Global Health Event
This event highlights how the collaborative efforts of scientists, policymakers, and
implementers revolutionized healthcare delivery and continue to inspire global health
progress.
Global Health Visiting Scholar Seminar
Implementation science is the study of how to improve implementation of public health
actions. This talk focuses on the utility of implementation science as a translational
catalyst in public health to promote effectiveness, efficiency, and equity.
Implementation Science Seminar
Sara Wilcox, Director of the PRC, and Pam Gillam, Director of CARE, share their experiences
with implementation in community settings.
Global Health Visiting Scholar Seminar
People need to eat more fruit and vegetables – but how? In this talk, Global Health
Visiting Scholar, Dr. Deanna Olney, discusses global fruit and vegetable consumption
and promising behavioral approaches to promote increased intake and improved dietary
practices.
Global Health Seminar
A growing global evidence-base demonstrates the multi-level impact of group prenatal
and postpartum care on providers’ experiences of delivering care, on the experiences
of pregnant and parenting people “receiving” care, and on numerous important outcomes.
This presentation focuses on methods and findings from the EU-funded GC_1000 initiative
(2020-2024) working in seven countries to co-create and implement strategies and tools
that support implementation and scale-up of group care. Lessons learned are being
used to develop a global Community of Practice and to leverage efforts for revising
the World Health Organization recommendation on group prenatal care.
Global Health Seminar
The perinatal period – the time between conception and the first year of life – is
a sensitive period of rapid change for both the mother and the infant. In low- and
middle-income countries, the prevalence of adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes
in the perinatal period is disproportionately high. This seminar examines the causes,
with a particular focus on nutrition, and the consequences of adverse perinatal outcomes
for health and development throughout the life course.
Global Health Seminar
Dr. Blake conducts research globally on food choice behaviors with an emphasis on
the nexus where the individual meets the food environment. Her research program aims
to improve the design, implementation, and evaluation of policies and programs to
achieve healthy sustainable diets, especially among families with children. This talk
provides an overview of lessons learned from a recently completed program funded by
the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and UKFCDO that facilitated research on the drivers
of food choice in Asia and Africa.
Global Health Seminar
Dr. Melissa Nolan is a clinical epidemiologist with study sites in South Carolina,
El Salvador, Colombia, and Brazil. This presentation describes the overlapping similarities,
yet distinctions, between her multiple study sites’ investigations on Chagas disease
and Spotted Fever Group Rickettsioses.
Trip to El Salvador
Epidemiology assistant professor Melissa Nolan and doctoral students Kyndall Dye-Braumuller
and Katie Lynn traveled to El Salvador to conduct tick surveillance and study the
prevalence and transfer of Chagas disease from mother to infant in utero .
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