This presentation was presented by YENI PURNAMASARI of Yayasan Dompet Dhuafa (Indonesia) during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific" on March 25, 2021.
This presentation was presented by Dr Lisa Dacanay during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific"
Rural Revitalization, Youth and Social Entrepreneurship Presentation by Lanyi...Bernadette Patañag
This presentation was presented by Lanying Zhang of Source for Action in China (SFA) during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific" dated March 25, 2021.
Decent Work for All in Sustainable Value Chains - presented by WFTO-AsiaBernadette Patañag
This presentation was presented by Selyna Peiris, representive of WFTO Asia during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific" on March 25, 2021.
The document outlines the achievements of the PNG Women in Agriculture Development Foundation in empowering rural women farmers in Papua New Guinea. The Foundation uses a "farmer to farmer needs driven extension approach" where women service providers deliver agricultural support and training to registered women farmer groups. This approach has improved food security, increased production and incomes, and given rural women a voice. The Foundation recommends expanding this model of participatory, farmer-led extension to further develop partnerships between smallholders and the private sector.
The document provides information about an orientation for the CORE Group Polio Project 2016 conference. It includes introductions and details about CORE Group's vision, mission, values, structure including working groups and membership. The membership section outlines the types of members, requirements, benefits and application process. Working groups are also listed with their co-chairs. Finally there is information about a knowledge cafe session at the conference.
Roger Mathiesen, Regional Adviser at Alive and ThriveSUN_Movement
This document discusses making breastfeeding more compatible with work by creating breastfeeding-friendly work environments. It notes that over 1 billion women work worldwide, including 115 million in Africa, but many workplaces are not supportive of breastfeeding. The document outlines benefits to employees, employers, governments, and society from establishing workplace lactation programs that provide space and time for breastfeeding or milk expression. It provides positive examples from programs in Vietnam that extended maternity leave and provided lactation rooms, finding increased rates of breastfeeding. The document calls for governments to establish supportive policies, and employers and employees to establish breastfeeding-friendly practices and spaces in the workplace.
Presented at NCVO's National Volunteering Forum on Friday 7 November 2014.
The presentation was by Dominic Cotton, Director of Communications and Public Affairs, Step up to Serve. These slides look at the key principles of quality youth social action and what is next for Step up to serve.
To find out about volunteering: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/ncvo-volunteering
Multi-dimensional Programming The Rubik's Cube Challenge to Community Health ...CORE Group
The document discusses frameworks for conceptualizing community health programs. It notes that prior models like wheels, shapes and bubbles fail to fully capture the dynamics and relationships involved. The Rubik's Cube is presented as a metaphor for the multi-dimensional nature of community health. The document outlines a World Cafe discussion to explore experiences with successful and less successful community health programs. Participants will draw pictures and share to discuss what dimensions contributed to or hindered outcomes. The goal is to better understand how to envision the multiple interconnected components involved in holistic community health. A panel will then provide perspectives from different community health actors.
This presentation was presented by Dr Lisa Dacanay during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific"
Rural Revitalization, Youth and Social Entrepreneurship Presentation by Lanyi...Bernadette Patañag
This presentation was presented by Lanying Zhang of Source for Action in China (SFA) during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific" dated March 25, 2021.
Decent Work for All in Sustainable Value Chains - presented by WFTO-AsiaBernadette Patañag
This presentation was presented by Selyna Peiris, representive of WFTO Asia during the APFSD Side Event on "SE-SDG Platforms: Towards Building Back Fairer in Asia and the Pacific" on March 25, 2021.
The document outlines the achievements of the PNG Women in Agriculture Development Foundation in empowering rural women farmers in Papua New Guinea. The Foundation uses a "farmer to farmer needs driven extension approach" where women service providers deliver agricultural support and training to registered women farmer groups. This approach has improved food security, increased production and incomes, and given rural women a voice. The Foundation recommends expanding this model of participatory, farmer-led extension to further develop partnerships between smallholders and the private sector.
The document provides information about an orientation for the CORE Group Polio Project 2016 conference. It includes introductions and details about CORE Group's vision, mission, values, structure including working groups and membership. The membership section outlines the types of members, requirements, benefits and application process. Working groups are also listed with their co-chairs. Finally there is information about a knowledge cafe session at the conference.
Roger Mathiesen, Regional Adviser at Alive and ThriveSUN_Movement
This document discusses making breastfeeding more compatible with work by creating breastfeeding-friendly work environments. It notes that over 1 billion women work worldwide, including 115 million in Africa, but many workplaces are not supportive of breastfeeding. The document outlines benefits to employees, employers, governments, and society from establishing workplace lactation programs that provide space and time for breastfeeding or milk expression. It provides positive examples from programs in Vietnam that extended maternity leave and provided lactation rooms, finding increased rates of breastfeeding. The document calls for governments to establish supportive policies, and employers and employees to establish breastfeeding-friendly practices and spaces in the workplace.
Presented at NCVO's National Volunteering Forum on Friday 7 November 2014.
The presentation was by Dominic Cotton, Director of Communications and Public Affairs, Step up to Serve. These slides look at the key principles of quality youth social action and what is next for Step up to serve.
To find out about volunteering: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/ncvo-volunteering
Multi-dimensional Programming The Rubik's Cube Challenge to Community Health ...CORE Group
The document discusses frameworks for conceptualizing community health programs. It notes that prior models like wheels, shapes and bubbles fail to fully capture the dynamics and relationships involved. The Rubik's Cube is presented as a metaphor for the multi-dimensional nature of community health. The document outlines a World Cafe discussion to explore experiences with successful and less successful community health programs. Participants will draw pictures and share to discuss what dimensions contributed to or hindered outcomes. The goal is to better understand how to envision the multiple interconnected components involved in holistic community health. A panel will then provide perspectives from different community health actors.
How can Tanzania make the most of new mini-grid and other energy access inves...IIED
This is a presentation by Sarah Best and Ben Garside of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) in collaboration with HIVOS and the Energy Change Lab.
It was prepared for a roundtable on the Productive Uses of Energy held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on 20 May 2016.
It asks how Tanzania can make the most of new mini-grid and other energy access investments to catalyse local enterprises, jobs and incomes in poor rural communities.
More information: http://www.energychangelab.org/
The document describes the Chinmaya Organization for Rural Development and its mission to facilitate sustainable development in rural India through empowering local communities. It outlines the organization's objectives like empowering women, increasing economic self-reliance, and strengthening local governance. It provides details of various programs run by the organization that have benefited over 27,000 people, including self-help groups, livelihood programs, and health initiatives. It also discusses the organization's use of community workers and evaluations of its efforts to support rural development.
Presented at the NCVO National Volunteering Forum on the 1 July 2014 by John Carlin, Volunteer Centre Support Manager, NCVO.
http://www.ncvo.org.uk/ncvo-volunteering
Presented at NCVO's National Volunteering Forum on Friday 7 November 2014.
The presentation was by Laura Hamilton, Volunteer and Development Manager for George House Trust and Chair of the Volunteering Greater Manchester Partnership. These slides look at volunteering that is taking place in Greater Manchester and how we can create a common vision.
To find out about volunteering: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/ncvo-volunteering
Team MICA aims to improve chronic disease care in urban slums by 2019 through their Cura social enterprise model. Their objectives are to increase awareness of chronic diseases, provide affordable healthcare and medicines, and encourage early diagnosis and treatment. Their model highlights include aggregating doctors' philanthropic time, creating an interconnected healthcare ecosystem, and establishing an in-house pharmacy system. Their social enterprise will operate 3 hospitals that provide subsidized services to link slum communities to healthcare resources while pursuing operational sustainability.
United Way of Austin programs aim to provide skills and resources to low-to-moderate income families so they can become self-sufficient. Their programs jump start sustainable solutions to help families thrive. People can learn more about these programs and how to support them by visiting unitedwayaustin.org/ourwork/.
This document summarizes the work of the Social Finance Impact Incubator, which partners with charitable foundations to tackle social issues. It discusses the Incubator's process of prioritizing themes to improve quality of life for older people in the UK. Through consultation with foundation partners, the Incubator selected improving transport and preventing involuntary job exits. For transport, the partners agreed to focus on better coordination, seeing it as a key underlying issue. The document outlines the Incubator's multi-phase process and notes some lessons learned about engaging funders, including making clear how grants can make a systems-level difference beyond business as usual.
Many organisations wonder where to spend their CSR funds, rightfully and meaningfully. Partner with Rotary anywhere. You can be assured of financial stewardship, due diligence of project, regular reportings, media coverage, and free voluntary force of business and professional leaders.
Dr. Steven Mann discussed the potential impact of physical activity on public health. The ukactive Research Institute aims to build an evidence base for exercise and physical activity programs to improve quality of life and prevent/manage disease. Their objectives include securing grants for real-world interventions, encouraging best practices in data collection and dissemination, and publishing research to contribute to understanding how to get more people more active more often. Physical activity is good for health but becoming active requires conscious effort and support around time, priorities, environment, knowledge and more.
Social Entrepreneurship Week - 2014 Sponsorship PackRama Chakaki
Social Enterprise Week is a weeklong event that brings together stakeholders in the social enterprise sector. Previous Social Enterprise Weeks saw high attendance, unique insights into the sector, and significant social media attention. The 2014 schedule includes sessions on impact investment, community health, education models for youth, ethical fashion, and the Hult Prize social enterprise challenge for students. The event is supported by various organizations and individuals and offers sponsorship opportunities.
Enhancing the efficiency and effectiveness of Agricultural Extension and Advisory Services requires, developing and adapting innovative approaches, methods and tools for delivery of AEAS and ultimately scaling them up and out.
This document summarizes CARE's approach to addressing poverty through their work in Bangladesh. CARE aims to empower marginalized women and girls by developing human capacity, promoting economic opportunity, addressing social injustices, and demonstrating long-term community commitment. Some key strategies include organizing women into groups to gain access to training, markets, and services; improving the milk collection system; and strengthening the breeding and animal health networks. The goal is to increase incomes and livelihoods for 35,000 households through an improved dairy value chain. CARE works to increase women's roles in decision making, challenge social norms, and support women entrepreneurs across the milk production process.
CSR :- Corporate Social Responsibility
It is apparent that citizens of modern, industrialized countries enjoy much more prosperous and healthy lives than those in least developed countries.
Cultural Aspects of Quality and how these impact product quality on manufacturing floors with reference to Pakistan Society. Read this presentation together with video , with same title on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05R7-Yp-kLQ
1) The document proposes creating an NGO called SAMRAKSHITA to empower women and ensure their safety.
2) SAMRAKSHITA would have various programs like LAYA, ARHA, PRAGATI, and SAHAYA to prevent female foeticide, promote girls' education, provide employment opportunities for women, and ensure protection.
3) It would collect monthly rupee donations from working professionals to fund these programs and work under the oversight of Citizens for Accountable Governance (CAG).
This document discusses best practices for volunteer management and engagement. It outlines key aspects of volunteer management, including being clear on roles and expectations, supporting volunteers throughout their journey, and ensuring flexibility. The document also describes nine quality areas for volunteer involvement based on Investing in Volunteers standards, such as diversity, role development, and recognition. Attendees then participated in breakout sessions to discuss current practices related to these standards and ideas for future improvements to enhance the volunteer experience. Finally, several organizations shared examples of how completing the Investing in Volunteers accreditation helped them listen to volunteer feedback and strengthen their programs.
M&E of Community Programs vs. Community M&E: What Gives?MEASURE Evaluation
This document discusses challenges with monitoring and evaluating community-based programs. It notes that community programs are expected to provide the same level of data as facility-based programs but without comparable resources. This often leads to poor quality data, low data use, and program burnout. The document argues for alternative approaches focused on using data for management rather than just reporting. It proposes using community rosters, simple case management forms, annual cluster sample surveys, and population surveys to track coverage and outcomes in a more effective way. The goal is to put more emphasis on evaluation and using data for learning and improvement.
Working Effectively with Women and Men to Improve the Sustainability of WASH...International WaterCentre
This presentation discusses research on gender outcomes of WASH programs in the Pacific. It found that although the programs focused on water, sanitation and hygiene, they had unintended gender outcomes - both positive like women gaining respect and a voice, and negative like increased workloads. The presentation argues that considering gender and including women and men can lead to more sustainable outcomes, gender equality, and empowerment. It provides principles and tools to facilitate participation, inclusion, and address gender in a constructive way to influence positive gender outcomes and sustainability.
This document discusses sustainability and investment in community development. It outlines key stakeholders in community development projects including employees, communities, governments, and companies. It also discusses how sustainability connects to natural, financial, social, human, and physical capital. The document then covers common community development interventions like health, education, livelihoods, and natural resource management. It poses challenges around selecting interventions, community engagement, and measuring intangible returns on investment. Finally, it emphasizes the importance of designing community programs through local dialogue and evaluating their impact for long-term business sustainability.
- The document discusses barriers to accessing prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) services in many countries, including low status of women, poverty, lack of transportation, stigma, and unsupportive health services.
- To overcome these barriers in Uganda, strategies were employed like quality improvement efforts, integrating PMTCT into other health services, involving people living with HIV, working with communities, and providing psychosocial support for children.
- Key approaches included family support groups, peer educators, task sharing between health workers and lay providers, community outreach, children's groups, and increasing male partner participation. Lessons learned showed that community-based, family-focused approaches improved PMTCT programs.
Civil Society Engagement Practical Country Platform Solutions to Reach Every ...CORE Group
This document discusses strengthening community health ecosystems. It outlines a 5-step process:
1. Set target health outcomes
2. Understand existing community health components and how they currently deliver outcomes
3. Diagnose priorities by identifying bottlenecks in the current ecosystem and required domains of action (agency, access, resources)
4. Develop or strengthen programs to address priorities
5. Implement, monitor, and evaluate programs, setting target outcomes
The overall framework conceptualizes community health as a system with various interacting components, both health-specific and health-enabling, that need to work together to serve community members. It provides a way to structure discussions and decision-making to foster continuous improvement of community health.
How can Tanzania make the most of new mini-grid and other energy access inves...IIED
This is a presentation by Sarah Best and Ben Garside of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) in collaboration with HIVOS and the Energy Change Lab.
It was prepared for a roundtable on the Productive Uses of Energy held in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, on 20 May 2016.
It asks how Tanzania can make the most of new mini-grid and other energy access investments to catalyse local enterprises, jobs and incomes in poor rural communities.
More information: http://www.energychangelab.org/
The document describes the Chinmaya Organization for Rural Development and its mission to facilitate sustainable development in rural India through empowering local communities. It outlines the organization's objectives like empowering women, increasing economic self-reliance, and strengthening local governance. It provides details of various programs run by the organization that have benefited over 27,000 people, including self-help groups, livelihood programs, and health initiatives. It also discusses the organization's use of community workers and evaluations of its efforts to support rural development.
Presented at the NCVO National Volunteering Forum on the 1 July 2014 by John Carlin, Volunteer Centre Support Manager, NCVO.
http://www.ncvo.org.uk/ncvo-volunteering
Presented at NCVO's National Volunteering Forum on Friday 7 November 2014.
The presentation was by Laura Hamilton, Volunteer and Development Manager for George House Trust and Chair of the Volunteering Greater Manchester Partnership. These slides look at volunteering that is taking place in Greater Manchester and how we can create a common vision.
To find out about volunteering: http://www.ncvo.org.uk/ncvo-volunteering
Team MICA aims to improve chronic disease care in urban slums by 2019 through their Cura social enterprise model. Their objectives are to increase awareness of chronic diseases, provide affordable healthcare and medicines, and encourage early diagnosis and treatment. Their model highlights include aggregating doctors' philanthropic time, creating an interconnected healthcare ecosystem, and establishing an in-house pharmacy system. Their social enterprise will operate 3 hospitals that provide subsidized services to link slum communities to healthcare resources while pursuing operational sustainability.
United Way of Austin programs aim to provide skills and resources to low-to-moderate income families so they can become self-sufficient. Their programs jump start sustainable solutions to help families thrive. People can learn more about these programs and how to support them by visiting unitedwayaustin.org/ourwork/.
This document summarizes the work of the Social Finance Impact Incubator, which partners with charitable foundations to tackle social issues. It discusses the Incubator's process of prioritizing themes to improve quality of life for older people in the UK. Through consultation with foundation partners, the Incubator selected improving transport and preventing involuntary job exits. For transport, the partners agreed to focus on better coordination, seeing it as a key underlying issue. The document outlines the Incubator's multi-phase process and notes some lessons learned about engaging funders, including making clear how grants can make a systems-level difference beyond business as usual.
Many organisations wonder where to spend their CSR funds, rightfully and meaningfully. Partner with Rotary anywhere. You can be assured of financial stewardship, due diligence of project, regular reportings, media coverage, and free voluntary force of business and professional leaders.
Dr. Steven Mann discussed the potential impact of physical activity on public health. The ukactive Research Institute aims to build an evidence base for exercise and physical activity programs to improve quality of life and prevent/manage disease. Their objectives include securing grants for real-world interventions, encouraging best practices in data collection and dissemination, and publishing research to contribute to understanding how to get more people more active more often. Physical activity is good for health but becoming active requires conscious effort and support around time, priorities, environment, knowledge and more.
Social Entrepreneurship Week - 2014 Sponsorship PackRama Chakaki
Social Enterprise Week is a weeklong event that brings together stakeholders in the social enterprise sector. Previous Social Enterprise Weeks saw high attendance, unique insights into the sector, and significant social media attention. The 2014 schedule includes sessions on impact investment, community health, education models for youth, ethical fashion, and the Hult Prize social enterprise challenge for students. The event is supported by various organizations and individuals and offers sponsorship opportunities.
Enhancing the efficiency and effectiveness of Agricultural Extension and Advisory Services requires, developing and adapting innovative approaches, methods and tools for delivery of AEAS and ultimately scaling them up and out.
This document summarizes CARE's approach to addressing poverty through their work in Bangladesh. CARE aims to empower marginalized women and girls by developing human capacity, promoting economic opportunity, addressing social injustices, and demonstrating long-term community commitment. Some key strategies include organizing women into groups to gain access to training, markets, and services; improving the milk collection system; and strengthening the breeding and animal health networks. The goal is to increase incomes and livelihoods for 35,000 households through an improved dairy value chain. CARE works to increase women's roles in decision making, challenge social norms, and support women entrepreneurs across the milk production process.
CSR :- Corporate Social Responsibility
It is apparent that citizens of modern, industrialized countries enjoy much more prosperous and healthy lives than those in least developed countries.
Cultural Aspects of Quality and how these impact product quality on manufacturing floors with reference to Pakistan Society. Read this presentation together with video , with same title on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=05R7-Yp-kLQ
1) The document proposes creating an NGO called SAMRAKSHITA to empower women and ensure their safety.
2) SAMRAKSHITA would have various programs like LAYA, ARHA, PRAGATI, and SAHAYA to prevent female foeticide, promote girls' education, provide employment opportunities for women, and ensure protection.
3) It would collect monthly rupee donations from working professionals to fund these programs and work under the oversight of Citizens for Accountable Governance (CAG).
This document discusses best practices for volunteer management and engagement. It outlines key aspects of volunteer management, including being clear on roles and expectations, supporting volunteers throughout their journey, and ensuring flexibility. The document also describes nine quality areas for volunteer involvement based on Investing in Volunteers standards, such as diversity, role development, and recognition. Attendees then participated in breakout sessions to discuss current practices related to these standards and ideas for future improvements to enhance the volunteer experience. Finally, several organizations shared examples of how completing the Investing in Volunteers accreditation helped them listen to volunteer feedback and strengthen their programs.
M&E of Community Programs vs. Community M&E: What Gives?MEASURE Evaluation
This document discusses challenges with monitoring and evaluating community-based programs. It notes that community programs are expected to provide the same level of data as facility-based programs but without comparable resources. This often leads to poor quality data, low data use, and program burnout. The document argues for alternative approaches focused on using data for management rather than just reporting. It proposes using community rosters, simple case management forms, annual cluster sample surveys, and population surveys to track coverage and outcomes in a more effective way. The goal is to put more emphasis on evaluation and using data for learning and improvement.
Working Effectively with Women and Men to Improve the Sustainability of WASH...International WaterCentre
This presentation discusses research on gender outcomes of WASH programs in the Pacific. It found that although the programs focused on water, sanitation and hygiene, they had unintended gender outcomes - both positive like women gaining respect and a voice, and negative like increased workloads. The presentation argues that considering gender and including women and men can lead to more sustainable outcomes, gender equality, and empowerment. It provides principles and tools to facilitate participation, inclusion, and address gender in a constructive way to influence positive gender outcomes and sustainability.
This document discusses sustainability and investment in community development. It outlines key stakeholders in community development projects including employees, communities, governments, and companies. It also discusses how sustainability connects to natural, financial, social, human, and physical capital. The document then covers common community development interventions like health, education, livelihoods, and natural resource management. It poses challenges around selecting interventions, community engagement, and measuring intangible returns on investment. Finally, it emphasizes the importance of designing community programs through local dialogue and evaluating their impact for long-term business sustainability.
- The document discusses barriers to accessing prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) services in many countries, including low status of women, poverty, lack of transportation, stigma, and unsupportive health services.
- To overcome these barriers in Uganda, strategies were employed like quality improvement efforts, integrating PMTCT into other health services, involving people living with HIV, working with communities, and providing psychosocial support for children.
- Key approaches included family support groups, peer educators, task sharing between health workers and lay providers, community outreach, children's groups, and increasing male partner participation. Lessons learned showed that community-based, family-focused approaches improved PMTCT programs.
Civil Society Engagement Practical Country Platform Solutions to Reach Every ...CORE Group
This document discusses strengthening community health ecosystems. It outlines a 5-step process:
1. Set target health outcomes
2. Understand existing community health components and how they currently deliver outcomes
3. Diagnose priorities by identifying bottlenecks in the current ecosystem and required domains of action (agency, access, resources)
4. Develop or strengthen programs to address priorities
5. Implement, monitor, and evaluate programs, setting target outcomes
The overall framework conceptualizes community health as a system with various interacting components, both health-specific and health-enabling, that need to work together to serve community members. It provides a way to structure discussions and decision-making to foster continuous improvement of community health.
The document summarizes several HIV/AIDS programs implemented by World Vision across multiple countries in Africa. It discusses key strategies used such as community mobilization, capacity building, and task shifting. Specific interventions discussed include PMTCT, pediatric HIV care, male circumcision, and programs to support orphans and vulnerable children. Results showed improved access to services, increased testing and treatment adherence, and reduced loss to follow up. Lessons highlighted the importance of integrated service delivery, community ownership, and long-term commitment to sustain programs.
This document summarizes family planning policies, programs, and activities in Sudan. It outlines the objectives of family planning in Sudan, which are primarily to improve maternal health by providing child spacing, and secondarily to control population growth. It discusses key actors like the Sudan Family Planning Association and UN agencies. It also describes common family planning interventions in Sudan like capacity building for healthcare providers, community awareness campaigns, and ensuring availability of family planning commodities. Barriers to effective family planning programs in Sudan include challenges with integrating services and developing strong referral systems.
Partnering with Patients, Families and Communities for Health: A Global Imper...EngagingPatients
Engagement is an essential tool to improving global health. This report introduces a new framework for engagement to help countries assess current programs and think strategically about future engagement opportunities. It spotlights barriers to engagement and offers concrete examples of effective engagement from around the globe.
This document summarizes a presentation given by the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion (ODPHP). It overviews ODPHP's divisions and their roles in prevention initiatives. It discusses tools and resources provided by ODPHP including Healthy People, dietary and physical activity guidelines, and the Affordable Care Act. ODPHP charges attendees to stay updated on their work, educate others, utilize available tools, and connect with ODPHP through their websites and social media platforms.
This document discusses nursing innovations in healthcare. It begins by explaining that nurses are well-positioned to develop innovative solutions due to their direct work with patients. It then defines innovation as developing new approaches or technologies. Examples are given of nursing innovations like Nightingale's study improving hospital sanitation and kangaroo care reducing neonatal mortality. The document also discusses innovations in health promotion, disease prevention, primary care and community healthcare. It notes programs like nurse home visits reducing child abuse and telemedicine expanding access to care. Overall the document covers the need for nursing innovations and various ways nurses have innovated to improve health outcomes.
World Health Organization developed the policy of health as a response to the problems of health in the developing countries, and established the primary health care concept. The strategy was introduced in 1978 in the first conference of WHO for health in the Alma Ata / Kazakhstan resulting 5 principles and 8 elements of PHC.
According to Alma Ata Conference,
Primary Health Care is an essential health care made universally accessible to individuals and acceptable to them, through their full participation and at the cost the community and country can afford.
According to World Health Organization,
Primary health care is a whole of society approach to health that aims at ensuring the highest possible level of health and wellbeing and their equitable distribution by focusing on peoples need and as early as possible along the continum from health promotion, rehabilitation and palliative care, and as close as feasible to peoples everyday environment.
concept/ principles
Equitable distribution
Community Participation
Focus on prevention
Use of appropriate technologies
Multi-sectoral approach
OBJECTIVES
To reduce in the prevalence of preventable, communicable and other disease
To provide comprehensive primary health care to the community through the Primary Health Centers.
To achieve and maintain an acceptable standard of quality of care.
To make the services more responsive and sensitive to the needs of the community
CHARACTERISTICS
Accessibility
Acceptability
Adaptability
Availability
Closeness
Comprehensible
Appropriateness
Continuity
Coordination
elements
Education for health
Locally endemic disease control
Expanded programs on immunization
Maternal and child health and family planning
Environment Sanitation and promotion of safe water Supply
Nutrition and promotion of adequate food supply
Treatment of communicable diseases and common illness
Supply of essential drugs
From Service delivery angle, PHCs may be of two
types, depending upon the delivery case load –
Type A PHC: PHC with delivery load of less than 20 deliveries in a month,
Type B PHC: PHC with delivery load of 20 or more deliveries in a month
PHC control by State Government
Current number of PHCs in India- 10,453
Recommended bed capacity for PHC – 4-6 beds
Each PHC acts as a referral center of- 6 Sub centers
OPD service- 6 hours
ROLE OF COMMUNITY HEALTH NURSE
Planner/ Programmer
Care provider
Community Organizer
Service Coordinator
Trainer / Health Educator
Health Monitor
Change Agent
Recorder/ Reporter/ Statistician
Reseacher
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/primary-health-care
https://nhm.gov.in/images/pdf/guidelines/iphs/iphs-revised-guidlines-2012/primay-health-centres.pdf
Keynote address by Dr. Eric Goosby of UCSF, presented at CFAR HIV Research in International Settings (CHRIS) meeting in San Diego, October 1, 2014. Dr. Goosby discussed. "Global Health Delivery and Diplomacy: The Long Road to Sustainable Programs."
MATERNAL & CHILD HEALTH (MCH).ppt for JHSIEmmanuelLaku
This document provides information on maternal and child health (MCH) programs and services. It discusses the importance of MCH care, objectives of MCH programs, major health issues faced by mothers and children, strategies to improve MCH, and the role and functions of MCH clinics. It also describes the types of records kept at MCH clinics, including antenatal cards, child health cards, and various registers, which are used to monitor clients and program activities. The overall goal of MCH programs and services is to improve the health of mothers and children and reduce maternal and child mortality.
Social prescribing is an intervention that aims to address patients' non-clinical needs by connecting them with local community services and activities like arts, leisure, learning, or volunteering groups. It has shown positive mental, emotional, and social benefits. The advantages include reduced need for clinical care, increased patient autonomy, and acknowledgment of socioeconomic factors impacting health. The US model incorporates a social prescribing coordinator and volunteers to guide patients to alternative services and support individual needs. UK clinicians agree patients' social needs are as important as medical conditions, and social prescribing could help address unmet resource needs in primary care.
national health progrmmes for children.pptxpayalgakhar
This document summarizes several national health programs in India for children, including the Reproductive and Child Health Program, Universal Immunization Program, Integrated Child Development Services, School Health Program, and nutritional programs. It provides details on the objectives, services provided, implementation, and strategies of these programs, which aim to improve child health, reduce mortality and malnutrition, and make health services more accessible to children and mothers across India.
Prevention of Maternal Mortality_StantonCORE Group
This document summarizes USAID's Maternal Health Vision for Action plan to end preventable maternal mortality globally by 2030. The plan focuses on 10 key strategies: 1) improving individual and community behaviors, 2) increasing access to services for vulnerable groups, 3) integrating family planning and maternal services, 4) scaling quality maternal/fetal care, 5) treating indirect causes of mortality, 6) addressing morbidity, 7) respectful maternity care, 8) strengthening health systems, 9) using data for decisions, and 10) promoting innovation. Financial incentives, community mobilization, addressing disparities, and strengthening health systems are emphasized as ways to achieve the vision.
Global launch: Delivering prevention in an ageing worldILC- UK
It’s never too late to prevent ill health. And the health and economic costs of failing to invest in preventative interventions across the life course are simply too high to ignore.
At this event, we launched two new reports on what works in delivering a preventative approach to health in an ageing world; how we can improve take-up and adherence to preventative interventions; what we have learned from COVID-19; and how policymakers across the world need to act to ensure prevention becomes a priority as countries build back from the damage inflicted by the pandemic.
We were joined by a panel of experts from across the world to discuss the findings and what needs to happen next so we can move from consensus to action on prevention.
This invited presentation for the Institute of Health Visiting Leadership Conference gives a DPH view on the future of Child Public Health and the need for a systems approach
The document outlines several national health programs in India focused on improving child health. Key programs discussed include the Reproductive and Child Health Program (RCH), Universal Immunization Program, Integrated Child Development Services (ICDS), School Health Program, and various nutritional programs. RCH aims to reduce infant/child mortality and promote family planning. ICDS provides childcare, nutrition, health checkups and education. The School Health Program addresses students' physical and mental health through screening, immunization, and health promotion. Nutritional programs target anemia, vitamin A deficiency, and iodine deficiency.
The document outlines several national health programs in India focused on improving child health. Key programs discussed include:
1. The Reproductive and Child Health Program which aims to reduce infant, child, and maternal mortality rates.
2. The Universal Immunization Program which aims to achieve 100% immunization coverage of various diseases.
3. The Integrated Child Development Services scheme which provides supplementary nutrition, immunization, health checkups and education to children under 6.
4. Several national nutritional programs focused on reducing anemia, iodine deficiency disorders, and providing midday meals.
Philips presentation at the 3rd health sector development partner forumEmmanuel Mosoti Machani
Ivy Syovata from Philips EA Presented at the 3rd HSDPF, sharing health sector development initiatives they have undertaken in the region. Of particular interest to counties present was the Community Life Centre in Mandera that several counties looked to take-up.
The document outlines the agenda for a workshop on healthy aging hosted by Innovate UK, including presentations on lessons learned from the Frome Project and the Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund's healthy aging competition, as well as discussions around what successful innovation clusters might look like and consumer perspectives. There will also be networking opportunities for participants to discuss forming consortia to apply for funding. The overall goal is to bring together stakeholders from different sectors to collaborate on developing innovative solutions to issues around population aging.
Similar to Health for All Presentation by Yayasan Dompet Dhuafa (20)
Health for All Presentation by Yayasan Dompet Dhuafa
1. SOCIAL ENTERPRISE SDGS PLATFORM
HEALTH FOR ALL
YENI PURNAMASARI
Dompet Dhuafa - Indonesia
SUSTAINING PRO-POOR HEALTHCARE
SERVICES IN PANDEMIC ERA: DOMPET
DHUAFA’S EXPERIENCES
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qUniversity of Indonesia
Master in Public Health
Specialization in Healthcare Quality
Assurance
2015
qUniversity of Lambung Mangkurat
Medical doctor
2005
Educational History
dr. Yeni Purnamasari, MKM
South Tangerang,
Indonesia
yeni@dompetdhuafa.org
+62 8 111 989 529
Skills Summary
qHealth Program Empowerment
qLactation Counselor
qBreastfeeding Counselor (WHO)
qMedical Family Doctor
qTuberculosis Practitioner
qProject Management
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Work Experience
Ø General Manager
Dompet Dhuafa Health
Division
2020
Ø Director
Dompet Dhuafa Bureau
of Replication And Free
Healthcare Development
2017-2018
Ø Head of Sub-Recipient
Tuberculosis Elimination in
Indonesia
ü Round 8 * 2011- 2012
ü Singgle Stream Funding *
2014-2015
ü New Funding Model *
2015-2017
Ø Vice Director
Dompet Dhuafa Free
Healthcare
2014-2016
Ø Manager of
Medical Services
Dompet Dhuafa Free
Healthcare
2011-2014
Ø Functional Medicine
Doctor & Head of
Maternal and Children
Healthcare
Dompet Dhuafa Free
Healthcare
2017-2018
Ø Head of Medical
Services
Aulia Women &
Children Hospital
2007 - 2010
Ø Medical Doctor
Public Health Care
(Puskesmas)
2005 - 2006
4.
5. What is poverty?
The Impoverished
(Weak, Poor, Oppressed)
Access to Healthcare
Access to Knowledge & Skills
Access to Economic Resources
Access to Spiritual Values
Productivity
In Pandemic Era, access of
UHC and Essential Healthcare
Services is limited
6. Philanthropreneurship
Poverty Line
Endowment
Investment
Business
Partnership
Zakat
Donation
Gift
Community
Based Health
Programs
(Promotive and
Preventive)
Local
Commodities
and
empowerment
communities
Healthy Food
Production
Garden and
product of
basic need
people
Family with Health
Knowledge
Bridges to Our SEs
Food and Nutrition
Healthy
Communities
Social Enterprises
Business Network &
Market Expansion
Shared Prosperity
Endowment
Fund Based
Companies
(Curative)
Investment
Fund &
Partnership
Profit for the
Poor
Social Enterprises
Philanthropy Programs
7. Opening Access
The Healthcare SE Model
Economic
Empowerment
Social, Education
and Healthcare
Services
Health for All
Advocacy
Works
Economic Growth
Justice
Holistic Wellness Approach
• Healthy Diet
• Personal Immunity
• Physical Workout
• Clean Neighborhoods
Blended Financing for Primary Clinics and Hospitals
• Gov’t Social Security Net
• Philanthropic Funds
• Investments
Local Food and Medicine Production
• Local and Organic Products
• Opening Market
• Providing Working Capital
• Legal Protection for An Alternative
Health System
8. #SEALAsia2020
History of Healthcare Services in DD
Giving donation to
people who need
funds to get
healthcare services
Building the
foundation’s free
clinics
Building the
organization’s
hospitals
9. Area of
Services
Promotive
Preventive
Curative
Health for All
Holistic Wellness
Community
Empowerment
Blended Finance
Philanthropreneur
Intervention
Community Based
Health Station
Economic
Empowerment
Clinics and
Hospitals
Our Healthcare Model
10. #SEALAsia2020
Healthcare Service Delivery
Community
Health
• Preventive
• Promotive
Medical
Services
(Primary
Clinics
and
Hospitals
• Curative
• Rehabilitation
HEALTHY SICK
Health
Wellness
Early
Diagnosis
Health
Health
Intervention
Prompt
Treatment
Secondary
Prevention
Primary
Prevention
Rehabilitation
Disability
Limitation
12. Disaster Relief Health Station Healthcare Network
for Women and
Children
Family
Backyard
Gardening
Healthy Indonesian
Children/
Pediatrics Center
Special Needs Support
Services
Nutrition
Center
Community Based Sanitation
Project
Islamic/Prophetic
Clinics
Boat
Ambulance
OUR CLINICS AND ACTIVITIES
OUR HEALTH EMPOWERMENT NETWORK
14. Griya Medika Hospital,
Tulang Bawang Lampung
AKA Medika Hospital,
Sribawono, Lampung
Qatar Charity Hospital,
Bogor, West Java
Lancang Kuning
Hospital, Pekan Baru
Sayyida Hospital,
Jakarta
Hasyim Asy’ari Hospital,
East Java
Achmad Wardi Eye
Hospital, Banten
RST Hospital,
Bogor, West java
Kartika Hospital,
Jakarta
DOMPET DHUAFA HOSPITAL
NETWORK
16. Sustainability Model for Pro-Poor
Healthcare Services
Healthcare
and
sustainability
program
Government
with UHC
Community
Empowerment
Civil Society
Organizations
Academia and
volunteers
Program
Partnerships
Private
Insurances
Investments
17. Integrated Health Zone
Integrated Zone
focused on SDG’s
issues
Partnerships and
Social Capital
Optimatization
7 Main Health
Indicators
Community Health
Empowerment
Model
Portfolios
Sustainability
Model
18. 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12
DOMPET DHUAFA COVID RESPONSE PROGRAM
Crisis
center
Hotline
Education
health
protocol
Desinfectant
spraying
services
Suport
personal
hygine
Ambulance
services
Provision of personal
protective equipment
for health workers
Social
support for
employees
Hotline
psychosocial
support
Health
volunteer
mobilization
Funeral
services
Desinfection
chamber
Partnership with
the stakeholder
19. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
COVID SERVICE SITRIBUTION MAP IN INDONESIA
20. 8
Rumah Sakit
RESOURCES MOBILIZATION DD
8 Hospital and
2 Container
Hospital
Testing
and
tracing
mobile
volunteer
2 Hotline
Services
30
ambulance
Document of
edutation and
covid
protocol
15 primary
health
services
500 medical
doctor and
health workers
Cooperation
partner
10 volunteer
psychologist
Funeral
ambulance
21. Situation analitis
and mapping the
gap
Focus Group
Discussion with
related
stakeholders
Community
organizing with the
community
structure model
Implementating
program
Monitoring
evaluation
Covid response area based on citizen association or vilage with focus in community resilient program in
monitoring in health status of the people in this area, prevention, managing incident and preventing the wider
impact of the pandemic in the health, social and economic sectors of the people in this area.
COVID RESPONSE AREA DOMPET DHUAFA
Main program :
1. Counseling and education
about covid to adhere health
protocol
2. Surveillance the impact of
covid to health, social and
economis
3. Community food security
program based on family and
group people
4. Support maternal and chield
health program in stunting
elimination
5. Acces of UHC with mobile
health services and protect
the health insurance poor
people
6. Partnership and
coolaboration model to
sustainability program
22. PERSPECTIVE OF VACCINATION COVID
Main Issues :
1. Education and Information
2. Access to all target people
3. Effectiveness and Safety
23. #SEALAsia2020
(Ayurveda Proverb)
“When diet is wrong,
medicine is no use
When diet is correct,
medicine is no need.”
“True treasure is
Health, not gold or
silver”
(Mahatma Ghandi)
24. Thank you!
Dompet Dhuafa
Philanthropy Building
Jl. Warung Jati Barat No.14
Jakarta Selatan 12540, Indonesia
Ph : +62 21 7821292
Fax : +62 21 7821333