mainly healthy note on last fridays meeting of brooklyn meets vatican and central park south but first hello in in baltimore leader of b;ac chapters of conscious capitalism and particularly focused on black for black youth banks and how to linkin john hopkins
economisthealth curruculum -start with the most econmic health services network on plane
why because keynes alumni schumacher quoted in 2025 report proclaimed ending poverty is truly challene of ending povert in millions of villaes
epicentre 1 sir fazle abed's model its not what vatican inspired (or peculiarly windsor castle alumni) models need as their epicentre- naila has over 25 years knowledge of how sir fazle abed built health services from nothing - in fact before there were village women microcredit networks there were village mothers health services network- until bangladesh women knew how to save their infants from death by diarrhea the culture expected them ot have 10 children with half dying- this did not leave women any other energy to work
Listen with Mother of Microcredit - YouTube
www.youtube.com/watch?v=2MRKWohm6T8
Aug 31, 2008 - http://www.grameen-info.org/grameen/gshikkha/ Listen to a few cultural tips from 33 years of developing the most human network - and bank
25 years int these networks being manually grounded in loving to serve basic health, soros invested in bangladesh being first village networks ot experiment with mobile partnerships
for those who want start with the leading edge of medical health services sir keith peters former head of royal society of medicine and the cambridge professors whose students got a nobel prize for open sourcing the human genome is a source to web with
chris dc 240 316 8157
have you any news of most exciting millennium goal startups 2013-2015 http://www.economisthealth.com/ part of 20 titles of youth journalists for humanity linked by norman macrae foundation
sadly mobile possibilities ruined yunus who developed the worst relationships in the wrld with ocders because he wanted everything done yesterday and under budet- -meanwhile soros made sure that sir fazle abdd and paul farmer and jim kim shared ideas , and kenya/naiorbi ihub became the other most exciting city for mobule youth development solutions
Book Release: "From One to Many: Scaling Up Health Programs in Low Income Countries"
December 9, 2010 at 8:31am naila has deades f knwledge f hw sir fazle build health service frm nthing - in fact befire there was wmen baning netwrs in the vilage there was m
"From One to Many: Scaling Up Health Programs in Low Income Countries" published by The University Press Limited was recently launched. The book is an excellent resource for anyone interested in learning about both the problems and the opportunities involved in effectively scaling up health programs. The book is a collection of articles submitted to theInternational Conference on Scaling Up Health Programs, held in Dhaka, Bangladesh in December 2008.
This edited volume is comprised of 17 chapters, two of which focus specifically on BRAC's efforts and successes in scaling up maternal health programs as well as the rural tuberculosis program.
In the foreword, Founder and Chairperson of BRAC, Sir Fazle Abed, writes, "the problems of poverty and disease are immense, therefore so should be the scale of the solutions." This edited-volume takes a deep look at many of the health care problems faced by the world's poorest, and provides a framework for understanding the challenges and opportunities within the field.
"From One to Many: Scaling Up Health Programs in Low Income Countries" has been released in Bangladesh, Germany and Switzerland and was edited by:
- Richard A. Cash: Senior Lecturer at the Harvard School of Public Health,Visiting Professor at the James P. Grant School of Public Health at BRAC University; BRAC USA Board Member
- A. Mushtaque R. Chowdhury, Associate Director at the Rockefeller Foundation, Professor at Columbia University in New York
- George B. Smith, Food Systems Expert
- Faruque Ahmed, Director of the BRAC Health Program
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