Articles by Kyle Poplin
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Guest Articles
Tuesday
October 21
2014The ‘Scrappy Rockstar’ of Global Health?: Maternova using Amazon-type platform to help save lives of mothers, infants in developing world
Maternova, a women-owned, women-run, for-profit social enterprise, has been described as "an Amazon-type platform, but for global health technologies." Allyson Cote, a co-founder, describes how her company is helping save the lives of mothers and infants in developing countries around the world.
- Categories
- Health Care, Social Enterprise
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Saturday
October 4
2014Weekly Roundup – 10/4/14: Reputation for cost-effectiveness blasting off in India
If low cost doesn’t have to equal low quality, and resource scarcity can serve to focus ideas, there just might come a day when international health care companies will be lining up to invest in India.
- Categories
- Education, Health Care, Impact Assessment, Technology
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Thursday
September 18
2014How Price Discrimination is Good for Global Health (Part 2): Patricia Danzon describes how the concept, despite its theoretical upside, ‘is not working very well’ in practice
?In Part 1 of her interview with NBHC, professor Patricia Danzon of The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania laid out some of the advantages of differential pricing in pharmaceuticals. In Part 2, she describes how the concept works in practice, including the key role of politics in its implementation.
- Categories
- Education, Health Care
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Wednesday
September 17
2014How Price Discrimination is Good for Global Health (Part 1): Professor Patricia Danzon of The Wharton School discusses differential pricing in pharmaceuticals
Professor Patricia Danzon of The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, discusses differential pricing -- sometimes called price discrimination -- which she maintains increases utilization of medicines and, therefore, overall social welfare.
- Categories
- Education, Health Care
- Tags
- research, supply chains
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Saturday
September 6
2014Weekly Roundup 9/5/14 – Recharging Batteries: It’s good to go to conferences, even for editors
There’s a reason groups go to such lengths to organize conferences, and people from all over the world attend them: They’re a great place to recharge batteries and recalibrate goals. It works for editors, too.
- Categories
- Uncategorized
- Tags
- microfinance
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Saturday
August 16
2014Weekly Roundup (8/16/14) – Empowering the BoP. Or Not: When the few drown out the many
Most people on the planet are poor, but one could argue that their many voices are too often drowned out by the few. We dive into the debate.
- Categories
- Health Care
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Saturday
July 26
2014Weekly Roundup – 7/26/14: Mind the Gap
A lot of exciting news came out of the 20th International AIDS Conference in Melbourne this week, but it’s tempered by the reality that in too much of the world, it’s a crime to be a member of the LGBT community. As long as that’s the case, efforts at prevention and treatment will be limited.
- Categories
- Health Care
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Friday
July 4
2014Weekly Roundup – 7/4/14: Finding best buys in global health, and not falling in love with ideas
The Medical Credit Fund recently won OPIC’s Access to Finance award, for figuring out ways to give loans to small rural health clinics in Tanzania, Ghana, Kenya and Nigeria. The kicker: The fund has given loans to more than 500 health care providers and its repayment rate is 97.3 percent.
- Categories
- Uncategorized