In this month’s Bulletin

In an editorial, R Bruce Aylward (466) explains why polio has been declared a public health emergency of international concern. Carole Presern et al. (467) draw attention to the factors that predict success – reported in the policy and practice section of this issue (533–544) – in meeting millennium development goals on maternal and child health. Gary Humphreys (470–471) reports on efforts to design high-tech low-cost toilets for 2.5 billion people currently lacking access to basic sanitation infrastructure. Suwit Wibulpolprasert (472–473) talks to Fiona Fleck about progress and setbacks in Thailand’s universal coverage scheme.

China

Informing rural health workers

Yaolong Chen et al. (474–481) use text messages as a way to get evidence acted upon.

South Africa

Does supply meet demand?

Kim Ward et al. (482–489) study the distribution of community pharmacies.

Gambia

S. pneumoniae vs C. trachomatis

Sarah E Burr et al. (490–498) study the indirect effects of trachoma control efforts.

Australia

Getting doctors where they are needed

Belinda G O'Sullivan et al. (512–519) describe a specialist outreach policy.

Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Nepal, Peru, Rwanda & Viet Nam

Meeting development goals

Shyama Kuruvilla et al. (533–544) untangle what works in making progress on maternal and child health.

Global

HIV services

Mariana Siapka et al. (499–511) explore the evidence for integrating service provision.

Paying attention to the details

Bryan Mercurio (520–525) dissects the options for making trade agreements less problematic for public health.

Surviving snakebite

José María Gutiérrez et al. (526–532) propose ways to make antivenoms more available.

Publication Dates

    (c) World Health Organization (WHO) 2014. All rights reserved.
    World Health Organization Genebra - Genebra - Switzerland
    E-mail: bulletin@who.int