Data Can Tell Stories—and Improve Health Care
In Liberia, technologists are learning to make two powerful information systems operate together, slowly revealing the story of how family planning there does—and doesn't—work.
In Liberia, technologists are learning to make two powerful information systems operate together, slowly revealing the story of how family planning there does—and doesn't—work.
These three innovators are hell-bent on changing the world. And now they're headed to Saxapahaw, NC, for SwitchPoint 2014.
What's it like to be a woman working in IT in Namibia? Rosaline Hendricks talks about that and more.
Games. Youth. War. We’ve got our eyes on 10 topics that will shape 2014 for us all—especially for members of the health workforce.
Meet Oluchukwu Ifele. She’s part of the growing, tight-knit community of health workers and technologists who have found that the right software can change everything.
iHRIS Train: it's free, it's customizable, and it's bringing us one step closer to universal health coverage, one record at a time.
We picked Malik Jaffer’s brain about health worker heroes and what it’ll take to make more of them.
Data and open-source software are helping to clear the path to universal health coverage.
As one of the six building blocks for health systems strengthening, the health workforce is best addressed systematically rather than with silver bullets.
In this age of rapidly emerging technologies, how can we improve the way we provide training to health workers?
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An integrated community care approach provides health care where and when it's needed. By @katiedain1 and Lobna Sal… https://t.co/FBpa2ui44L