Marian Jacobs
University of Cape Town
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marian Jacobs.
The Lancet | 2004
Lincoln Chen; Tim Evans; Sudhir Anand; Jo Ivey Boufford; Hilary Brown; Mushtaque Chowdhury; Marcos Cueto; Lola Dare; Gilles Dussault; Gijs Elzinga; Elizabeth Fee; Demissie Habte; Piya Hanvoravongchai; Marian Jacobs; Christoph Kurowski; Sarah Michael; Ariel Pablos-Mendez; Nelson Sewankambo; Giorgio Solimano; Barbara Stilwell; Alex de Waal; Suwit Wibulpolprasert
In this analysis of the global workforce, the Joint Learning Initiative-a consortium of more than 100 health leaders-proposes that mobilisation and strengthening of human resources for health, neglected yet critical, is central to combating health crises in some of the worlds poorest countries and for building sustainable health systems in all countries. Nearly all countries are challenged by worker shortage, skill mix imbalance, maldistribution, negative work environment, and weak knowledge base. Especially in the poorest countries, the workforce is under assault by HIV/AIDS, out-migration, and inadequate investment. Effective country strategies should be backed by international reinforcement. Ultimately, the crisis in human resources is a shared problem requiring shared responsibility for cooperative action. Alliances for action are recommended to strengthen the performance of all existing actors while expanding space and energy for fresh actors.
The Lancet | 2004
Vasant Narasimhan; Hilary Brown; Ariel Pablos-Mendez; Orvill Adams; Gilles Dussault; Gijs Elzinga; Anders Nordström; Demissie Habte; Marian Jacobs; Giorgio Solimano; Nelson Sewankambo; Suwit Wibulpolprasert; Timothy W. Evans; Lincoln Chen
The global community is in the midst of a growing response to health crises in developing countries, which is focused on mobilising financial resources and increasing access to essential medicines. However, the response has yet to tackle the most important aspect of health-care systems--the people that make them work. Human resources for health--the personnel that deliver public-health, clinical, and environmental services--are in disarray and decline in much of the developing world, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa. The reasons behind this disorder are complex. For decades, efforts have focused on building training institutions. What is becoming increasingly clear, however, is that issues of supply, demand, and mobility (transnational, regional, and local) are central to the human-resource problem. Without substantial improvements in workforces, newly mobilised funds and commodities will not deliver on their promise. The global community needs to engage in four core strategies: raise the profile of the issue of human resources; improve the conceptual base and statistical evidence available to decision makers; collect, share, and learn from country experiences; and begin to formulate and enact policies at the country level that affect all aspects of the crisis.
The Lancet | 2011
Fitzhugh Mullan; Seble Frehywot; Francis Omaswa; Eric Buch; Candice Chen; S. Ryan Greysen; Travis Wassermann; Diaa Eldin Eigaili Abubakr; Magda Awases; Charles Boelen; Mohenou Jean-Marie Isidore Diomande; Delanyo Dovlo; Jose Fo Ferro; Abraham Haileamlak; Jehu Iputo; Marian Jacobs; Abdel Karim Koumare; Mwapatsa Mipando; Gottleib Lobe Monekosso; Emiola Oluwabunmi Olapade-Olaopa; Paschalis Rugarabamu; Nelson Sewankambo; Heather Ross; Huda Ayas; Selam Bedada Chale; Soeurette Cyprien; Jordan Cohen; Tenagne Haile-Mariam; Ellen K. Hamburger; Laura Jolley
Small numbers of graduates from few medical schools, and emigration of graduates to other countries, contribute to low physician presence in sub-Saharan Africa. The Sub-Saharan African Medical School Study examined the challenges, innovations, and emerging trends in medical education in the region. We identified 168 medical schools; of the 146 surveyed, 105 (72%) responded. Findings from the study showed that countries are prioritising medical education scale-up as part of health-system strengthening, and we identified many innovations in premedical preparation, team-based education, and creative use of scarce research support. The study also drew attention to ubiquitous faculty shortages in basic and clinical sciences, weak physical infrastructure, and little use of external accreditation. Patterns recorded include the growth of private medical schools, community-based education, and international partnerships, and the benefit of research for faculty development. Ten recommendations provide guidance for efforts to strengthen medical education in sub-Saharan Africa.
Journal of Public Health Policy | 2008
Sarah B. Macfarlane; Marian Jacobs; Ephata E Kaaya
This paper describes accelerating development of programs in global health, particularly in North American academic institutions, and sets this phenomenon in the context of earlier programs in tropical medicine and international health that originated predominantly in Europe. Like these earlier programs, the major focus of the new global health programs is on the health needs of developing countries, and perhaps for this reason, few similar programs have emerged in academic institutions in the developing countries themselves. If global health is about the improvement of health worldwide, the reduction of disparities, and protection of societies against global threats that disregard national borders, it is essential that academic institutions reach across geographic, cultural, economic, gender, and linguistic boundaries to develop mutual understanding of the scope of global health and to create collaborative education and research programs. One indication of success would be emergence of a new generation of truly global leaders working on a shared and well-defined agenda – and doing so on equal footing.
Global Health Action | 2009
Johan Fagan; Marian Jacobs
Background: Burden of disease (BOD) is greatest in resource-starved regions such as Africa. Even though hearing disability ranks third on the list of non-fatal disabling conditions in low- and middle-income countries, ear, nose, and throat (ENT) disorders are not specifically coded for within the framework governing global BOD estimates, and in discussions about health challenges, non-communicable diseases receive scant attention. Implementing cost-effective interventions to address conditions largely neglected by global estimates of BOD such as hearing loss are important contributors to health and economic development. Objectives: Establish a database of ENT, audiology, and speech therapy services in Sub-Saharan Africa; create awareness about the status of these services; propose effective intervention; gather data to lobby African governments, donor countries, and aid organizations; determine need for Developing World Forum for ENT, Audiology, and Speech Therapy services. Design: Survey of ENT, audiology, and speech therapy services and training in 18 Sub-Saharan Africa countries. Results: There is an alarming paucity of services and training opportunities, and there is a large gap between higher technology, expensive health care in high-income countries and lower technology, low-cost practice in low-income countries. Conclusions: Lower technology and lower cost Developing World medical practice should be recognized and fostered as a field of medical practice, teaching, and research. Developing World centers of excellence must be fostered to take a lead in teaching, training, and research. A Developing World Forum for ENT Surgery, Audiology, and Speech Therapy, directed and driven by Africa and the Developing World, supported by the First World, should be established, to develop a comprehensive intervention to turn around the severe shortage of services and expertise in the Developing World. Global health policies and practices should include new norms and standards which serve the interests of the global community, and are based on current realities of global health.
Medical Education | 2011
S. Ryan Greysen; Dela Dovlo; E. Oluwabunmi Olapade-Olaopa; Marian Jacobs; Nelson Sewankambo; Fitzhugh Mullan
Medical Education 2011: 45: 973–986
Global Health Action | 2014
Abdallah S. Daar; Marian Jacobs; Stig Wall; Johann Groenewald; Julian Eaton; Vikram Patel; Palmira dos Santos; Ashraf Kagee; Anik Gevers; Charlene Sunkel; Gail Andrews; Ingrid Daniels; David M. Ndetei
Urgent action is needed to address mental health issues globally. In Africa, where mental health disorders account for a huge burden of disease and disability, and where in general less than 1% of the already small health budgets are spent on these disorders, the need for action is acute and urgent. Members of the World Health Organization, including African countries, have adopted a Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan. Africa now has an historic opportunity to improve the mental health and wellbeing of its citizens, beginning with provision of basic mental health services and development of national mental health strategic plans (roadmaps). There is need to integrate mental health into primary health care and address stigma and violations of human rights. We advocate for inclusion of mental health into the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals, and for the convening of a special UN General Assembly High Level Meeting on Mental Health within three years.Urgent action is needed to address mental health issues globally. In Africa, where mental health disorders account for a huge burden of disease and disability, and where in general less than 1% of the already small health budgets are spent on these disorders, the need for action is acute and urgent. Members of the World Health Organization, including African countries, have adopted a Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan. Africa now has an historic opportunity to improve the mental health and wellbeing of its citizens, beginning with provision of basic mental health services and development of national mental health strategic plans (roadmaps). There is need to integrate mental health into primary health care and address stigma and violations of human rights. We advocate for inclusion of mental health into the post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals, and for the convening of a special UN General Assembly High Level Meeting on Mental Health within three years.
Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal | 2013
Stephen Wall; Corinne I. Mazzeo; Ebunoluwa A. Adejuyigbe; Adejumoke I. Ayede; Rajiv Bahl; Abdullah H. Baqui; William C. Blackwelder; Neal Brandes; Gary L. Darmstadt; Fabian Esamai; Patricia L. Hibberd; Marian Jacobs; Jerome O. Klein; Kasonde Mwinga; Nigel Rollins; Haroon Saloojee; Antoinette Tshefu; Robinson D. Wammanda; Anita K. M. Zaidi; Shamim Qazi
Background: Three randomized open-label clinical trials [Simplified Antibiotic Therapy Trial (SATT) Bangladesh, SATT Pakistan and African Neonatal Sepsis Trial (AFRINEST)] were developed to test the equivalence of simplified antibiotic regimens compared with the standard regimen of 7 days of parenteral antibiotics. These trials were originally conceived and designed separately; subsequently, significant efforts were made to develop and implement a common protocol and approach. Previous articles in this supplement briefly describe the specific quality control methods used in the individual trials; this article presents additional information about the systematic approaches used to minimize threats to validity and ensure quality across the trials. Methods: A critical component of quality control for AFRINEST and SATT was striving to eliminate variation in clinical assessments and decisions regarding eligibility, enrollment and treatment outcomes. Ensuring appropriate and consistent clinical judgment was accomplished through standardized approaches applied across the trials, including training, assessment of clinical skills and refresher training. Standardized monitoring procedures were also applied across the trials, including routine (day-to-day) internal monitoring of performance and adherence to protocols, systematic external monitoring by funding agencies and external monitoring by experienced, independent trial monitors. A group of independent experts (Technical Steering Committee/Technical Advisory Group) provided regular monitoring and technical oversight for the trials. Conclusions: Harmonization of AFRINEST and SATT have helped to ensure consistency and quality of implementation, both internally and across the trials as a whole, thereby minimizing potential threats to the validity of the trials’ results.
Global Public Health | 2012
Marian Jacobs; Wafaa El-Sadr
Abstract For decades, concerns regarding health systems have been prominent in the global health discourse, leading to numerous publications and laudable declarations, as well as compacts and consensus statements intended to guide policy and practice. This discussion paper is intended to neither summarise nor systematically review this vast field of interest. Instead, the paper reflects on some challenges for attaining health systems equity and raises questions related to the contributions of both national and the global health systems to this mission.
BMJ | 2018
Marian Jacobs; Michael H. Merson
Despite advances in child health over the past 20 years, children are still failing to reach their full health and development. Marian Jacobs and Michael Merson examine what the 2016 strategic review tells about how IMCI and iCCM have contributed to gains in child health, as well as the changes in child health epidemiology, health systems, technology and innovations, and health science