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Featured researches published by Agnes Binagwaho.


The Lancet | 2013

Global health 2035: a world converging within a generation

Dean T. Jamison; Lawrence H. Summers; George Alleyne; Kenneth J. Arrow; Seth Berkley; Agnes Binagwaho; Flavia Bustreo; David B. Evans; Richard Feachem; Julio Frenk; Gargee Ghosh; Sue J. Goldie; Yan Guo; Sanjeev Gupta; Richard Horton; Margaret E. Kruk; Adel A. F. Mahmoud; Linah K. Mohohlo; Mthuli Ncube; Ariel Pablos-Mendez; K. Srinath Reddy; Helen Saxenian; Agnes Soucat; Karene H Ulltveit-Moe; Gavin Yamey

Prompted by the 20th anniversary of the 1993 World Development Report a Lancet Commission revisited the case for investment in health and developed a new investment frame work to achieve dramatic health gains by 2035. The report has four key messages each accompanied by opportunities for action by national governments of low-income and middle-income countries and by the international community. Conclusion 1: there is a very large payoff from investing in health. Conclusion 2: a grand convergence is achievable within our lifetime. Conclusion 3: scale-up of low-cost packages of interventions can enable major progress in NCDs and injuries within a generation. Conclusion 4: progressive universalism is an effi cient way to achieve health and fi nancial protection.


The Lancet | 2015

Women and Health: the key for sustainable development

Ana Langer; Afaf Ibrahim Meleis; Felicia Marie Knaul; Rifat Atun; Meltem A. Aran; Héctor Arreola-Ornelas; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Agnes Binagwaho; Ruth Bonita; Jacquelyn M. Caglia; Mariam Claeson; Justine Davies; Jewel Gausman; Glickman C; Annie D. Kearns; Tamil Kendall; Rafael Lozano; Naomi Seboni; Gita Sen; Siriorn Sindhu; Miriam Temin; Julio Frenk

Executive summary Girls’ and women’s health is in transition and, although some aspects of it have improved substantially in the past few decades, there are still important unmet needs. Population ageing and transformations in the social determinants of health have increased the coexistence of disease burdens related to reproductive health, nutrition, and infections, and the emerging epidemic of chronic and non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Simultaneously, worldwide priorities in women’s health have themselves been changing from a narrow focus on maternal and child health to the broader framework of sexual and reproductive health and to the encompassing concept of women’s health, which is founded on a life-course approach. This expanded vision incorporates health challenges that aff ect women beyond their reproductive years and those that they share with men, but with manifestations and results that aff ect women disproportionally owing to biological, gender, and other social determinants. The complexity of the challenges faced by women throughout the life course needs an increased focus on health systems, which heavily rely on the many contributions of women to care as members of the health workforce, in which their numbers are rapidly increasing, and in their traditional roles as primary caregivers at home and in communities. Women and Health—the focus of this Commission—is a novel concept that refers to the multifaceted pathways through which women and health interact, moving beyond the traditional and exclusive focus on women’s health to address the roles of women as both users and providers of health care, and highlighting the potential for synergy between them. We envision a virtuous cycle that builds on the premise that women who are healthy throughout their lives experience gender equality and are enabled, empowered, and valued in their societies, including in their roles as caregivers, are well prepared to achieve their potential and make substantial contributions to their own health and wellbeing, to that of their families and communities, and, ultimately, to sustainable development. Such thinking needs an interdisciplinary, cross-sectoral perspective to identify women-centred solutions to the unique obstacles that girls and women face as both consumers and providers of health care. In this Commission, we analyse existing and original evidence about the complex relations between women and health. We examine the major economic, environ mental, social, political, demographic, and epide miological transitions happening worldwide, their implications on the health system, and their eff ects on women and health. The health status of girls and women is analysed using a life-course approach to show the breadth of women’s health beyond the reproductive role. We estimate the fi nancial value of the paid and unpaid health-care-related duties that women undertake in health systems and in their homes and communities, which are a hidden subsidy to health systems and societies. We conclude that gender-transformative policies are needed to enable women to integrate their social, biological, and occupational roles and function to their full capacity, and that healthy, valued, enabled, and empowered women will make substantial contributions to sustainable development (key messages). In view of these issues, we propose crucial actions for development partners, governments, civil society, advocates, academics, and professional associations that are needed to advance the women and health agenda (panel 1).


PLOS Medicine | 2009

Task shifting for scale-up of HIV care: Evaluation of nurse-centered antiretroviral treatment at Rural Health Centers in Rwanda

Fabienne Shumbusho; Johan van Griensven; David W. Lowrance; Innocent Turate; Mark A. Weaver; Jessica Price; Agnes Binagwaho

Fabienne Shumbusho and colleagues evaluate a task-shifting model of nurse-centered antiretroviral treatment prescribing in rural primary health centers in Rwanda and find that nurses can effectively and safely prescribe ART when given adequate training, mentoring, and support.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2013

The Human Resources for Health Program in Rwanda — A New Partnership

Agnes Binagwaho; Patrick Kyamanywa; Paul Farmer; Tej Nuthulaganti; Benoite Umubyeyi; Soline Dusabeyesu Mugeni; Anita Asiimwe; Uzziel Ndagijimana; Helen Lamphere McPherson; Jean de Dieu Ngirabega; Anne Sliney; Agnes Uwayezu; Vincent Rusanganwa; Claire M. Wagner; Cameron T Nutt; Mark Eldon-Edington; Corrado Cancedda; Ira C. Magaziner; Eric Goosby

The authors discuss the Human Resources for Health Program, which is working to improve the quality and quantity of health professionals in Rwanda by means of sustained collaborations with U.S. schools of medicine, nursing, dentistry, and public health.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2012

Excellent clinical outcomes and high retention in care among adults in a community-based HIV treatment program in rural Rwanda.

Michael W. Rich; Ann C. Miller; Peter Niyigena; Molly F. Franke; Jean Bosco Niyonzima; Adrienne R. Socci; Peter Drobac; Massudi Hakizamungu; Alishya Mayfield; Robert Ruhayisha; Henry Epino; Sara Stulac; Corrado Cancedda; Adolph Karamaga; Saleh Niyonzima; Chase Yarbrough; Julia G. Fleming; Cheryl Amoroso; Joia S. Mukherjee; Megan Murray; Paul Farmer; Agnes Binagwaho

Background: Access to antiretroviral therapy (ART) has rapidly expanded; as of the end of 2010, an estimated 6.6 million people are receiving ART in low-income and middle-income countries. Few reports have focused on the experiences of rural health centers or the use of community health workers. We report clinical and programatic outcomes at 24 months for a cohort of patients enrolled in a community-based ART program in southeastern Rwanda under collaboration between Partners In Health and the Rwandan Ministry of Health. Methods and Findings A retrospective medical record review was performed for a cohort of 1041 HIV+ adult patients initiating community-based ART between June 1, 2005, and April 30, 2006. Key programatic elements included free ART with direct observation by community health worker, tuberculosis screening and treatment, nutritional support, a transportation allowance, and social support. Among 1041 patients who initiated community-based ART, 961 (92.3%) were retained in care, 52 (5%) died and 28 (2.7%) were lost to follow-up. Median CD4 T-cell count increase was 336 cells per microliter [interquartile range: (IQR): 212–493] from median 190 cells per microliter (IQR: 116–270) at initiation. Conclusions: A program of intensive community-based treatment support for ART in rural Rwanda had excellent outcomes in 24-month retention in care. Having committed to improving access to HIV treatment in sub-Saharan Africa, the international community, including country HIV programs, should set high programmatic outcome benchmarks.


The Lancet | 2013

Embedding non-communicable diseases in the post-2015 development agenda

George Alleyne; Agnes Binagwaho; Andy Haines; Selim Jahan; Rachel Nugent; Ariella Rojhani; David Stuckler

The post-2015 development agenda will build on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), in which health is a core component. This agenda will focus on human development, incorporate the components of the Millennium Declaration, and will be made sustainable by support from the social, economic, and environmental domains of activity, represented graphically as the strands of a triple helix. The approaches to prevention and control of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) have been elaborated in the political declaration of the UN high-level meeting on NCDs and governments have adopted a goal of 25% reduction in relative mortality from NCDs by 2025 (the 25 by 25 goal), but a strong movement is needed based on the evidence already available, enhanced by effective partnerships, and with political support to ensure that NCDs are embedded in the post-2015 human development agenda. NCDs should be embedded in the post-2015 development agenda, since they are leading causes of death and disability, have a negative effect on health, and, through their effect on the societal, economic, and the environmental domains, impair the sustainability of development. Some drivers of unsustainable development, such as the transport, food and agriculture, and energy sectors, also increase the risk of NCDs.


BMC Health Services Research | 2013

Comprehensive and integrated district health systems strengthening: the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership

Peter Drobac; Paulin Basinga; Jeanine Condo; Paul Farmer; Karen Finnegan; Jessie K Hamon; Cheryl Amoroso; Lisa R. Hirschhorn; Jean Baptise Kakoma; Chunling Lu; Yusuf Murangwa; Megan Murray; Fidele Ngabo; Michael W. Rich; Dana R. Thomson; Agnes Binagwaho

BackgroundNationally, health in Rwanda has been improving since 2000, with considerable improvement since 2005. Despite improvements, rural areas continue to lag behind urban sectors with regard to key health outcomes. Partners In Health (PIH) has been supporting the Rwanda Ministry of Health (MOH) in two rural districts in Rwanda since 2005. Since 2009, the MOH and PIH have spearheaded a health systems strengthening (HSS) intervention in these districts as part of the Rwanda Population Health Implementation and Training (PHIT) Partnership. The partnership is guided by the belief that HSS interventions should be comprehensive, integrated, responsive to local conditions, and address health care access, cost, and quality. The PHIT Partnership represents a collaboration between the MOH and PIH, with support from the National University of Rwanda School of Public Health, the National Institute of Statistics, Harvard Medical School, and Brigham and Women’s Hospital.Description of interventionThe PHIT Partnership’s health systems support aligns with the World Health Organization’s six health systems building blocks. HSS activities focus across all levels of the health system — community, health center, hospital, and district leadership — to improve health care access, quality, delivery, and health outcomes. Interventions are concentrated on three main areas: targeted support for health facilities, quality improvement initiatives, and a strengthened network of community health workers.Evaluation designThe impact of activities will be assessed using population-level outcomes data collected through oversampling of the demographic and health survey (DHS) in the intervention districts. The overall impact evaluation is complemented by an analysis of trends in facility health care utilization. A comprehensive costing project captures the total expenditures and financial inputs of the health care system to determine the cost of systems improvement. Targeted evaluations and operational research pieces focus on specific programmatic components, supported by partnership-supported work to build in-country research capacity.DiscussionBuilding on early successes, the work of the Rwanda PHIT Partnership approach to HSS has already seen noticeable increases in facility capacity and quality of care. The rigorous planned evaluation of the Partnership’s HSS activities will contribute to global knowledge about intervention methodology, cost, and population health impact.


The Lancet | 2014

Rwanda 20 years on: investing in life

Agnes Binagwaho; Paul Farmer; Sabin Nsanzimana; Corine Karema; Michel Gasana; Jean de Dieu Ngirabega; Fidele Ngabo; Claire M. Wagner; Cameron T Nutt; Thierry Nyatanyi; Maurice Gatera; Yvonne Kayiteshonga; Cathy Mugeni; Placidie Mugwaneza; Joseph Shema; Parfait Uwaliraye; Erick Gaju; Marie Aimee Muhimpundu; Theophile Dushime; Florent Senyana; Jean Baptiste Mazarati; Celsa Muzayire Gaju; Lisine Tuyisenge; Vincent Mutabazi; Patrick Kyamanywa; Vincent Rusanganwa; Jean Pierre Nyemazi; Agathe Umutoni; Ida Kankindi; Christian R Ntizimira

Two decades ago, the genocide against the Tutsis in Rwanda led to the deaths of 1 million people, and the displacement of millions more. Injury and trauma were followed by the effects of a devastated health system and economy. In the years that followed, a new course set by a new government set into motion equity-oriented national policies focusing on social cohesion and people-centred development. Premature mortality rates have fallen precipitously in recent years, and life expectancy has doubled since the mid-1990s. Here we reflect on the lessons learned in rebuilding Rwandas health sector during the past two decades, as the country now prepares itself to take on new challenges in health-care delivery.


PLOS Medicine | 2010

Male Circumcision at Different Ages in Rwanda: A Cost-Effectiveness Study

Agnes Binagwaho; Elisabetta Pegurri; Jane Muita; Stefano M. Bertozzi

Agnes Binagwaho and colleagues predict that circumcision of newborn boys would be effective and cost-saving as a long-term strategy to prevent HIV in Rwanda.


The Lancet | 2015

Women and Health: the key for sustainable development. The Lancet Commissions.

Ana Langer; Afaf Ibrahim Meleis; Felicia Marie Knaul; Rifat Atun; Meltem A. Aran; Héctor Arreola-Ornelas; Zulfiqar A. Bhutta; Agnes Binagwaho; Ruth Bonita; Jacquelyn M. Caglia; Mariam Claeson; Justine Davies; Donnay Fa; Jewel Gausman; Glickman C; Annie D. Kearns; Tamil Kendall; Rafael Lozano; Seboni N; Gita Sen; Siriorn Sindhu; Temin M; Julio Frenk

Executive summary Girls’ and women’s health is in transition and, although some aspects of it have improved substantially in the past few decades, there are still important unmet needs. Population ageing and transformations in the social determinants of health have increased the coexistence of disease burdens related to reproductive health, nutrition, and infections, and the emerging epidemic of chronic and non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Simultaneously, worldwide priorities in women’s health have themselves been changing from a narrow focus on maternal and child health to the broader framework of sexual and reproductive health and to the encompassing concept of women’s health, which is founded on a life-course approach. This expanded vision incorporates health challenges that aff ect women beyond their reproductive years and those that they share with men, but with manifestations and results that aff ect women disproportionally owing to biological, gender, and other social determinants. The complexity of the challenges faced by women throughout the life course needs an increased focus on health systems, which heavily rely on the many contributions of women to care as members of the health workforce, in which their numbers are rapidly increasing, and in their traditional roles as primary caregivers at home and in communities. Women and Health—the focus of this Commission—is a novel concept that refers to the multifaceted pathways through which women and health interact, moving beyond the traditional and exclusive focus on women’s health to address the roles of women as both users and providers of health care, and highlighting the potential for synergy between them. We envision a virtuous cycle that builds on the premise that women who are healthy throughout their lives experience gender equality and are enabled, empowered, and valued in their societies, including in their roles as caregivers, are well prepared to achieve their potential and make substantial contributions to their own health and wellbeing, to that of their families and communities, and, ultimately, to sustainable development. Such thinking needs an interdisciplinary, cross-sectoral perspective to identify women-centred solutions to the unique obstacles that girls and women face as both consumers and providers of health care. In this Commission, we analyse existing and original evidence about the complex relations between women and health. We examine the major economic, environ mental, social, political, demographic, and epide miological transitions happening worldwide, their implications on the health system, and their eff ects on women and health. The health status of girls and women is analysed using a life-course approach to show the breadth of women’s health beyond the reproductive role. We estimate the fi nancial value of the paid and unpaid health-care-related duties that women undertake in health systems and in their homes and communities, which are a hidden subsidy to health systems and societies. We conclude that gender-transformative policies are needed to enable women to integrate their social, biological, and occupational roles and function to their full capacity, and that healthy, valued, enabled, and empowered women will make substantial contributions to sustainable development (key messages). In view of these issues, we propose crucial actions for development partners, governments, civil society, advocates, academics, and professional associations that are needed to advance the women and health agenda (panel 1).

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Sabin Nsanzimana

Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute

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Fidele Ngabo

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Jeanine Condo

National University of Rwanda

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Michael W. Rich

Washington University in St. Louis

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