20 results on '"Sarah L Barber"'
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2. Specific Synbiotic Sugars Stimulate Streptococcus salivarius BLIS K12 and BLIS M18 Lantibiotic Production to Expand Bacterial Inhibition Range and Potency
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Liam K. Harold, Nicola C. Jones, Sarah L. Barber, Abigail L. Voss, Rohit Jain, John R. Tagg, and John D. F. Hale
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Streptococcus salivarius ,probiotics ,synbiotics ,lantibiotics ,BLIS ,bacteriocin ,Microbiology ,QR1-502 - Abstract
Synbiotics are mixtures of prebiotics and probiotics that enhance the activity of probiotic bacteria when co-administered to provide greater benefits to the host. Traditionally, the synbiotics that have been discovered enhance gut probiotic strains and are nutritionally complex molecules that survive digestive breakdown until they reach the later stages of the intestinal tract. Here, we screened and identified sugars or sugar substitutes as synbiotics for the oral probiotic strains Streptococcus salivarius BLIS K12 and BLIS M18. Using a modified deferred antagonism assay, we found that 0.5% (w/v) galactose and 2.5% (w/v) raffinose were the best candidates for use as synbiotics with BLIS K12 and M18, as they trigger enhanced antimicrobial activity against a range of bacteria representing species from the mouth, gut, and skin. Using reverse transcriptase quantitative PCR, we found that this enhanced antimicrobial activity was caused by the upregulation of the lantibiotic genes salA, salB, and sal9 in either K12 or M18. This led to the conclusion that either 2.5% (w/v) raffinose or 0.5% (w/v) galactose, respectively, are suitable synbiotics for use in conjunction with BLIS K12 and M18 to enhance probiotic performance.
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- 2024
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3. The reporting checklist for public versions of guidelines: RIGHT-PVG
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Xiaoqin Wang, Yaolong Chen, Elie A. Akl, Ružica Tokalić, Ana Marušić, Amir Qaseem, Yngve Falck-Ytter, Myeong Soo Lee, Madelin Siedler, Sarah L. Barber, Mingming Zhang, Edwin S. Y. Chan, Janne Estill, Joey S. W. Kwong, Akiko Okumura, Qi Zhou, Kehu Yang, Susan L. Norris, and The RIGHT working group
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Guideline ,Public or patient version of guidelines (PVG) ,Reporting quality ,Reporting checklist ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Abstract Background Public or patient versions of guidelines (PVGs) are derivative documents that “translate” recommendations and their rationale from clinical guidelines for health professionals into a more easily understandable and usable format for patients and the public. PVGs from different groups and organizations vary considerably in terms of quality of their reporting. In order to address this issue, we aimed to develop a reporting checklist for developers of PVGs and other potential users. Methods First, we collected a list of potential items through reviewing a sample of PVGs, existing guidance for developing and reporting PVGs or other similar evidence-based patient tools, as well as qualitative studies on original studies of patients’ needs about the content and/or reporting of information in PVGs or similar evidence-based patient tools. Second, we conducted a two-round Delphi consultation to determine the level of consensus on the items to be included in the final reporting checklist. Third, we invited two external reviewers to provide comments on the checklist. Results We generated the initial list of 45 reporting items based on a review of a sample of 30 PVGs, four PVG guidance documents, and 46 relevant studies. After the two-round Delphi consultation, we formed a checklist of 17 items grouped under 12 topics for reporting PVGs. Conclusion The RIGHT-PVG reporting checklist provides an international consensus on the important criteria for reporting PVGs.
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- 2021
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4. Aging and Universal Health Coverage: Implications for the Asia Pacific Region
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Sarah L. Barber and Megumi Rosenberg
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aging ,asia ,health services ,pacific islands ,universal coverage ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Global population aging is the result of successes in public health, enabling longer life expectancy in many countries. The Asia Pacific region is aging more rapidly than many other parts of the world. The implications will be profound for every sector of society, requiring policy makers to reframe their thinking about the design of health and social systems to enable older populations to thrive. With increasing demand for more and different kinds of services, an imperative is shifting resources toward primary care for the prevention and comprehensive care of people with chronic conditions, and establishing linkages with community support. Major innovations are underway that accelerate progress in attaining universal health coverage for older populations. The renewed commitments under the Sustainable Development Goals to achieve universal health coverage offer a unique opportunity to invest in the foundations of the health system of the future.
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- 2017
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5. Lessons learnt from providing technical assistance to Chinese generic medicines manufactures to achieve the WHO Prequalification standards
- Author
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Baobin Huang, Christina Foerg-Wimmer, and Sarah L Barber
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030503 health policy & services ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Pharmaceutical Science ,World health ,03 medical and health sciences ,Engineering management ,0302 clinical medicine ,Procurement ,Benchmark (surveying) ,Quality (business) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Business ,0305 other medical science ,China ,media_common - Abstract
The World Health Organization (WHO) Prequalification sets a benchmark of generic medicines quality standards for both local utilization and international procurement. So far in China, there are onl...
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- 2019
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6. WHO Thematic Platform for Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management Research Network (TPRN): Report of the Kobe Expert Meeting
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Sarah L Barber, Emily Ying Yang Chan, Virginia Murray, Jonathan Abrahams, and Ryoma Kayano
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psychosocial ,Disaster risk reduction ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,health data ,lcsh:Medicine ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Scientific evidence ,03 medical and health sciences ,research methods ,0302 clinical medicine ,risk communication ,Political science ,Agency (sociology) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Risk management ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,business.industry ,capacity building ,lcsh:R ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Capacity building ,Public relations ,Workforce development ,ethics ,WHO Thematic Platform for Health EDRM ,Commentary ,health emergency and disaster risk management (Health EDRM) ,Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030 ,business ,Psychosocial ,Disaster medicine - Abstract
The WHO Thematic Platform for Health Emergency and Disaster Risk Management Research Network (TPRN) was established in 2016 in response to the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030. The TPRN facilitates global collaborative action for improving the scientific evidence base in health emergency and disaster risk management (Health EDRM). In 2018, the WHO convened a meeting to identify key research questions, bringing together leading experts from WHO, TPRN, World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine (WADEM), and the Japan International Cooperation Agency, and delegates to the Asia Pacific Conference on Disaster Medicine (APCDM). The meeting identified research questions in five major areas for Health EDRM: health data management, psychosocial management, community risk management, health workforce development, and research methods and ethics. Funding these key research questions is essential to accelerate evidence-based actions during emergencies and disasters.
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- 2019
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7. Technical gaps faced by Chinese generic medicine manufacturers to achieve the standards of WHO medicines Prequalification
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Jim Sun, Milan Smid, Chunfu Wu, Alain Kupferman, Baobin Huang, Sarah L Barber, and Patrick Hoet
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Engineering management ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Traditional medicine ,business.industry ,Alternative medicine ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Medicine ,Good manufacturing practice ,business - Abstract
The study aims to determine the type and extent of technical gaps faced by Chinese generic medicine manufacturers to achieve the standards of WHO Medicines Prequalification. The study was undertaken with four manufacturers producing anti-tuberculosis Fixed Dose Combinations (FDCs) in China from March 2010 to June 2011 and with 47 manufacturers producing anti-HIV/AIDS, anti-tuberculosis, and anti-malaria medicines in China in August 2011. The study assessed key elements required to comply with WHO Good Manufacturing Practices and completion of regulatory dossiers. For Good Manufacturing Practices, the study found technical gaps in quality management, validation and qualification, and calibration and maintenance. More technical gaps were identified in risk management and correction action and prevention action. For dossiers, the study found three technical gaps: bioequivalence testing, incomplete information from active pharmaceutical ingredients suppliers, and stability testing. The study indicates the need for technical assistance to Chinese generic medicine manufacturers, particularly for dossier preparation but also that technical gaps are attributed to differences between the standards of Chinese drug regulations and of WHO Medicines Prequalification Program.
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- 2013
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8. Trends in access to health services and financial protection in China between 2003 and 2011: a cross-sectional study
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Sarah L Barber, Ying Xin, Juncheng Qian, Min Cai, Ke Xu, J. Ties Boerma, Jun Gao, Qun Meng, Ling Xu, and Yaoguang Zhang
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Adult ,Male ,Rural Population ,China ,Adolescent ,National Health Programs ,Health Services Accessibility ,Insurance Coverage ,Young Adult ,Patient Admission ,Health care ,Cluster Analysis ,Humans ,Hospital Costs ,Child ,Socioeconomics ,Reimbursement ,Sampling frame ,Aged ,Government ,Insurance, Health ,Equity (economics) ,Cesarean Section ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,Delivery, Obstetric ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Child, Preschool ,Household income ,Female ,Cluster sampling ,Residence ,business - Abstract
In the past decade, the Government of China initiated health-care reforms to achieve universal access to health care by 2020. We assessed trends in health-care access and financial protection between 2003, and 2011, nationwide.We used data from the 2003, 2008, and 2011 National Health Services Survey (NHSS), which used multistage stratified cluster sampling to select 94 of 2859 counties from China's 31 provinces and municipalities. The 2011 survey was done with a subset of the NHSS sampling frame to monitor key indicators after the national health-care reforms were announced in 2009. Three sets of indicators were chosen to measure trends in access to coverage, health-care activities, and financial protection. Data were disaggregated by urban or rural residence and by three geographical regions: east, central, and west, and by household income. We examined change in equity across and within regions.The number of households interviewed was 57,023 in 2003, 56,456 in 2008, and 18,822 in 2011. Response rates were 98·3%, 95·0%, and 95·5%, respectively. The number of individuals interviewed was 193,689 in 2003, 177,501 in 2008, and 59,835 in 2011. Between 2003 and 2011, insurance coverage increased from 29·7% (57,526 of 193,689) to 95·7% (57,262 of 59,835, p0·0001). The average share of inpatient costs reimbursed from insurance increased from 14·4 (13·7-15·1) in 2003 to 46·9 (44·7-49·1) in 2011 (p0·0001). Hospital delivery rates averaged 95·8% (1219 of 1272) in 2011. Hospital admissions increased 2·5 times to 8·8% (5288 of 59,835, p0·0001) in 2011 from 3·6% (6981 of 193,689) in 2003. 12·9% of households (2425 of 18,800) had catastrophic health expenses in 2011. Caesarean section rates increased from 19·2% (736 of 3835) to 36·3% (443 of 1221, p0·0001) between 2003 and 2011.Remarkable increases in insurance coverage and inpatient reimbursement were accompanied by increased use and coverage of health care. Important advances have been made in achieving equal access to services and insurance coverage across and within regions. However, these increases have not been accompanied by reductions in catastrophic health expenses. With the achievement of basic health-services coverage, future challenges include stronger risk protection, and greater efficiency and quality of care.None.
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- 2012
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9. Development and status of health insurance systems in China
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Lan Yao and Sarah L Barber
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Public economics ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Self-insurance ,Subsidy ,General insurance ,Payment ,Incentive ,Health care ,Economics ,business ,Income protection insurance ,Reimbursement ,media_common - Abstract
Health insurance programs have changed rapidly over time in China. Among rural populations, insurance coverage shifted from nearly universal levels in the 1970s to 7% in 1999; it stands at 94% of counties in 2009. This large increase is the result of a series of health reforms that aim to achieve universal access to healthcare and better risk protection, largely through the rollout of the health insurance programs and the gradual increase in subsidies and benefits over time. In this paper, we present the development of the rural and urban health insurance programs, their modes of financing and operation and the benefits and reimbursement schemes at the end of 2009. We discuss some of the problems with the rural and urban residents' schemes including reliance on local government capacity, reimbursement ceilings and rates, and incentives for unnecessary care and waste in the design of the programs. Recommendations include increasing financial support and deepening the benefits packages. Strategies to control cost and improve quality include developing mixed provider payment mechanisms, implementing essential medicines policies and strengthening the quality of primary-care provision. Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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- 2011
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10. Empowering women: how Mexico's conditional cash transfer programme raised prenatal care quality and birth weight
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Paul Gertler and Sarah L. Barber
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Economic growth ,Poverty ,business.industry ,Birth weight ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Conditional cash transfer ,Beneficiary ,Prenatal care ,Development ,Low birth weight ,Social support ,Health care ,medicine ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Demography - Abstract
Data from a controlled randomised trial are used to estimate the effect of Mexico's conditional cash transfer programme, Oportunidades, on birth outcomes, and to examine the pathways by which it works. Birth weights average 127.3 grams higher, and low birth weight incidence is 44.5 per cent lower among beneficiary mothers. Better birth outcomes are explained entirely by better quality prenatal care. Oportunidades affected quality through empowering women with information about adequate healthcare content to expect better care, and with skills and social support to negotiate better care. Efforts to empower the less well-off are necessary for public services to fully benefit the poor.
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- 2010
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11. Variations In Prenatal Care Quality For The Rural Poor In Mexico
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Stefano M. Bertozzi, Sarah L. Barber, and Paul Gertler
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National health ,Poverty ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Prenatal care ,Indigenous ,Incentive ,Nursing ,Environmental health ,Medicine ,Quality (business) ,business ,Clinical skills ,Health policy ,media_common - Abstract
Quality is high on the Mexican health policy agenda. In this paper we evaluate the quality of prenatal care for rural low-income women. Women who obtained care from private practitioners and non-MDs received fewer procedures on average. Poverty predicts poor quality; however, indigenous women in private settings received fewer procedures, after household wealth was controlled for. We recommend strengthening clinical skills and providing incentives to adhere to quality standards. Quality reporting could promote informed employer care-purchasing and individual care-seeking choices. The national health reforms should be monitored to determine their success in not only increasing access among the poor and indigenous but also ensuring that such care meets quality norms.
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- 2007
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12. Does the Quality of Prenatal Care Matter in Promoting Skilled Institutional Delivery? A Study in Rural Mexico
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Sarah L. Barber
- Subjects
Adult ,Rural Population ,Program evaluation ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Developing country ,Health Promotion ,Prenatal care ,Health Services Accessibility ,Promotion (rank) ,Environmental health ,Odds Ratio ,Humans ,Medicine ,Quality (business) ,education ,Mexico ,Quality of Health Care ,media_common ,education.field_of_study ,business.industry ,Public health ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Prenatal Care ,Delivery, Obstetric ,Logistic Models ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Rural Health Services ,business ,Qualitative research - Abstract
Objectives: To determine if the quality of prenatal care predicts skilled institutional delivery, a primary means of reducing maternal mortality. Methods: The probability of skilled institutional delivery is predicted among 4173 rural low-income women of reproductive age in seven Mexican states, as a function of maternal retrospective reports about prenatal care services received in 1997–2003. Results: Women who received most prenatal care procedures were more likely to have a skilled institutional delivery (OR 2.29, 95% CI 1.18, 4.44). Women who received less than the 75th percentile of prenatal care procedures were not significantly different from those who received no prenatal care. Conclusions: Policies promoting increased access to prenatal services should be linked to the promotion of practice standards to impact health and behavioral outcomes.
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- 2006
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13. The relevance and prospects of advancing tobacco control in Indonesia
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Sarah L. Barber, Anhari Achadi, and Widyastuti Soerojo
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Economic growth ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Smoking Prevention ,Tobacco Industry ,Legislation ,Health Promotion ,Tobacco industry ,Advertising ,Tobacco in Alabama ,Health care ,medicine ,Humans ,Policy Making ,Workplace ,Health Education ,Consumption (economics) ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public health ,Smoking ,Tobacco control ,Taxes ,Social Control Policies ,Leadership ,Fees and Charges ,Indonesia ,Government revenue ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,Business ,Public Facilities - Abstract
Using published data about consumption, economic aspects, and legislation, this paper analyzes tobacco control in Indonesia, a major consumer and producer of tobacco products. Given its large population and smoking prevalence, Indonesia ranks fifth among countries with the highest tobacco consumption globally. Over 62% of Indonesian adult males smoke regularly, contributing to a growing burden of non-communicable diseases and enormous demands on the health care system. Tobacco control policies, however, have remained low on the political and public health agenda for many years. One reason was the contribution of tobacco to government revenues and employment, particularly in the industrial sector. But tobacco's importance in employment has fallen significantly since the 1970s from 38% of total manufacturing employment compared with 5.6% today. Widespread use of tobacco since the 1970s and the concomitant burden of non-communicable diseases have given rise to a more balanced view of the costs and benefits of tobacco production over the last decade. The first tobacco control regulation passed in 1999, succeeded by amendments in 2000 and 2003. Today, few restrictions exist on tobacco industry conduct, advertising, and promotion in Indonesia. We examine the relevance and prospects of advancing in Indonesia four cost-effective tobacco control strategies: price and tax measures, advertising bans, clean air legislation, and public education. We conclude with several suggestions for action for the public health community.
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- 2005
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14. Development and status of health insurance systems in China
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Sarah L, Barber and Lan, Yao
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China ,Insurance, Health ,Health Care Reform ,Policy Making ,Insurance Coverage ,State Medicine - Abstract
Health insurance programs have changed rapidly over time in China. Among rural populations, insurance coverage shifted from nearly universal levels in the 1970s to 7% in 1999; it stands at 94% of counties in 2009. This large increase is the result of a series of health reforms that aim to achieve universal access to healthcare and better risk protection, largely through the rollout of the health insurance programs and the gradual increase in subsidies and benefits over time. In this paper, we present the development of the rural and urban health insurance programs, their modes of financing and operation and the benefits and reimbursement schemes at the end of 2009. We discuss some of the problems with the rural and urban residents' schemes including reliance on local government capacity, reimbursement ceilings and rates, and incentives for unnecessary care and waste in the design of the programs. Recommendations include increasing financial support and deepening the benefits packages. Strategies to control cost and improve quality include developing mixed provider payment mechanisms, implementing essential medicines policies and strengthening the quality of primary-care provision.
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- 2011
15. The tobacco excise system in Indonesia: hindering effective tobacco control for health
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Sarah L Barber and Abdillah Ahsan
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Consumption (economics) ,Marketing ,Point of sale ,Health Policy ,Tobacco control ,Smoking ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Smoking Prevention ,Tobacco Industry ,Tobacco Use Disorder ,Tax reform ,Taxes ,computer.software_genre ,Value-added tax ,Tax credit ,Indonesia ,Environmental health ,Profit margin ,Humans ,Excise ,Business ,computer ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Comprehensive tobacco control policies include high taxes. This paper describes the tobacco excise structure in Indonesia from 2007 to 2009. The design of the tobacco excise system contributes to neutralizing the effect of a tax increase on consumption. Wide gaps in tax rates allow for the availability of low-priced products, and consumers can substitute to cheaper products in response to price increases. There has been no systematic increase in the tax rates, which promotes affordable of tobacco products. Firms can reduce their prices at point of sale and absorb the tax increase instead of passing it onto consumers. Tiered tax rates by production scale allow firms to evade paying the highest tax brackets legally, thereby increasing profit margins while reducing prices at point of sale. Increases in tobacco excise rates in Indonesia may not have a large health impact under the current system of tax administration.
- Published
- 2009
16. Family planning advice and postpartum contraceptive use among low-income women in Mexico
- Author
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Sarah L. Barber
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pediatrics ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Prenatal care ,Women in development ,Pregnancy ,Health care ,medicine ,Urban Health Services ,Childbirth ,Humans ,Socioeconomic status ,Contraception Behavior ,Mexico ,Poverty ,Demography ,business.industry ,Postpartum Period ,Prenatal Care ,Contraception ,Logistic Models ,Sterilization (medicine) ,Family planning ,Family medicine ,Relative risk ,Family Planning Services ,Female ,business - Abstract
In Mexico, family planning advice has been incorporated into the clinical guidelines for prenatal care. However, the relationship between women's receipt of family planning advice during prenatal care and subsequent contraceptive use has not been evaluated.Data were collected in 2003 and 2004 in 17 Mexican states from 2,238 urban low-income women postpartum. Participating women reported on prenatal services received and contraceptive use. Logistic and multinomial logistic regression models evaluated whether receiving family planning advice during prenatal care predicted current contraceptive use, after quality of care in the community, service utilization, delivery characteristics, household socioeconomic characteristics, and maternal and infant characteristics were controlled for.Overall, 47% of women used a modern contraceptive method. Women who received family planning advice during prenatal care were more likely to use a contraceptive than were those who did not receive such advice (odds ratio, 2.2). Women who received family planning advice had a higher probability of using condoms (relative risk ratio, 2.3) and IUDs (5.2), and of undergoing sterilization (1.4), than of using no method.Integrating family planning advice into prenatal care may be an important strategy for reaching women when their demand for contraception is high.
- Published
- 2007
17. Public and private prenatal care providers in urban Mexico: how does their quality compare?
- Author
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Sarah L. Barber
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Reproductive age ,Clinical settings ,Prenatal care ,Affect (psychology) ,Pregnancy ,Poverty Areas ,Urban Health Services ,Medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Mexico ,Accreditation ,media_common ,Quality of Health Care ,Public Sector ,business.industry ,Health Policy ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outcome measures ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Prenatal Care ,General Medicine ,Confidence interval ,Family medicine ,Income ,Female ,Private Sector ,business - Abstract
Objective. To evaluate variations in prenatal care quality by public and private clinical settings and by household wealth. Design. The study uses 2003 data detailing retrospective reports of 12 prenatal care procedures received that correspond to clinical guidelines. The 12 procedures are summed up, and prenatal care quality is described as the average procedures received by clinical setting, provider qualifications, and household wealth. Setting. Low-income communities in 17 states in urban Mexico. Participants. A total of 1253 women of reproductive age who received prenatal care within 1 year of the survey. Main outcome measure. The mean of the 12 prenatal care procedures received, reported as unadjusted and adjusted for individual, household, and community characteristics. Results. Women received significantly more procedures in public clinical settings [80.7, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 79.3–82.1; P ≤ 0.05] compared with private (60.2, 95% CI = 57.8–62.7; P ≤ 0.05). Within private clinical settings, an increase in household wealth is associated with an increase in procedures received. Care from medical doctors is associated with significantly more procedures (78.8, 95% CI = 77.5–80.1; P ≤ 0.05) compared with non-medical doctors (50.3, 95% CI = 46.7–53.9; P ≤ 0.05). These differences are independent of individual, household, and community characteristics that affect health-seeking behavior. Conclusions. Significant differences in prenatal care quality exist across clinical settings, provider qualifications, and household wealth in urban Mexico. Strategies to improve quality include quality reporting, training, accreditation, regulation, and franchising.
- Published
- 2006
18. Empowering women to obtain high quality care: evidence from an evaluation of Mexicos conditional cash transfer programme.
- Author
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Sarah L Barber and Paul J Gertler
- Subjects
PRECONCEPTION care ,MATERNAL health services ,PRENATAL care ,STATISTICAL tolerance regions - Abstract
Objectives To evaluate the impact of Mexicos conditional cash transfer programme on the quality of health care received by poor women. Quality is measured by maternal reports of prenatal care procedures received that correspond with clinical guidelines. Methods The data describe retrospective reports of care received from 892 women in poor rural communities in seven Mexican states. The women were participating in an effectiveness study and randomly assigned to incorporation into the programme in 1998 or 1999. Eligible women accepted cash transfers conditional on obtaining health care and nutritional supplements, and participated in health education sessions. Results Oportunidades beneficiaries received 12.2% more prenatal procedures compared with non-beneficiaries (adjusted mean 78.9, 95% Confidence Interval (CI): 77.5â80.3; P Conclusion The Oportunidades conditional cash transfer programme is associated with better quality of prenatal care for low-income, rural women in Mexico. This result is probably a manifestation of the programmes empowerment goal, by encouraging beneficiaries to be informed and active health consumers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
19. Can healthy ageing moderate the effects of population ageing on economic growth and health spending trends in Mongolia? A modelling study
- Author
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Gemma A. Williams, Jonathan Cylus, Lynn Al Tayara, Tomáš Roubal, Tsolmongerel Tsilaajav, and Sarah L. Barber
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Population ageing ,Healthcare expenditures ,Economic growth ,Healthy ageing ,Mongolia ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Population ageing will accelerate rapidly in Mongolia in the coming decades. We explore whether this is likely to have deleterious effects on economic growth and health spending trends and whether any adverse consequences might be moderated by ensuring better health among the older population. Methods Fixed-effects models are used to estimate the relationship between the size of the older working-age population (55–69 years) and economic growth from 2020 to 2100 and to simulate how growth is modified by better health among the older working-age population, as measured by a 5% improvement in years lived with disability. We next use 2017 data on per capita health spending by age from the National Health Insurance Fund to project how population ageing will influence public health spending from 2020 to 2060 and how this relationship may change if the older population (≥ 60 years) ages in better or worse health than currently. Results The projected increase in the share of the population aged 55–69 years is associated with a 4.1% slowdown in per-person gross domestic product (GDP) growth between 2020 and 2050 and a 5.2% slowdown from 2020 to 2100. However, a 5% reduction in disability rates among the older population offsets these effects and adds around 0.2% to annual per-person GDP growth in 2020, rising to nearly 0.4% per year by 2080. Baseline projections indicate that population ageing will increase public health spending as a share of GDP by 1.35 percentage points from 2020 to 2060; this will occur slowly, adding approximately 0.03 percentage points to the share of GDP annually. Poorer health among the older population (aged ≥ 60 years) would see population ageing add an additional 0.17 percentage points above baseline estimates, but healthy ageing would lower baseline projections by 0.18 percentage points, corresponding to potential savings of just over US$ 46 million per year by 2060. Conclusions Good health at older ages could moderate the potentially negative effects of population ageing on economic growth and health spending trends in Mongolia. Continued investment in the health of older people will improve quality of life, while also enhancing the sustainability of public budgets.
- Published
- 2022
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20. The reform of the essential medicines system in China: a comprehensive approach to universal coverage
- Author
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Sarah L. Barber, Baobin Huang, Budiono Santoso, Richard Laing, Valerie Paris, and Chunfu Wu
- Subjects
China ,access ,essential medicines ,Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
To achieve universal health care coverage, the Government of China invested in large–scale health care reform. One of the major reform components focuses on improving access to essential medicines to reduce high out–of–pocket medicines spending. The reform policies were comprehensive, and included systematic selection of essential medicines to improve availability, centralized procurement and tendering at provincial levels, pricing policies, provision of essential medicines at cost in primary level facilities, and stronger quality and safety standards. While challenges remain, China's system sets an example of a comprehensive approach that other countries could emulate in reforming their health care systems and achieving universal coverage.
- Published
- 2013
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