Monday, August 06, 2012

Global Health

Identificado pelo AMICOR Jorge Ossanai

Technologies for global health

Peter Howitt MA a Corresponding AuthorEmail AddressProf Ara Darzi FRCS aProf Guang-Zhong Yang PhD aHutan Ashrafian MRCS kProf Rifat Atun FRCP l n,Prof James Barlow PhD nAlex Blakemore PhD iProf Anthony MJ Bull PhD dJosip Car PhD mLesong Conteh PhD aGraham S Cooke PhD fNathan Ford PhD fSimon AJ Gregson PhD gKaren Kerr PhD aDominic King MRCS cMyutan Kulendran MRCS cProfRobert A Malkin PhD dProf Azeem Majeed MD jProf Stephen Matlin DSc aRobert Merrifield PhD aHugh A Penfold PhD o,Steven D Reid PhD fProf Peter C Smith BA cProf Molly M Stevens PhD d hMichael R Templeton PhD eProf Charles Vincent PhDkElizabeth Wilson MSc b
Video (1):

Supplementary video

Peter Howitt discusses the joint Lancet University College London Commission on Technologies for Global Health.
Executive summary
Availability of health technology is inversely related to health need. Although health-care systems in high-income countries make extensive use of technology, people in the world's poorest countries often lack the most fundamental drugs and devices. A concerted global effort to encourage the development and use of health technologies that can benefit the poorest people in the world is needed.
Technologies for global health refers to a broad category of interventions that reduce malnutrition, improve sanitation, and increase safety on roads, and they are distinct from health technologies specifically designed to prevent, diagnose, or treat illness, from the highly specific (eg, a vaccine for a particular disease) to the more widely applicable (eg, a blood pressure monitor). The contribution of technologies for health should be acknowledged, and they are considered here, although this report mainly focuses on the narrower category of health technologies.

No comments:

Post a Comment