-
Future of Drug Pricing: Paying for Benefits Not Per Pill
Global pressure on health spending is forcing the $1 trillion-a-year pharmaceutical industry to look for new ways to price its products: charging based on how much they improve patients' health, rather than how many pills or vials are sold.
- Categories
- Health Care
-
When Doctors Can’t Reach Sick People in Madagascar, They Send This Medicine-Carrying Drone
Due to the continued use of drone strikes by the military, Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) are often associated more with ending lives than saving them. That’s a trend researchers at Stony Brook University want to help reverse.
- Categories
- Health Care, Technology
- Region
- Sub-Saharan Africa
- Tags
- research
-
SA To Unveil Momentous Mobile Clinic
The world’s first primary healthcare clinic on wheels will be launched in the South African city of Ladysmith on Thursday. The Phelophepa health train is an initiative by Eskom and Transnet, the electricity and freight logistics utilities respectively, aimed at providing mobile health services to communities across the country.
- Categories
- Health Care
- Tags
- public health
-
Atlanta Nonprofit Focused on Health Gets $2 Million Award
An Atlanta nonprofit focused on global health known for highlighting the work of its partners is getting a turn in the spotlight and a $2 million award from the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation.
- Categories
- Health Care
- Region
- North America
-
This Startup is Fixing Health Care…in Kabul
Aschkan Abdul-Malek had come to Afghanistan to solve problems. He was working for a consulting firm, and in 2013 was helping the World Bank study healthcare constraints in developing countries. One day, as he was home talking to his cook, he learned how personally devastating the healthcare problem could be: The cook was spending six times his annual income to fly his wife to India for medical care, because she couldn’t find the doctor she needed at home.
- Categories
- Health Care
- Region
- North Africa & Near East
-
Piloting Portable Ultrasounds in Rural Ghana
For women living in rural locations in Ghana, portable ultrasounds may be a useful tool in preventing pregnancy complications. Although the World Health Organization recommends that pregnant women have at least four antenatal care visits and skilled attendants at birth, many pregnant women in rural communities in low-income countries do not meet these recommendations.
- Categories
- Health Care
- Region
- Sub-Saharan Africa
-
The race for a Zika vaccine is intense. But it may be missing the most important players
About a year ago, before the Zika virus grabbed global attention, there were zero vaccines for it in development. Today, according to the World Health Organization, there are 30. Some of the work has been astonishingly quick. Human trials for two experimental vaccines have already begun.
- Categories
- Health Care
-
Reaching the last mile: The future of medicine access for everyone
According to the World Health Organization, much of the world’s burden of disease can be prevented or cured with known, affordable technologies. The problem is getting drugs, vaccines, information and other forms of prevention, care or treatment — on time, reliably, in sufficient quantity and at reasonable cost — to those who need them.
- Categories
- Health Care
