Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Corrado Cancedda is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Corrado Cancedda.


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 | 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.


Academic Medicine | 2014

Enhancing formal educational and in-service training programs in rural Rwanda: a partnership among the public sector, a nongovernmental organization, and academia.

Corrado Cancedda; Paul Farmer; Patrick Kyamanywa; Robert Riviello; Joseph Rhatigan; Claire M. Wagner; Fidele Ngabo; Manzi Anatole; Peter Drobac; Tharcisse Mpunga; Cameron T Nutt; Jean Baptiste Kakoma; Joia S. Mukherjee; Chadi Cortas; Jeanine Condo; Fabien Ntaganda; Gene Bukhman; Agnes Binagwaho

Global disparities in the distribution, specialization, diversity, and competency of the health workforce are striking. Countries with fewer health professionals have poorer health outcomes compared with countries that have more. Despite major gains in health indicators, Rwanda still suffers from a severe shortage of health professionals. This article describes a partnership launched in 2005 by Rwanda’s Ministry of Health with the U.S. nongovernmental organization Partners In Health and with Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. The partnership has expanded to include the Faculty of Medicine and the School of Public Health at the National University of Rwanda and other Harvard-affiliated academic medical centers. The partnership prioritizes local ownership and—with the ultimate goals of strengthening health service delivery and achieving health equity for poor and underserved populations—it has helped establish new or strengthen existing formal educational programs (conferring advanced degrees) and in-service training programs (fostering continuing professional development) targeting the local health workforce. Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital have also benefited from the partnership, expanding the opportunities for training and research in global health available to their faculty and trainees. The partnership has enabled Rwandan health professionals at partnership-supported district hospitals to acquire new competencies and deliver better health services to rural and underserved populations by leveraging resources, expertise, and growing interest in global health within the participating U.S. academic institutions. Best practices implemented during the partnership’s first nine years can inform similar formal educational and in-service training programs in other low-income countries.


PLOS Medicine | 2015

Maximizing the Impact of Training Initiatives for Health Professionals in Low-Income Countries: Frameworks, Challenges, and Best Practices.

Corrado Cancedda; Paul Farmer; Vanessa B. Kerry; Tej Nuthulaganti; Kirstin W. Scott; Eric Goosby; Agnes Binagwaho

Corrado Cancedda and colleagues outline a framework for health professional training initiatives in low-income countries.


International journal of health policy and management | 2015

Non-Physician Clinicians in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Evolving Role of Physicians

Nir Eyal; Corrado Cancedda; Patrick Kyamanywa; Samia Hurst

Responding to critical shortages of physicians, most sub-Saharan countries have scaled up training of non-physician clinicians (NPCs), resulting in a gradual but decisive shift to NPCs as the cornerstone of healthcare delivery. This development should unfold in parallel with strategic rethinking about the role of physicians and with innovations in physician education and in-service training. In important ways, a growing number of NPCs only renders physicians more necessary - for example, as specialized healthcare providers and as leaders, managers, mentors, and public health administrators. Physicians in sub-Saharan Africa ought to be trained in all of these capacities. This evolution in the role of physicians may also help address known challenges to the successful integration of NPCs in the health system.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2016

Strengthening Health Systems While Responding to a Health Crisis: Lessons Learned by a Nongovernmental Organization During the Ebola Virus Disease Epidemic in Sierra Leone

Corrado Cancedda; Sheila M. Davis; Kerry Dierberg; Jonathan Lascher; J. Daniel Kelly; Mohammed Bailor Barrie; Alimamy Philip Koroma; Peter M. George; Adikali Alpha Kamara; Ronald Marsh; Manso S. Sumbuya; Cameron T Nutt; Kirstin W. Scott; Edgar Thomas; Katherine Bollbach; Andrew Sesay; Ahmidu Barrie; Elizabeth Barrera; K.P. Barron; John Welch; Nahid Bhadelia; Raphael Frankfurter; Ophelia M. Dahl; Sarthak Das; Rebecca E. Rollins; Bryan Eustis; Amanda Schwartz; Piero Pertile; Ilias Pavlopoulos; Allan Mayfield

An epidemic of Ebola virus disease (EVD) beginning in 2013 has claimed an estimated 11 310 lives in West Africa. As the EVD epidemic subsides, it is important for all who participated in the emergency Ebola response to reflect on strengths and weaknesses of the response. Such reflections should take into account perspectives not usually included in peer-reviewed publications and after-action reports, including those from the public sector, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), survivors of Ebola, and Ebola-affected households and communities. In this article, we first describe how the international NGO Partners In Health (PIH) partnered with the Government of Sierra Leone and Wellbody Alliance (a local NGO) to respond to the EVD epidemic in 4 of the countrys most Ebola-affected districts. We then describe how, in the aftermath of the epidemic, PIH is partnering with the public sector to strengthen the health system and resume delivery of regular health services. PIHs experience in Sierra Leone is one of multiple partnerships with different stakeholders. It is also one of rapid deployment of expatriate clinicians and logistics personnel in health facilities largely deprived of health professionals, medical supplies, and physical infrastructure required to deliver health services effectively and safely. Lessons learned by PIH and its partners in Sierra Leone can contribute to the ongoing discussion within the international community on how to ensure emergency preparedness and build resilient health systems in settings without either.


Eurosurveillance | 2015

Genotypic anomaly in Ebola virus strains circulating in Magazine Wharf area, Freetown, Sierra Leone, 2015.

Saskia L. Smits; Suzan D. Pas; Chantal Reusken; Bart L. Haagmans; Peirro Pertile; Corrado Cancedda; Kerry Dierberg; Isata Wurie; Abdul Kamara; David Kargbo; Sarah Caddy; Armando Arias; Lucy Thorne; Jia Lu; Umaru Jah; Ian Goodfellow; Marion Koopmans

The Magazine Wharf area, Freetown, Sierra Leone was a focus of ongoing Ebola virus transmission from late June 2015. Viral genomes linked to this area contain a series of 13 T to C substitutions in a 150 base pair intergenic region downstream of viral protein 40 open reading frame, similar to the Ebolavirus/H.sapiens-wt/SLE/2014/Makona-J0169 strain (J0169) detected in the same town in November 2014. This suggests that recently circulating viruses from Freetown descend from a J0169-like virus.


Academic Medicine | 2017

Building Workforce Capacity Abroad While Strengthening Global Health Programs at Home: Participation of Seven Harvard-Affiliated Institutions in a Health Professional Training Initiative in Rwanda

Corrado Cancedda; Robert Riviello; Kim Wilson; Kirstin W. Scott; Meenu Tuteja; Jane Barrow; Bethany L. Hedt-Gauthier; Gene Bukhman; Jennifer Scott; Danny A. Milner; Giuseppe Raviola; Barbara N. Weissman; Stacy E. Smith; Tej Nuthulaganti; Craig D. McClain; Barbara E. Bierer; Paul Farmer; Anne E. Becker; Agnes Binagwaho; Joseph Rhatigan; David E. Golan

A consortium of 22 U.S. academic institutions is currently participating in the Rwanda Human Resources for Health Program (HRH Program). Led by the Rwandan Ministry of Health and funded by both the U.S. Government and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the primary goal of this seven-year initiative is to help Rwanda train the number of health professionals necessary to reach the country’s health workforce targets. Since 2012, the participating U.S. academic institutions have deployed faculty from a variety of health-related disciplines and clinical specialties to Rwanda. In this Article, the authors describe how U.S. academic institutions (focusing on the seven Harvard-affiliated institutions participating in the HRH Program—Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston Children’s Hospital, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary) have also benefited: (1) by providing opportunities to their faculty and trainees to engage in global health activities; (2) by establishing long-term, academic partnerships and collaborations with Rwandan academic institutions; and (3) by building the administrative and mentorship capacity to support global health initiatives beyond the HRH Program. In doing this, the authors describe the seven Harvard-affiliated institutions’ contributions to the HRH Program, summarize the benefits accrued by these institutions as a result of their participation in the program, describe the challenges they encountered in implementing the program, and outline potential solutions to these challenges that may inform similar future health professional training initiatives.


Journal of Dental Education | 2018

A Case Study Optimizing Human Resources in Rwanda’s First Dental School: Three Innovative Management Tools

Donna M. Hackley; Chrispinus H. Mumena; Agnes Gatarayiha; Corrado Cancedda; Jane Barrow

Harvard School of Dental Medicine, University of Maryland School of Dentistry, and the University of Rwanda (UR) are collaborating to create Rwandas first School of Dentistry as part of the Human Resources for Health (HRH) Rwanda initiative that aims to strengthen the health care system of Rwanda. The HRH oral health team developed three management tools to measure progress in systems-strengthening efforts: 1) the road map is an operations plan for the entire dental school and facilitates delivery of the curriculum and management of human and material resources; 2) each HRH U.S. faculty member develops a work plan with targeted deliverables for his or her rotation, which is facilitated with biweekly flash reports that measure progress and keep the faculty member focused on his or her specific deliverables; and 3) the redesigned HRH twinning model, changed from twinning of an HRH faculty member with a single Rwandan faculty member to twinning with multiple Rwandan faculty members based on shared academic interests and goals, has improved efficiency, heightened engagement of the UR dental faculty, and increased the impact of HRH U.S. faculty members. These new tools enable the team to measure its progress toward the collaboratives goals and understand the successes and challenges in moving toward the planned targets. The tools have been valuable instruments in fostering discussion around priorities and deployment of resources as well as in developing strong relationships, enabling two-way exchange of knowledge, and promoting sustainability.

Collaboration


Dive into the Corrado Cancedda's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Patrick Kyamanywa

National University of Rwanda

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Joseph Rhatigan

Brigham and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Robert Riviello

Brigham and Women's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge