Publications

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The present study analyzes the prevalence and some key drivers of child marriage at the district level in India, using government data sources. The practice of child marriage persists across the country, with many northern states having the highest percentage of women married before the legal age. Although there has been a significant decline in child marriage for females throughout the country, especially for girls below the age of 15 years, child marriage continues to affect almost a third of all girls in India. Among individual characteristics, the level of education of females has the most profound impact on the age they marry, irrespective of household wealth, locality and other characteristics. Further, in the districts studied here, Other Backward Class (OBC) and Scheduled Caste (SC) women tend to have the lowest mean age at the time of marriage, irrespective of their level of education, locality and economic background.
 
 
Resource | Publications
Many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in Asia have adopted the goal of universal health coverage. In principle, universal coverage includes providing financial protection to the whole population. This is a goal. In practice, universal coverage cannot be achieved at once, but involves progress along a path towards achieving complete population coverage. This is especially true in LMICs, where resources are constrained and per capita health expenditures are low. Experience shows that LMICs generally begin on the pathway to universal coverage by implementing different prepayment mechanisms targeted at particular sections of the population. The implementation of prepayment mechanisms for non-poor informal workers in LMICs is a relatively new policy area, with many unresolved issues. Questions being raised are whether compulsory schemes such as social health insurance (SHI) are effective in covering nonpoor informal workers, whether voluntary schemes such as communitybased health insurance (CBHI) can be used to scale-up coverage of non-poor informal workers, and whether complete subsidization of non-poor informal workers can create perverse incentives for remaining in or moving into informal employment.
 
 
Resource | Publications
With universal health coverage (UHC) high on the global health agenda, governments of many low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have pledged to increase health investment in the scale-up of essential health services to meet the needs of their people. This has led to the recognition of health technology assessment (HTA) as a necessary tool for setting priorities especially in the UHC context. This Policy Brief was developed based on experiences from six settings – China, Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, Malaysia, Thailand and Viet Nam – which represent approximately one sixth of the world’s population. The Policy Brief highlights the problems and evidence concerning HTA development in the Asia Pacific region and makes recommendations that may be potentially applicable to settings in other regions.
 
 
Resource | Publications
This policy brief aims to provide guidance for policy-makers in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in the Asia Pacific region on actions that governments can take to improve and regulate quality of care in ambulatory care services. There is increasing evidence of the very poor quality of ambulatory care in LMICs. Current strategies to address quality of care in these countries such as accreditation have tended to focus on hospitals. But ambulatory care accounts for the largest share of out-of-pocket expenses in LMICs and is key to addressing the double burden of communicable and noncommunicable disease. This brief draws on available evidence of factors influencing quality of care and strategies to improve quality of care in the ambulatory care sector. Although there is a large body of literature addressing quality of care in high-income countries, this is an emerging field of research for LMICs.
 
 
Resource | Publications
Harm reduction in Malaysia has seen growth from the year 2005 to where we stand now in 2015. Collaborative efforts between the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Home Affairs, the Prisons Department, the Malaysian AIDS Council and many nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) have allowed access to Opioid Substitution Therapy (OST) and Needle Syringe Exchange to 74,816 and 85,593 clients cumulatively. On 18th October 2015, in the margins of the 24th International Harm Reduction Conference in Kuala Lumpur, stakeholders in Malaysian harm reduction programs, including the Malaysian Ministry of Health, the National Anti-Drugs Agency, the Centre of Excellence for Research in AIDS (CERiA), addiction psychiatrists, the Addiction Medicine Association Malaysia (AMAM), the Royal Malaysian Police, the Centre for Drug Research, Universiti Sains Malaysia, and people who use drugs convened to discuss the Next Leap Forward in Harm Reduction in Malaysia. This report documents their discussions and makes several key recommendations.
 
 
Resource | Publications
The Hong Kong STD/AIDS update is a composite report on HIV/AIDS reporting and STI caseload statistics published 3 monthly. The current issue has the updated information up to September 2015.
 
 
Resource | Publications
Following almost a decade of ART service provision across the country, NACO commissioned a countrywide assessment of the ART centres from January 2014 to March 2015. The overall goal of the review was two-fold. One was to review the quality of ART service delivery in the country. The second was a validation of the data recorded and reported by ART centres to assess data quality and integrity.
 
 
Resource | Publications
The primary objective of the CDHS is to provide the Ministry of Health (MOH), Ministry of Planning (MOP), and other relevant institutions and users with updated and reliable data on infant and child mortality, fertility preferences, family planning behavior, maternal mortality, utilization of maternal and child health services, health expenditures, women’s status, and knowledge and behavior regarding HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections. This information contributes to policy decisions, planning, monitoring, and program evaluation for the development of Cambodia at both the national and local government levels.
 
 
Resource | Publications
Since the inception of MICS in the mid-1990s, no one document consolidated how MICS has developed and evolved over time.  In this publication, we examine the rationale and activities of the first surveys and how these laid the foundation for the MICS programme. Through a thematic lens, this publication charts the key elements of the MICS programme and recounts the achievements and value of MICS. In the changing data-landscape of a post MDG era, we also examine the strategic role of MICS in future monitoring activities.
 
 
Resource | Publications
Poverty reduction has always been an important objective of Bhutan’s development policies and plans. Bhutan adopted poverty reduction as the overall objective of the 10th Five-Year Plan (2008-2013). The commitment to reduce poverty has continued into the 11th Five Plan (11th FYP, 2013-2018). Proportion of population living under poverty line was reduced to 12% in 2012 from 23.2 percent in 2007. About 95% percent of the poor population lived in rural areas. Among the extremely poor, 97% of them live in rural areas. Therefore, poverty in Bhutan continues to be a rural phenomenon.