Relations study recently found that U.S. foreign aid "programs continue to operate through legislated stovepipes, putting res and cash into efforts, regardless of - and often in opposition to - the primary needs on the ground in recipient countries. . . . All too often, foreign assistance increases dependency, and aims at the wrong targets." The newspaper writes that almost "everyone agrees on the need to revitalize USAID," which has seen a good deal of privatization and outsourcing over the years, and more development programs that have been "shifted to other departments, notably the Pentagon. ò€¦ In 2006, USAID was effectively folded into the State Department." Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chair John Kerry (D-Mass.) said recently of U.S. foreign aid, "We need a more balanced approach, and a comprehensive development strategy to determine which agency is in charge, what we hope to achieve, and how best to accomplish our goals." Lew said the administration recognizes that the need for improved coordination and planning for U.S. foreign assistance. He said, "We"re taking the view that even with the current structure, and assuming you didn"t change any of the laws, there"s an enormous coordination of programs that ought to be happening at country level, where we really ought to see our ambassadors as true chiefs of mission, not just in title, but as CEOs who have the ability to look across all the programs and manage more effectively." Maurice Middleberg, a policy analyst at the Global Health Council in Washington, said, "I"m not sure the ambassador is the right person." Middleberg said there should be "a loud and clear voice for development" and that there should be an arm"s-length relationship between the State Department and global development. Oxfam America President Raymond Offenheiser, said, "There"s a lot of confusion in Washington at this point." He added, "We see Secretary [of State Hillary] Clinton making speeches, and very compelling speeches, about the importance of effective development, of building civilian capacity and supporting rural development in many regions of the world, and the importance of poverty alleviation. The problem is we just haven"t seen that translated into specific commitments" (Smith, Boston Globe, 6/14). This information was reprinted from globalhealth.kff.org with kind permission from the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. You can view the entire Kaiser Daily Global Health Policy Report, search the archives and sign up for email delivery at globalhealth.kff.org. © Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. All rights reserved.


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