55 results on '"Kinney, Mary V"'
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52. Newborn survival: a multi-country analysis of a decade of change.
- Author
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Lawn, Joy E, Kinney, Mary V, Black, Robert E, Pitt, Catherine, Cousens, Simon, Kerber, Kate, Corbett, Erica, Moran, Allisyn C, Morrissey, Claudia S, and Oestergaard, Mikkel Z
- Subjects
NEWBORN infants ,NEONATAL mortality - Abstract
A correction to the article "Newborn survival: a multi-country analysis of a decade of change" by Joy E Lawn and colleagues in a July 2012 issue is presented.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
53. Newborn survival: a multi-country analysis of a decade of change
- Author
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Lawn, Joy E., Kinney, Mary V., Black, Robert E., Pitt, Catherine, Cousens, Simon, Kerber, Kate, Corbett, Erica, Moran, Allisyn C., Morrissey, Claudia S., Oestergaard, Mikkel Z., Lawn, Joy E., Kinney, Mary V., Black, Robert E., Pitt, Catherine, Cousens, Simon, Kerber, Kate, Corbett, Erica, Moran, Allisyn C., Morrissey, Claudia S., and Oestergaard, Mikkel Z.
- Abstract
Neonatal deaths account for 40% of global under-five mortality and are ever more important if we are to achieve the Millennium Development Goal 4 (MDG 4) on child survival. We applied a results framework to evaluate global and national changes for neonatal mortality rates (NMR), healthy behaviours, intervention coverage, health system change, and inputs including funding, while considering contextual changes. The average annual rate of reduction of NMR globally accelerated between 2000 and 2010 (2.1% per year) compared with the 1990s, but was slower than the reduction in mortality of children aged 1-59 months (2.9% per year) and maternal mortality (4.2% per year). Regional variation of NMR change ranged from 3.0% per year in developed countries to 1.5% per year in sub-Saharan Africa. Some countries have made remarkable progress despite major challenges. Our statistical analysis identifies inter-country predictors of NMR reduction including high baseline NMR, and changes in income or fertility. Changes in intervention or package coverage did not appear to be important predictors in any region, but coverage data are lacking for several neonatal-specific interventions. Mortality due to neonatal infection deaths, notably tetanus, decreased, and deaths from complications of preterm birth are increasingly important. Official development assistance for maternal, newborn and child health doubled from 2003 to 2008, yet by 2008 only 6% of this aid mentioned newborns, and a mere 0.1% (US$4.56m) exclusively targeted newborn care. The amount of newborn survival data and the evidence based increased, as did recognition in donor funding. Over this decade, NMR reduction seems more related to change in context, such as socio-economic factors, than to increasing intervention coverage. High impact cost-effective interventions hold great potential to save newborn lives especially in the highest burden countries. Accelerating progress requires data-driven investments and addressing cont
54. Any better? A follow-up content analysis of adolescent sexual and reproductive health inclusion in Global Financing Facility country planning documents.
- Author
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Walmisley U, Kinney MV, Kiendrébéogo JA, Kafando Y, and George AS
- Subjects
- Humans, Adolescent, Female, Pregnancy, Sexual Health, Global Health, Pregnancy in Adolescence, Adolescent Health, Follow-Up Studies, Reproductive Health Services organization & administration, Reproductive Health Services economics, Health Planning organization & administration, Reproductive Health
- Abstract
Background: The Global Financing Facility (GFF) supports national reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, adolescent health, and nutrition needs. Previous analysis examined how adolescent sexual and reproductive health was represented in GFF national planning documents for 11 GFF partner countries., Objectives: This paper furthers that analysis for 16 GFF partner countries as part of a Special Series., Methods: Content analysis was conducted on publicly available GFF planning documents for Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, CAR, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Haiti, Indonesia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tajikistan, Vietnam. Analysis considered adolescent health content (mindset), indicators (measure) and funding (money) relative to adolescent sexual and reproductive health needs, using a tracer indicator., Results: Countries with higher rates of adolescent pregnancy had more content relating to adolescent reproductive health, with exceptions in fragile contexts. Investment cases had more adolescent content than project appraisal documents. Content gradually weakened from mindset to measures to money. Related conditions, such as fistula, abortion, and mental health, were insufficiently addressed. Documents from Burkina Faso and Malawi demonstrated it is possible to include adolescent programming even within a context of shifting or selective priorities., Conclusion: Tracing prioritisation and translation of commitments into plans provides a foundation for discussing global funding for adolescents. We highlight positive aspects of programming and areas for strengthening and suggest broadening the perspective of adolescent health beyond the reproductive health to encompass issues, such as mental health. This paper forms part of a growing body of accountability literature, supporting advocacy work for adolescent programming and funding.
- Published
- 2024
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55. Individual interactions in a multi-country implementation-focused quality of care network for maternal, newborn and child health: A social network analysis.
- Author
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Mukinda FK, Djellouli N, Akter K, Sarker M, Tufa AA, Mwandira K, Seruwagi G, Kyamulabi A, Mwaba K, Marchant T, Shawar YR, English M, Namakula H, Gonfa G, Colbourn T, and Kinney MV
- Abstract
The Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (QCN) was established to build a cross-country platform for joint-learning around quality improvement implementation approaches to reduce mortality. This paper describes and explores the structure of the QCN in four countries and at global level. Using Social Network Analysis (SNA), this cross-sectional study maps the QCN networks at global level and in four countries (Bangladesh, Ethiopia, Malawi and Uganda) and assesses the interactions among actors involved. A pre-tested closed-ended structured questionnaire was completed by 303 key actors in early 2022 following purposeful and snowballing sampling. Data were entered into an online survey tool, and exported into Microsoft Excel for data management and analysis. This study received ethical approval as part of a broader evaluation. The SNA identified 566 actors across the four countries and at global level. Bangladesh, Malawi and Uganda had multiple-hub networks signifying multiple clusters of actors reflecting facility or district networks, whereas the network in Ethiopia and at global level had more centralized networks. There were some common features across the country networks, such as low overall density of the network, engagement of actors at all levels of the system, membership of related committees identified as the primary role of actors, and interactions spanning all types (learning, action and information sharing). The most connected actors were facility level actors in all countries except Ethiopia, which had mostly national level actors. The results reveal the uniqueness and complexity of each network assessed in the evaluation. They also affirm the broader qualitative evaluation assessing the nature of these networks, including composition and leadership. Gaps in communication between members of the network and limited interactions of actors between countries and with global level actors signal opportunities to strengthen QCN., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist., (Copyright: © 2023 Mukinda et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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