Resource Center
Resource Center
See the video here. Diarrhea is the second leading killer of children worldwide, responsible for over 600,000 deaths each year. India bears a quarter of the global burden: nearly 400 children die of diarrhea each day. A highly effective treatment—zinc and oral rehydration salts (ORS)—is affordable and available, but too few children are receiving the...
Read moreView the Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. and Subsidiaries’ Consolidated Financial Statements for 2015.
Read moreLast World Hepatitis Day, we announced that CHAI, with the support of DFID, was launching its program in viral hepatitis to address the massive burdens of hepatitis B and C. Over this first year, we have seen tremendous progress in the global response to viral hepatitis. We have seen the release of new WHO treatment...
Read moreIn Kanchin State, a remote part of northern Myanmar, 24 year-old U Dee Se has used heroin since the age of 18. Like many other people who inject drugs (PWIDs) in the area, throughout his drug use, he shared needles with friends, but was unconcerned about potentially contracting HIV. “My body was asking for the...
Read moreIncreasing access to accurate, validated diagnostics in the private sector is key to reducing India’s high tuberculosis burden. CHAI facilitated a partnership between private sector laboratories and manufacturers to support adoption of a low-price, high-volume model that improves access to quality diagnostics and strengthens linkages in India’s healthcare system. Learn more by reading the case...
Read moreMay 17, 2016 – The Clinton Health Access Initiative, Inc. (CHAI) today announced agreements with GPC Medical Limited and Shanghai Jolly Medical Education Co., Ltd. that will reduce the price of the neonatal bag and mask resuscitator and the neonatal resuscitation training mannequin by 30-61 percent. These deals are expected to expand access to...
Read moreThe Kingdom of Swaziland’s National Malaria Control Program (NMCP) is pursuing the ambitious goal of malaria elimination, which is defined as zero local malaria cases (originating within Swaziland’s borders). If realized, Swaziland would be the first country in sub-Saharan Africa to achieve this public health milestone. Swaziland is close: during the July 2014-June 2015 malaria...
Read moreOn April 1, 2016, Mrs. Lovina Ogolo arrives at Foursees Primary Health Care Center in Rivers State, Nigeria with her six-week old grandson, David Ogolo, to receive his vaccinations. She shows up early at the clinic with other caregivers. Some were referred by friends or health workers, while others heard a radio advertisement that a...
Read moreEnormous progress has recently been made in the global fight against malaria, with over a billion malaria illnesses and six million malaria deaths averted over the past 15 years. Aiming to build upon this success, the World Health Organization has set ambitious targets of reducing malaria mortality and case incidence by an additional 40% by...
Read moreIn September 2015, a group of family doctors and primary care clinic staff gathered in the southern Ukranian city of Kriviy Rih to attend a provider support group-sponsored training on integrated HIV care for injection drug users at the Center of Excellence Psychiatric Dispensary. Here in Kriviy Rih, a city with an injection drug user...
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