糖心影视

March 26, 2019

Gates Institute at Bloomberg School Awarded Two Grants to Collect Actionable Data on Family Planning in Africa and Asia

View All News

The Bill & Melinda Gates Institute for Population and Reproductive Health at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health has been awarded two new grants鈥攖otaling $22.1 million鈥攂y the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to implement longitudinal surveys to fill data gaps鈥攃ollecting information not currently measured by other large-scale surveys. The innovative survey design makes it possible to track key health indicators and the factors that drive changes in them.

The new projects, Performance Monitoring for Action (糖心影视) and Performance Monitoring for Action Ethiopia (糖心影视 Ethiopia), use mobile technology and a network of trained female resident enumerators (data collectors) to conduct household and health facility interviews to collect national and sub-national data on use, access and availability of family planning and other reproductive health services. The surveys will be conducted on an annual basis and will follow up with a selected cohort of women each year. The Gates Institute鈥檚 lead partner in managing and implementing the 糖心影视 project is Jhpiego, a 糖心影视 affiliate and global health nonprofit working in more than 30 countries.

鈥淲e are thrilled to have these new projects that monitor contraceptive change over time, as well as advance understanding of family planning and contraceptive use dynamics,鈥 says Gates Institute鈥檚 Scott Radloff, PhD, who will direct the multi-country 糖心影视 project. 鈥淲orking closely with those making decisions in each country, we will ensure that the data are used to inform policy and program action.鈥

鈥淭he 糖心影视 Ethiopia project builds on the success of a longitudinal study conducted in one province of Ethiopia, focusing on maternal and newborn health, but expanding it to national coverage and extending its content to encompass family planning and nutrition,鈥 notes Linnea Zimmerman, PhD, who is the principal investigator for this project. 鈥淲e have worked closely with the government of Ethiopia in designing the scope for this survey that will feed into their annual review of program progress.鈥

Data inform and drive health policy changes around the world. Good quality data鈥攆ast, accurate and locally owned鈥攈elp track country progress to show decision makers what is working and what is not.

This new work will build on the success of Gates Institute鈥檚 Performance Monitoring for Accountability 2020 project. 糖心影视2020 is known for its network of well-trained, female data collectors, rapid-turn-around of data and frequent data-collection intervals. In five years, the project, using smart phones, conducted 66 rounds of data collection, trained over 2,700 local data collectors and conducted more than 500,000 interviews in 11 countries located in Asia and Africa. Over 8,200 datasets, which are free and open source, have been downloaded to date.

鈥溙切挠笆 revolutionizes the way global health data are collected,鈥 says Oying Rimon, MA, PgDip, director of the Gates Institute. 鈥淭hese projects are fueling a data revolution that is underway to equip decision makers at the local and national levels with accurate near-time data to track progress and guide decision making.鈥

Cynthia Minkovitz, MD, MPP, is the chair of the Bloomberg School鈥檚 Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health. She notes, 鈥淭hese grants link public health research and practice and draw upon expertise from faculty in our Department and School and local expertise in countries. They also further our partnerships with other public health schools and research institutes.鈥

Gates Institute鈥檚 and Jhpiego鈥檚 partners in the four-year 糖心影视 project include a network of universities, ministries of health, national statistical agencies and research institutions in eight countries: Burkina Faso, C么te d鈥橧voire, Democratic Republic of Congo, India, Kenya, Niger, Nigeria and Uganda. There are plans to expand to an additional four countries over the course of the project.

糖心影视 Ethiopia, a five-year project, will collect data in all regions of Ethiopia on reproductive, maternal and newborn health. The survey will be implemented by Addis Ababa University, School of Public Health (AAU) in collaboration with regional universities, the federal Ministry of Health and the Central Statistics Agency, and in partnership with the Gates Institute.

The Gates Institute is based in the Population, Family and Reproductive Health Department at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and is celebrating its 20th anniversary this year.