Where they have Good Public Health system and you can make critiques about some aspects but china was able to jump on it quickly. That wasnt true in 2014 when people appeared in west africa. There was no Health System and for three months we were unable to know if it was evil and it turned into an explosive epidemic. We have to have no communities left out. We have to think of this not just as a development or equity issue but a Global Health security issue. If you get sick in one of those communities, you are likely to have side effects or die or have that disease spread among you. For all those reasons it is a good community. 75 , 13 large fractional countries, we are going to get granular with a metric, try to take away at that but also a metric on how those 0 dose children get incorporated into a system and we want to build a resilient Health System for everybody. We have to be more differentiated and targeted. We have to go subnational. There is a reason communities are being reac
Health and the university and also not in the way of a great conversation so im delighted to introduce our moderator well known to all of you im sure. Michael is the chair of the department of Health Policy and management. [applause] eye in the chair of the department of Health Policy and management and i want to welcome you to the book launch. My job as the moderator is to let them come up to ask questions while i have a back and forth and then i get up towards the end and say now it is time to go to the reception and have some wine, so that is my main job. Three quick things about this terrific book. This book contains four case studies of leading Global Health organizations around the world. Its to the literature and thats number one. Number two, in an interesting way and pretty unique it is and always case studies. It looks at how the organizations are governed and what the rules of the government are, how they are financed, how transparent they are and takes a look at all these is
Health and the university and also not in the way of a great conversation so im delighted to introduce our moderator well known to all of you im sure. Michael is the chair of the department of Health Policy and management. [applause] eye in the chair of the department of Health Policy and management and i want to welcome you to the book launch. My job as the moderator is to let them come up to ask questions while i have a back and forth and then i get up towards the end and say now it is time to go to the reception and have some wine, so that is my main job. Three quick things about this terrific book. This book contains four case studies of leading Global Health organizations around the world. Its to the literature and thats number one. Number two, in an interesting way and pretty unique it is and always case studies. It looks at how the organizations are governed and what the rules of the government are, how they are financed, how transparent they are and takes a look at all these is
That was an interesting question. You asked about whether there was any differences between the written theology as opposed to a more verbal one. Yeah, the main face that we looked at obviously did have a written. What we didnt look at, and weve actually referred to this in the paper, was the enormous richness of traditional faiths and certainly i can speak mainly in africa, but im sure the truth is in asia where the faiths have been there for years and sometimes in a sink syncrotistic way. More modern faiths such as christianity and islam, we didnt look at those because the diversity of those would have needed a lot more work. All we could see was a very interesting thing, was that there was a considerable enthusiasm among all of the faith leaders for seeing how they could be more involved and actually there was a great opportunity expressed in the work that we did for making faith leaders more aware so that their sacred teachings, the preachings about traditional values could actuall
That was an interesting question. You asked about whether there was any differences between the written theology as opposed to a more verbal one. Yeah, the main face that we looked at obviously did have a written. What we didnt look at, and weve actually referred to this in the paper, was the enormous richness of traditional faiths and certainly i can speak mainly in africa, but im sure the truth is in asia where the faiths have been there for years and sometimes in a sink syncrotistic way. More modern faiths such as christianity and islam, we didnt look at those because the diversity of those would have needed a lot more work. All we could see was a very interesting thing, was that there was a considerable enthusiasm among all of the faith leaders for seeing how they could be more involved and actually there was a great opportunity expressed in the work that we did for making faith leaders more aware so that their sacred teachings, the preachings about traditional values could actuall