Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sadia Chowdhury is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sadia Chowdhury.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2016

Cross-country analysis of strategies for achieving progress towards global goals for women's and children's health.

Syed Masud Ahmed; Lal B. Rawal; Sadia Chowdhury; John Murray; Sharon Arscott-Mills; Susan Jack; Rachael Hinton; Prima M Alam; Shyama Kuruvilla

Abstract Objective To identify how 10 low- and middle-income countries achieved accelerated progress, ahead of comparable countries, towards meeting millennium development goals 4 and 5A to reduce child and maternal mortality. Methods We synthesized findings from multistakeholder dialogues and country policy reports conducted previously for the Success Factors studies in 10 countries: Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Egypt, Ethiopia, the Lao Peoples Democratic Republic, Nepal, Peru, Rwanda and Viet Nam. A framework approach was used to analyse and synthesize the data from the country reports, resulting in descriptive or explanatory conclusions by theme. Findings Successful policy and programme approaches were categorized in four strategic areas: leadership and multistakeholder partnerships; health sector; sectors outside health; and accountability for resources and results. Consistent and coordinated inputs across sectors, based on high-impact interventions, were assessed. Within the health sector, key policy and programme strategies included defining standards, collecting and using data, improving financial protection, and improving the availability and quality of services. Outside the health sector, strategies included investing in girls’ education, water, sanitation and hygiene, poverty reduction, nutrition and food security, and infrastructure development. Countries improved accountability by strengthening and using data systems for planning and evaluating progress. Conclusion Reducing maternal and child mortality in the 10 fast-track countries can be linked to consistent and coordinated policy and programme inputs across health and other sectors. The approaches used by successful countries have relevance to other countries looking to scale-up or accelerate progress towards the sustainable development goals.


Human Resources for Health | 2015

Exploring the context in which different close-to-community sexual and reproductive health service providers operate in Bangladesh: a qualitative study.

Ilias Mahmud; Sadia Chowdhury; Bulbul Siddiqi; Sally Theobald; Hermen Ormel; Salauddin Biswas; Yamin Tauseef Jahangir; Malabika Sarker; Sabina Faiz Rashid

BackgroundA range of formal and informal close-to-community (CTC) health service providers operate in an increasingly urbanized Bangladesh. Informal CTC health service providers play a key role in Bangladesh’s pluralistic health system, yet the reasons for their popularity and their interactions with formal providers and the community are poorly understood. This paper aims to understand the factors shaping poor urban and rural women’s choice of service provider for their sexual and reproductive health (SRH)-related problems and the interrelationships between these providers and communities. Building this evidence base is important, as the number and range of CTC providers continue to expand in both urban slums and rural communities in Bangladesh. This has implications for policy and future programme interventions addressing the poor women’s SRH needs.MethodsData was generated through 24 in-depth interviews with menstrual regulation clients, 12 focus group discussions with married men and women in communities and 24 semi-structured interviews with formal and informal CTC SRH service providers. Data was collected between July and September 2013 from three urban slums and one rural site in Dhaka and Sylhet, Bangladesh. Atlas.ti software was used to manage data analysis and coding, and a thematic analysis was undertaken.ResultsPoor women living in urban slums and rural areas visit a diverse range of CTC providers for SRH-related problems. Key factors influencing their choice of provider include the following: availability, accessibility, expenses and perceived quality of care, the latter being shaped by notions of trust, respect and familiarity. Informal providers are usually the first point of contact even for those clients who subsequently access SRH services from formal providers. Despite existing informal interactions between both types of providers and a shared understanding that this can be beneficial for clients, there is no effective link or partnership between these providers for referral, coordination and communication regarding SRH services.ConclusionTraining informal CTC providers and developing strategies to enable better links and coordination between this community-embedded cadre and the formal health sector has the potential to reduce service cost and improve availability of quality SRH (and other) care at the community level.


Sex Education | 2001

Without Sex Education: Exploring the social and sexual vulnerabilities of rural Bangladeshi girls and boys

Kathleen Cash; Hashima-E-Nasreen; Ayesha Aziz; Abbas Bhuiya; A. Mushtaque R. Chowdhury; Sadia Chowdhury

In 1997, two organizations, BRAC (Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee) and ICDDR,B (International Center for Diarrheal Disease Research), as part of their collaborative research model, developed an HIV/AIDS prevention strategy for rural Bangladeshi youth. Currently, HIV/AIDS is not apparent in rural Bangladesh. Other sexual and reproductive health problems are more pressing. Moreover, there are few inor out-of-school sex education programs for adolescents in Bangladesh. Therefore, preliminary qualitative research was conducted to understand the broad parameters of sexual and reproductive health within the sociocultural context of young peoples risks and vulnerabilities. Exploratory research revealed that youth were vulnerable to sexual diseases, late-term abortions, sexual violence, reproductive tract infections, and premarital pregnancies. Adolescents and adults thought that youth today need sex education. Adults said that youth should not be educated about condom use because this would conflict with a girls prospects for an arranged marriage. Bangladeshi youth today are being exposed to experiences unfamiliar to their parents. Lacking appropriate knowledge, information and awareness about sexual and reproductive health unduly heightens young peoples fears, and increases their social and sexual vulnerabilities.


World Bank Publications | 2018

Health and Nutrition in Urban Bangladesh

Ramesh Govindaraj; Dhushyanth Raju; Federica Secci; Sadia Chowdhury; Jean-Jacques Frere

Urbanization is occurring at a rapid pace in Bangladesh, accompanied by the proliferation of slum settlements, whose residents have special health needs given the adverse social, economic, and public environmental conditions they face. Over the past 45 years, the country’s health and nutrition policies and programs have focused largely on rural health services. Consequently, equitable access of urban populations—particularly the urban poor—to quality health and nutrition services has emerged as a major development issue. However, the knowledge base on urban health and nutrition in Bangladesh remains weak. To address the knowledge gap, Health and Nutrition in Urban Bangladesh: Social Determinants and Health Sector Governance examines the health and nutrition challenges in urban Bangladesh—looking at socioeconomic determinants in general and at health sector governance in particular. Using a mixed methods approach, the study identifies critical areas such as financing, regulation, service delivery, and public environmental health, among others that require policy attention. The study also proposes specific actions within and outside the health sector to address the issues, providing guidance on their sequencing and the specific responsibilities of government agencies and other actors. This study should be useful to policy makers and practitioners working on urban health and nutrition issues in Bangladesh and in other low- and middle-income countries.


World Bank Publications | 2016

Improving Maternal and Reproductive Health in South Asia

Sameh El-Saharty; Sadia Chowdhury; Naoko Ohno; Intissar Sarker

South Asia Region (SAR) has decreased maternal mortality ratio (MMR) by 65 percent between 1990 and 2013, which was the greatest progress among all world regions. Such achievement implores the question, What made SAR stand out against what is predicted by standard socioeconomic outcomes?Improving Maternal and Reproductive Health in South Asia: Drivers and Enablers identifies the interventions and factors that contributed to reducing MMR and improving maternal and reproductive health (MRH) outcomes in SAR. In this study, the analytical framework assumes that improving MRH outcomes is influenced by a multitude of forces from within and outside the health system and considers factors at the household and community levels, as well as interventions in other sectors and factors in the enabling environment. The analysis is based on a structured literature review of the interventions in SAR countries, relevant international experience, and review of the best available evidence from systematic reviews. The focus of the analysis is mainly on assessing the effectiveness of interventions. The findings from this study indicate that the most effective interventions that prevent maternal mortality are those that address the intra-partum stage - the point where most maternal deaths occur - and include improving skilled birth attendance coverage, increasing institutional delivery rates, and scaling up access to emergency obstetric care. There is also adequate evidence that investing in family planning to increase contraceptive use also played a key role during the inter-partum phase by preventing unwanted pregnancies and thus averting the risk of maternal mortality in SAR countries. Outside the programmatic interventions, the levels of household income, women’s education, and completion of secondary education of girls were also strongly correlated with improved MRH outcomes. Also, there is strong evidence that health financing schemes - both demand and supply side - and conditional cash transfer programs were effective in increasing the uptake of MRH services. The study points out to many other interventions with different degrees of effectiveness. The study also identified four major reasons for why SAR achieved this progress in MMR reduction.The best practices and evidence of what works synthesized in this study provide an important way forward for low- and middle-income countries toward achieving the health-related Sustainable Development Goals.


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2014

Facteurs de réussite pour la réduction de la mortalité maternelle et infantile

Shyama Kuruvilla; Julian Schweitzer; David Bishai; Sadia Chowdhury; Daniele Caramani; Laura Frost; Rafael Cortez; Bernadette Daelmans; Andres de Francisco; Taghreed Adam; Robert E. Cohen; Y. Natalia Alfonso; Jennifer Franz-Vasdeki; Seemeen Saadat; Beth Anne Pratt; Beatrice Eugster; Sarah Bandali; Pritha Venkatachalam; Rachael Hinton; John Murray; Sharon Arscott-Mills; Henrik Axelson; Blerta Maliqi; Intissar Sarker; Rama Lakshminarayanan; Troy Jacobs; Susan Jacks; Elizabeth Mason; Abdul Ghaffar; Nicholas Mays

Reducing maternal and child mortality is a priority in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), and will likely remain so after 2015. Evidence exists on the investments, interventions and enabling policies required. Less is understood about why some countries achieve faster progress than other comparable countries. The Success Factors for Womens and Childrens Health studies sought to address this knowledge gap using statistical and econometric analyses of data from 144 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) over 20 years; Boolean, qualitative comparative analysis; a literature review; and country-specific reviews in 10 fast-track countries for MDGs 4 and 5a. There is no standard formula--fast-track countries deploy tailored strategies and adapt quickly to change. However, fast-track countries share some effective approaches in addressing three main areas to reduce maternal and child mortality. First, these countries engage multiple sectors to address crucial health determinants. Around half the reduction in child mortality in LMICs since 1990 is the result of health sector investments, the other half is attributed to investments made in sectors outside health. Second, these countries use strategies to mobilize partners across society, using timely, robust evidence for decision-making and accountability and a triple planning approach to consider immediate needs, long-term vision and adaptation to change. Third, the countries establish guiding principles that orient progress, align stakeholder action and achieve results over time. This evidence synthesis contributes to global learning on accelerating improvements in womens and childrens health towards 2015 and beyond.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2002

Efficacy and trial effectiveness of weekly and daily iron supplementation among pregnant women in rural Bangladesh: disentangling the issues

Eva Charlotte Ekström; Sm Ziauddin Hyder; A Mushtaque R Chowdhury; Sadia Chowdhury; Bo Lönnerdal; Jean Pierre Habicht; Lars Åke Persson


Sex Education | 2001

Telling Them Their Own Stories: Legitimizing sexual and reproductive health education in rural Bangladesh

Kathleen Cash; Sharful Islam Khan; Hashima-E-Nasreen; Abbas Bhuiya; Sadia Chowdhury; A. Mushtaque R. Chowdhury


Archive | 2013

Economics and ethics of results-based financing for family planning : evidence and policy implications

Sadia Chowdhury; Petra Vergeer; Harald Schmidt; Helene Barroy; David Bishai; Scott D. Halpern


Archive | 2014

MATERNAL AND CHILD SURVIVAL: Findings from five countries' experience in addressing maternal and child health challenges

Rafael Cortez; Seemeen Saadat; Sadia Chowdhury; Intissar Sarker

Collaboration


Dive into the Sadia Chowdhury's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rachael Hinton

World Health Organization

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Bishai

Johns Hopkins University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge