Global Health Delivery Project

The Global Health Delivery Project is a project at Harvard University, United States, that aims to improve health among disadvantaged populations worldwide by studying global health delivery and delivering that knowledge to practitioners.

GHD was founded in 2007 by Dr. Jim Yong Kim, Dr. Paul Farmer and Harvard Business School Professor Michael Porter. It operates with guidance from four pillars: Harvard Medical School, Harvard School of Public Health, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Partners in Health.

The Global Health Delivery Project shares the knowledge it generates to enable practitioners to design, implement and improve delivery programs that maximize health benefits for vulnerable communities. Closing this gap between knowledge and practice requires building a field of study in health delivery. GHD’s contribution to this research is based on principles developed by the organization’s co-founder, Michael Porter:[1]

  • Program case studies are primary tools for analysis and teaching.
  • Field research focuses on the role of organizational leaders and their choices.
  • Analytic frameworks are developed that can guide practice; frameworks are tested and refined in collaboration with practitioners delivering programs in their country.

Projects

GHD case studies

GHD develops global health case studies for the GHD curriculum and education programs, as well as contributing research tools in developing frameworks for health care delivery. GHD has developed more than 26 cases on topics, such as HIV/AIDS, malaria, tuberculosis, polio, maternal and child health, nutrition and tobacco control. The case studies follow the Harvard Business School model[2] to explore successes and failures in health care delivery.

GHD education

GHD offers a health care delivery course for Harvard undergraduates, and graduate courses at Harvard Medical School and the Harvard School of Public Health. The Global Health Effectiveness Program, piloted in 2009, consists of a 3-week session with classes in epidemiology, management science and GHD case studies. The inaugural class included 26 students and six visiting faculty from 17 countries. At Harvard Business School, the GHD curriculum has been included in health care delivery immersion and global health management courses. GHD also teamed up with the MIT Sloan School of Management on its Global Entrepreneurship Lab course.

GHDonline

GHDonline is an open collaboration platform developed by and for global health implementers and practitioners. GHDonline members share proven practices, connect with colleagues, and find tools to improve health outcomes in resource-limited settings.

GHD research

GHD research focuses on understanding and exploring solutions to the complex biological, social, economic and political problems involved in health care delivery.

GHD was part of the World Health Organization’s Maximizing Positive Synergies Project,[3]” that investigated the interactions between global health initiatives and health systems. In preparation for the G8 Summit in July 2009, Julio Frenk, Dean of the Harvard School of Public Health, presented results from the consortium’s work to a global audience of Ministers of Health.

Publications

  • From a declaration of values to the creation of value in global health: A report from Harvard University’s Global Health Delivery Project, J. Y. Kim; J. Rhatigan; S. H. Jain; R. Weintraub; M. E. Porter
  • Global Public Health: An International Journal for Research, Policy and Practice, December 14, 2009 Venice Statement on global health initiatives and health systems], Atun R, Dybul M, Evans T, Kim JY, Moatti JP, Nishtar S, Russell A.
  • Lancet, September 5, 2009 An assessment of interactions between global health initiatives and country health systems, World Health Organization Maximizing Positive Synergies Collaborative Group, Samb B, Evans T, Dybul M, Atun R, Moatti JP, Nishtar S, Wright A, Celletti F, Hsu J, Kim JY, Brugha R, Russell A, Etienne C.
  • Lancet, June 20, 2009 GHIs Impact on the Rwandan Health System: A mixed methods analysis (PDF), Mukherjee JS, JG Jerome, E Sullivan, MA May, A Mayfield, W Lambert, N Dhavan, N Carney, J Rhatigan, LC Ivers
  • World Health Organization, June 2009 Haiti: Maximizing Positive Synergies between Global Health Initiatives and the Health System (PDF), Ivers, Louise C., JG Jerome, E Sullivan, JR Talbot, N Dhavan, M St Louis, W Lambert, J Rhatigan, JY Kim, JS Mukherjee
  • World Health Organization, June 2009 Kenya: The Impact of Global Health Initiatives on the Health System (PDF), Rhatigan, J., E Sullivan, K ole-MoiYoi, G Kimathi, N Dhavan, E Kabiru
  • World Health Organization, June 2009 Applying the Care Delivery Value Chain: HIV/AIDS Care in Resource Poor Settings (Working paper), Joseph Rhatigan, Sachin H. Jain, Joia S. Mukherjee, and Michael E. Porter
  • Harvard Business School, April 3, 2009 Delivering Global Health, Sachin H. Jain et al.
  • Student BMJ, June 2008 The Obstacle Source, The most critical roadblock to delivering care in the developing world is not money, but an implementation bottleneck, Jim Yong Kim
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References

  1. Porter, ME. "What is Strategy?" Harvard Business Review. http://hbr.org/product/what-is-strategy/an/96608-PDF-ENG?Ntt=what%2520is%2520strategy&referral=00269&cm_sp=endeca-_-spotlight-_-link
  2. Harvard Business School Learning in Practice http://www.hbs.edu/learning/case.html
  3. World Health Organization. Maximizing Positive Synergies. http://www.who.int/healthsystems/GHIsynergies/en/index.html
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