International Health Links movement expands in the United Kingdom

Abstract The need to strengthen health capacity in developing countries is widely documented. The World Health Organization has called for an increase in the number of health workers in all countries experiencing critical shortages, a significant scaling-up of training and more efficient use of exis...

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Veröffentlicht in:International health 2010-09, Vol.2 (3), p.165-171
Hauptverfasser: Leather, Andrew J.M, Butterfield, Catherine, Peachey, Karen, Silverman, Mike, Sheriff, Rebecca Syed
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract The need to strengthen health capacity in developing countries is widely documented. The World Health Organization has called for an increase in the number of health workers in all countries experiencing critical shortages, a significant scaling-up of training and more efficient use of existing health workers. Health Links, long-term mutually beneficial partnerships between UK health institutions and their counterparts in developing countries, are helping to fill these gaps. Links allow for the reciprocal transfer of knowledge and skills between partners, enabling the UK's expertise in health service delivery and training to be channelled towards the needs of those in developing countries, while also bringing a wide range of benefits to the UK. Examples of Health Links in Ethiopia demonstrate such benefits. An increasingly supportive policy environment is enabling a significant expansion in the number of Links. However, the quality of these Links is critical to their impact and thus there is a need both to continue to support those engaging in Links to develop sustainable, mutually beneficial strategic partnerships, and to strengthen the body of evidence of their impacts.
ISSN:1876-3413
1876-3405
DOI:10.1016/j.inhe.2010.04.004