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Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries, 2nd Edition

Author: Editors: Dean T. Jamison, Joel G. Breman, Anthony R. Measham, George Alleyne, Mariam Claeson, David B. Evans, Prabhat Jha, Anne 
InfoShare Partner: Disease Control Priorities Project (DCPP)
Publication Date: April 2006
Type of Document: Article/Report/Paper
Topics: Adolescents/youth, Behavior change interventions, Cervical cancer, Child health/survival, Environment and health/population, Family planning, Financing/management, Gender, HIV/AIDS, general, HIV/AIDS prevention, HIV/AIDS care/treatment, Immunization, Infectious diseases, other, Maternal health/survival, Nutrition, Policy/Law, Population growth/trends, Reproductive health, general, Service delivery, Sexual health/STIs
Region: Global, Asia/Pacific, Europe, Latin America/Caribbean, Middle East/North Africa, North America, Sub-Saharan Africa
Language: English
Additional information: Please go to http://www.dcp2.org/pubs/DCP for more information about the book and to download individual chapters.
Number of Pages: 1400
File Size: 12.76 MB
File Format: Adobe Acrobat (PDF)

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As part of its comprehensive global health examination, DCP2 asked:

What progress has been made in defining and reducing the global burden of disease?
How much have countries accomplished in developing and providing efficient, effective, and equitable health care?
How can they set and achieve priorities in health services?
Once these countries have identified the priorities, how can they deliver interventions to the targeted population in the most cost-effective manner?
How can efforts in health and related sectors–such as nutrition, agriculture, water and sanitation, and education–be integrated to improve health?
DCP2's answers contribute substantially to global initiatives to improve the health of all peoples by providing a multidisciplinary understanding of these fundamental issues and challenges, as well as effective interventions for the range of communicable and noncommunicable diseases and conditions and risk factors.

Combining insights from DCP2 and knowledge of their local situation, actors at many levels–from parliamentarians and health ministers to hospital administrators, health care workers, and concerned citizens–will be able to set priorities, select appropriate interventions, devise better means of delivery, improve management, and be more effective in mobilizing resources. In this manner, the benefits of technical progress in improving health can be extended and shared by all.