• Such efforts potentially support people in improved outcomes regarding their knowledge of health issues, health communication with professionals, decision-making about health issues, proper use of health services, and improved ways of taking care of themselves. (utwente.nl)
  • In this study, we focus on the general population and take as a point of departure the way people with different health statuses-pertaining to general functioning and well-being-use the internet to obtain positive health outcomes, for example, in determining a medical condition from which one might suffer or making better health-related decisions. (utwente.nl)
  • We attempt to provide an in-depth picture by focusing on different health statuses in relation to stages of internet access and online health outcomes. (utwente.nl)
  • The first goal was to reveal to what extent the process of internet access is important to obtain health outcomes. (utwente.nl)
  • The results furthermore revealed that all 4 access stages directly contribute to obtaining positive health outcomes, suggesting that to make online health care attainable for the general population, interventions should focus simultaneously on all stages. (utwente.nl)
  • The second goal was to reveal to what extent different health statuses among the general population relate to the internet access stages and thus to internet health outcomes. (utwente.nl)
  • The results confirmed that digital inequality research would benefit from considering health as a predictor of internet attitude, material access, internet skills, internet health use, and health outcomes. (utwente.nl)
  • The New Zealand Maternity Clinical Indicators present comparative maternity interventions and outcomes data for pregnant women and their babies, by maternity facility and district health board region. (health.govt.nz)
  • It presents 20 indicators that reflect care during pregnancy and the postnatal period, severe maternal morbidity and outcomes for babies at birth. (health.govt.nz)
  • As the seven previous reports demonstrated, reported maternity service delivery and outcomes for women and babies vary between district health boards (DHBs) and between individual secondary and tertiary facilities. (health.govt.nz)
  • The QI Program requires residential aged care providers to report on crucial areas of care to support quality improvement and improved health outcomes for older Australians. (health.gov.au)
  • Furthermore, the researchers say their findings have implications for the doctors' office, too, arguing that using WHR as a primary measurement of health could lead to better outcomes than BMI alone. (healthline.com)
  • What that means in its simplest form is that every increase in WHR leads to worse health outcomes, no matter your BMI. (healthline.com)
  • In 2015, the World Health Organization launched Mother and Newborn Information for Tracking Outcomes and Results (MoNITOR), a technical advisory group to WHO. (springer.com)
  • Five indicators were related to distal outcomes (mortality, disability, or healthy life expectancy), one to monitoring functional assessments, and one to poverty levels. (paho.org)
  • Indicators should also be responsive to outcomes and link to valued health outcomes for patients and families. (ahrq.gov)
  • Harris D, Aboueissa A, Baugh N, Sarton C. Impact of rurality on maternal and infant health indicators and outcomes in Maine. (rrh.org.au)
  • Population -based CP registries can provide data that are relevant for generating key outcomes of interest at the population level, thus potentially contributing to improving public health policies for children with disabilities . (bvsalud.org)
  • With the NIPA updates, nominal GDP in August 2022 was 9.4% higher than in August 2021 as GDP growth continues to outpace health spending growth. (altarum.org)
  • The health spending share of GDP has declined from a newly estimated recent high of 18.4% of GDP in December 2021, largely because of high economy-wide inflation. (altarum.org)
  • Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2018) Children's Headline Indicators , AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 30 September 2023. (aihw.gov.au)
  • Canberra: Australian Institute of Health and Welfare, 2018 [cited 2023 Sep. (aihw.gov.au)
  • SDG indicators shape maternal health interventions. (kff.org)
  • The Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) agenda and the Global Strategy for Women's, Children's, and Adolescent's Health 2016-2030 aim to reduce maternal and newborn deaths, disability, and enhancement of well-being. (springer.com)
  • WHO leads by coordinating metrics related to maternal and newborn health. (springer.com)
  • MoNITOR held two meetings to review ongoing measurement efforts, map maternal and newborn indicators and data sources, and assess gaps. (springer.com)
  • WHO is also building a simpler, real-time, integrated database for maternal and newborn indicators included in the Global Strategy. (springer.com)
  • In maternal and child health, these disparities may be evidenced by the health risks and behaviors of new mothers, the health of infants born to these mothers, and the care received by both mothers and infants. (rrh.org.au)
  • To determine the impact of rurality on maternal and child health in Maine, USA, 11 years of data (2000-2010) for the state of Maine from the Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) project were analyzed. (rrh.org.au)
  • These results highlight areas where focused pre-pregnancy and prenatal education may improve maternal and child health in rural Maine. (rrh.org.au)
  • Once interventions are put in place to try to improve the health of a population, health indicators can then be used to evaluate the success of the intervention. (wikipedia.org)
  • Differences in health indicators among genders, races, ethnic groups, socioeconomic classes, and other groups can be used to guide policy and interventions that will bring health equity in the future. (wikipedia.org)
  • An occupational health indicator is a specific measure of a work-related disease or injury, or a factor associated with occupational health, such as workplace exposures, hazards, or interventions, in a specified population. (oregon.gov)
  • This report is produced by Iowa Department of Public Health about occupational health indicator is a measure of a work-related disease or injury, or a factor associated with occupational health, such as workplace exposures, hazards, or interventions, in a workforce population. (iowa.gov)
  • In this respect, most attention has focused on, for example, age, racial and ethnic, and socioeconomic differences in access to online health. (utwente.nl)
  • Lower socioeconomic status is generally associated with poorer health, regardless of rurality of residence 6 , and greater distance to primary care has been associated with later diagnosis of serious health conditions in rural Maine, USA 7 . (rrh.org.au)
  • In late February 2016, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared an international state of emergency because of the advance of microcephaly associated with the Zika virus ( 1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • Reference Costs provide indicators of the unit costs of providing a range of hospital and community services at trust and hospital level, based on information derived from electronic hospital activity systems and HSC trust financial and information returns for 2015-2016. (data.gov.uk)
  • This is the eighth report in the New Zealand Maternity Clinical Indicators series, with a focus on women giving birth and babies born in the 2016 calendar year. (health.govt.nz)
  • The SPH Portal provides a comprehensive one-stop platform for partners and donors to identify gaps in a country's health security capacities, assess opportunities to target their financial and technical resources for the maximum public health benefit, and explore mechanisms for collaboration with countries. (who.int)
  • The aim of this indicator is to assess the take-up of Healthy Working Lives Awards by companies. (gov.scot)
  • A quality indicator or quality measure is an agreed-upon process or outcome measure that is used to assess quality of care , 3 specified with a numerator and denominator to indicate the intended population, recommended care, and exclusions. (ahrq.gov)
  • Objective Assess the oral health indicators in the Family Health Units (Unidades de Saúde da Família - USFs) with scheduled demand in comparison with Family Health Units with spontaneous demand in oral health care, in Piracicaba. (bvsalud.org)
  • Data are also necessary to measure the effectiveness of prevention activities and to identify workplace health and safety problems that need further investigation. (cdc.gov)
  • Housing indicators: Measure the housing stock details, status, and changes over the course of land reuse projects. (cdc.gov)
  • Depending on the type of industries and jobs in a state and the availability of data, some states have developed additional indicators to better measure worker health in their state. (oregon.gov)
  • With these findings in mind, the Department of Ecology is now asking scientists what additional data should be collected to identify the cause of marine organisms' decline and better measure the health of Bellingham Bay and Puget Sound. (sciencedaily.com)
  • As the global health community now turns its focus on the Sustainable Development Goals, aid workers in Afghanistan and its least-developed peers are asking whether the best measure of progress is the number of births attended by skilled birth personnel. (kff.org)
  • Our implicit measure of health care utilization returned to positive growth in January, up 3.7% year over year. (altarum.org)
  • The DEXA (DXA) can also measure body composition, such as body fat and muscle mass, allowing for better overall health management. (peacearchnews.com)
  • I had some health goals, and I knew the scale wasn't an accurate measure of my results. (peacearchnews.com)
  • The objective of this article was to provide a consensus-based short list of effective indicators to measure health system responsiveness to the needs of older adults which would be relevant to informing public policy. (paho.org)
  • Annual update of the 'Long-term Monitoring of Health Inequalities' headline indicators. (gov.scot)
  • However, national statistics on occupational injuries and illnesses have been collected primarily outside of the public health infrastructure and rely nearly entirely on data reported by employers. (cdc.gov)
  • State health agencies that have access to various public health data systems are uniquely positioned to 1) provide critical data on occupational diseases, 2) generate information necessary to evaluate the conventional occupational injury data sources, 3) link surveillance findings with intervention efforts, and 4) integrate occupational health into mainstream public health ( 5 ). (cdc.gov)
  • These findings show the necessity of adequately diagnosing and treating suspected cases of Zika virus infection and also that health surveillance systems can be improved by using routine data. (cdc.gov)
  • The distribution of Zika virus in Brazil during 2014 and 2015 is summarized in Figure 1 , according to case reports and epidemiologic data produced by the Federal Ministry of Health and state secretaries of health ( 13 ). (cdc.gov)
  • The indicator must be data which can feasibly be collected in a reasonable amount of time. (wikipedia.org)
  • The analysis of the data must result in a recommendation on which people can make changes to improve health *This is not a comprehensive list of health indicators. (wikipedia.org)
  • The SPH Portal also furnishes stakeholders with documents, data, and resources encompassing critical areas essential for advancing global health security and emergency preparedness. (who.int)
  • Thirteen states then agreed to pilot the generation of data from 2000 for these 19 indicators. (oregon.gov)
  • These data are used in the Forest Indicators Dashboard, available at uvm.edu/femc/indicators/vt, to quantify annual changes in tree canopy density ('greenness') and growing season length. (uvm.edu)
  • Available data: National - State & Territory - Primary Health Network. (aihw.gov.au)
  • This new edition of Health at a Glance presents the most recent comparable data on the performance of health systems in OECD countries. (oecd-ilibrary.org)
  • Users can explore 85 individual indicators-- on our air, water, land, human exposure, health and ecological condition-- using interactive graphs, tables, and maps, and download the data for each indicator. (enn.com)
  • In 2011, an expert working group established a set of 12 maternity clinical indicators that could be measured using the available data collections at that time. (health.govt.nz)
  • Altarum's monthly Health Sector Economic Indicators (HSEI) briefs analyze the most recent data available on health sector spending, prices, employment, and utilization. (altarum.org)
  • The Health Care Price Index (HCPI) increased by 2.8% year over year in September, the same growth rate as slightly revised data from August. (altarum.org)
  • Emerging issues include a lack of consistent definitions for key indicators across varying data collection platforms. (springer.com)
  • Over the next 2 years, MoNITOR will provide recommendations for priority indicators, norms and standards for data collection platforms, a coordinated research agenda, and how to build regional capacity. (springer.com)
  • Ipieca and IOGP collect data on oil and gas health leading performance indicators on an annual basis to support improvements in health management and performance across the sector. (ipieca.org)
  • In order to help advance quality indicator development and implementation in this area, we developed a conceptual framework based on previous related initiatives, updated reviews of end-of-life cancer quality indicators and relevant data sources, and expert input. (ahrq.gov)
  • 1 , 2 Such data requires common usage of quality indicators or quality measures. (ahrq.gov)
  • This data explorer contains indicators from WHO Europe's Health for All family of databases - European Health for All database (HFA), European Mortality Indicator Database (MDB), and European database on human and technical resources for health (HRes). (who.int)
  • Select one or more indicator to visualize data. (who.int)
  • We aimed to propose six PHIs for CP designed to annually document the extent of CP and effectiveness of perinatal organisation, the burden of this condition, access to health services and preventive health strategies in the post-neonatal period and to report on the latest updated estimations using population -based data routinely collected by European CP registries . (bvsalud.org)
  • CSTE recommendations led to the generation of 19 occupational health indicators (OHIs) and one Employment Demographic Profile, which were developed during 2001--2003. (cdc.gov)
  • It specifically addresses the health, economic, educational, demographic, and other conditions related to young people in the sub-region, and highlights essential evidence in the drive towards the region's first demographic dividend and much-vaunted vision of shared prosperity for all its citizens. (aphrc.org)
  • Rural residents may face health challenges related to geographic barriers to care, physician shortages, poverty, lower educational attainment, and other demographic factors. (rrh.org.au)
  • The geographic and demographic realities of rural life may also interact around health-related issues. (rrh.org.au)
  • Demographic and health indicators : presentation and interpretation / Yves Péron and Claude Strohmenger. (who.int)
  • National health spending in August 2022 grew by 4.9%, year over year. (altarum.org)
  • Following the Bureau of Economic Analysis' recent annual update to their National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA), health spending in August 2022 is estimated to account for 17.4% of GDP, the lowest share since June 2015. (altarum.org)
  • Nominal GDP in January 2023 was 7.4% higher than in January 2022, as GDP growth continues to outpace health spending growth. (altarum.org)
  • Wage growth in health care has been declining since mid-2022 and has now fallen slightly below economywide wage growth. (altarum.org)
  • Hospital beds per capita Doctors per capita Nurses per capita Hospital readmission rates Health expenditure as percentage of GDP Percentage of a nation's gross domestic product (GDP) used toward healthcare. (wikipedia.org)
  • This section offers a wealth of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), compelling case studies, insightful outputs, and inspiring outcome and success stories. (who.int)
  • In 2007, the joint Ipieca-IOGP Health Committee published Health performance indicators: a guide for the oil and gas industry . (ipieca.org)
  • In January 2023, national health spending grew by 4.6%, year over year. (altarum.org)
  • Health spending in January 2023 accounted for 17.2% of nominal GDP. (altarum.org)
  • Health care added 44,200 jobs in February 2023, consistent with the 12-month average of 49,100. (altarum.org)
  • Compared with the previous edition, this new edition includes a new set of dashboards of health indicators to summarise in a clear and user-friendly way the relative strengths and weaknesses of OECD countries on different key indicators of health and health system performance, and also a special focus on the pharmaceutical sector. (oecd-ilibrary.org)
  • By using this conceptual framework, indicator developers, researchers, and policymakers can refine and implement indicator sets to effectively evaluate and improve care at the end of life. (ahrq.gov)
  • The OHIs complement other guidelines for state-based occupational health surveillance to address overall state and national goals to improve public health. (cdc.gov)
  • These OHIs are intended to help states build occupational health capacity by providing them with tools to collect and generate important, basic information concerning the occupational health status of the state population and to identify areas in which to focus prevention efforts. (cdc.gov)
  • NIOSH provides funding for the OHIs because they are now a required component of state-based cooperative agreements for occupational health surveillance. (cdc.gov)
  • This report introduces the OHIs and describes CSTE's approach to developing this new occupational health surveillance tool. (cdc.gov)
  • The Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE), in collaboration with the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, developed a set of 19 occupational health indicators (OHIs). (oregon.gov)
  • The National Aged Care Mandatory Quality Indicator Program (QI Program) is expanding in residential and in-home aged care. (health.gov.au)
  • Additionally, health indicators can highlight health disparities in a population. (wikipedia.org)
  • It includes the use of faecal bacteria as an indicator of faecal pollution and water quality, ubiquity of faecal bacteria, and sources and movement of faecal bacteria in the environment. (usgs.gov)
  • Working on the relationship between respiratory health and atmospheric pollution in French cities led us to adopt a perspective that considers the risk for a single city of showing high levels of respiratory health problems. (witpress.com)
  • The aim is to build different synthetic indicators of atmospheric pollution that consider the temporal and spatial diversity within a city, and to compare the different results. (witpress.com)
  • The findings show that the spatial structure of air pollution between the cities remains globally the same whatever the indicator chosen. (witpress.com)
  • In 1998, the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists (CSTE) and CDC's National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) convened a work group that identified priority occupational health conditions to be placed under surveillance, addressed cross-cutting surveillance concerns, and made recommendations regarding the role of states in a comprehensive nationwide surveillance system for work-related disease, injuries, and hazards. (cdc.gov)
  • The criteria for selection as high priority indicators were: usefulness as a tracer of health system responsiveness and usefulness to inform policy. (paho.org)
  • Health systems professionals should consider these comprehensive priority indicators in their efforts to provide a better health system for older people. (paho.org)
  • Owned by the Ministry of Health and licensed for reuse under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence . (health.govt.nz)
  • Home health care utilization (7.5%) and prescription drug utilization (5.3%) increased most last month. (altarum.org)
  • Health indicators are used by many institutions, including international organizations such as the United Nations and World Health Organization (WHO). (wikipedia.org)
  • The World Health Organization (WHO) stresses that public health is an important topic on policy agendas in most Western countries. (utwente.nl)
  • Quality indicators can be classified as pertaining to structure (the environment in which health care is provided), process (the method by which health care is provided), and outcome (the consequences of health care). (ahrq.gov)
  • Results There were significant differences in the indicators of dental emergency, dental extraction per clinical procedure, and dental extractions per inhabitant, and these values were higher in Family Health Units with spontaneous demand. (bvsalud.org)
  • Considerable effort is directed to offering health information and services aimed at the general population online. (utwente.nl)
  • However, when health information and services are moved online, issues of equality need to be considered. (utwente.nl)
  • Digital inequality research typically considers how specific populations can benefit from access to online services and has shown that those most likely to experience health-related issues are also less likely to benefit from the internet in general. (utwente.nl)
  • For example, attitudes might be improved by considering issues of accessibility and usability of online health information and services, material access by offering schemes such as device donation, internet skills by training programs tailored to the needs of people with different health statuses, and online health apps by awareness programs. (utwente.nl)
  • Prices for health care services paid for by private insurance increased by 4.1% in February (up from 3.5% in January), while Medicare prices actually fell slightly last month, down -0.2% year over year. (altarum.org)
  • Among the major health care categories, prices for dental care (6.6%) and nursing home care (5.6%) grew fastest, while physician services (0.6%) and home health care (1.9%) price growth were the slowest. (altarum.org)
  • The perspective adopted by the Indicators is that of citizens accessing services and facing shortcomings. (cmi.no)
  • Dental health services. (bvsalud.org)
  • Health services accessibility. (bvsalud.org)
  • Background Despite its importance, the integration of oral health into primary care is still an emerging practice in the field of health care services. (medscape.com)
  • We sought to identify traces of possible clinical manifestations of nervous system diseases among the registers of hospital admissions recorded in the Brazilian Unified Health System. (cdc.gov)
  • Indicators such as mortality, readmissions and medication prescriptions after hospitalisation provide insight into the quality of integration between hospital and community care. (oecd-ilibrary.org)
  • Identify 'key indicators of financial health' that can be easily tracked, such as margins, sales mix, number of customers, number of days receivables are outstanding and inventory levels. (edwardlowe.org)
  • Implementing quality indicators which are reflective of the scope of care, feasible to implement, and supported by evidence might help to identify areas and settings most in need of improvement. (ahrq.gov)
  • For the study, Paré utilized the UK Biobank, a medical research database containing anonymous health and lifestyle information about its participants. (healthline.com)
  • Indicator 2: Number and percent of waiver participants with a completed and signed freedom of choice form that states that they were offered a choice of waiver service providers. (il.us)
  • Virtual surveys were sent to 141 participants with experience in analysis and monitoring of health indicators, management of health systems, and health care of older adults. (paho.org)
  • These actions can be identified through comprehensive tools such as all-hazards National Action Plans for Health Security (NAPHS), disease-specific plans, contingency plans, and other sources. (who.int)
  • 4 Measuring and improving the quality of cancer end-of-life care requires quality indicators that are reflective of the domains of quality cancer care, feasible to implement, and supported by experts and research evidence. (ahrq.gov)
  • Health indicators are quantifiable characteristics of a population which researchers use as supporting evidence for describing the health of a population. (wikipedia.org)
  • Typically, researchers will use a survey methodology to gather information about a population sample, use statistics in an attempt to generalize the information collected to the entire population, and then use the statistical analysis to make a statement about the health of the population. (wikipedia.org)
  • Health indicators are often used by governments to guide health care policy or to make goals for improving population health. (wikipedia.org)
  • By describing the current health of a population, the areas that need improvement become evident, and policy-makers and health professionals can work to fill these gaps. (wikipedia.org)
  • Internet attitude increases the likelihood of improving material access, the development of internet skills, and internet health use, suggesting that making online health apps attractive for larger segments of the population is an important objective. (utwente.nl)
  • Indicators can be generated by states to track trends in the occupational health status of the working population. (oregon.gov)
  • African Population & Health Research Center. (aphrc.org)
  • Public health surveillance is vital to preventing occupational diseases, injuries, and fatalities ( 4 ). (cdc.gov)
  • State health agencies play a central role in public health surveillance. (cdc.gov)
  • The recent spread of Zika virus across the globe has worried citizens and public health authorities. (cdc.gov)
  • They are also used by smaller-scale community health organizations, hospitals, and other medical and public health organizations such as the Center for Disease Control (CDC), National Institute of Health (NIH), The African Comprehensive HIV/AIDS Partnerships (ACHAP), and Global Alliance for Africa. (wikipedia.org)
  • Several state public health or labor departments generate occupational health indicators. (oregon.gov)
  • Since 2005, the Occupational Public Health Program in the Oregon Public Health Division has calculated occupational health indicators. (oregon.gov)
  • Most state public health or labor departments calculate the 25 occupational health indicators listed below. (oregon.gov)
  • The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released updated environmental and public health indicators in an online database, making information about the current and historical condition of the nation's environment and human health more accessible to the public. (enn.com)
  • Spending on personal health care increased by 6.3%, but that growth was dampened by a decline in federal government support to public health activities. (altarum.org)
  • a Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD. b The Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Portland, OR. (ahrq.gov)
  • PRAMS is a national public health surveillance system that uses questionnaires to survey women who had delivered live infants in the previous 2-4 months. (rrh.org.au)
  • In general, oral health integrated care programs were designed in the public health sector and based on partnerships with various private and public health organizations, governmental bodies and academic institutions. (medscape.com)
  • Public health indicators for cerebral palsy: A European collaborative study of the Surveillance of Cerebral Palsy in Europe network. (bvsalud.org)
  • Public health indicators (PHIs) play an increasingly important role in health policy decision -making. (bvsalud.org)
  • ISO 11138-5:2006 provides specific requirements for test organisms, suspensions, inoculated carriers, biological indicators and test methods intended for use in assessing the performance of sterilization processes employing low-temperature steam and formaldehyde as the sterilizing agent. (iso.org)
  • This indicator is available in the following set of views in the "By topic" section of the Global Health Observatory. (who.int)
  • New research suggests that waist-to-hip ratio could be a simpler, more accurate indicator of weight and general wellness than BMI. (healthline.com)
  • Indicators are developed using up-to-date information from EPA, other federal agencies, state agencies, and non-governmental organizations. (enn.com)
  • The expert working group has continued to review and revise the maternity clinical indicators since this time. (health.govt.nz)
  • In 2004, OSHA posted a statement, Verification of Calibration for Direct-Reading Portable Gas Monitors on its website as a Safety and Health Information Bulletin. (safetyandhealthmagazine.com)
  • The Service Delivery Indicators ("the Indicators") provide a set of metrics for benchmarking service delivery performance in education and health in Africa to track progress across and within countries over time. (cmi.no)
  • These statistics are based on BMI, one of the simplest and most widespread health indicators doctors use today. (healthline.com)
  • Material access, considered in this study as the diversity of the devices used, is highly relevant, as it has significant relationships with internet skills and internet health use. (utwente.nl)
  • Then let everyone in the company know the status of these indicators on a monthly basis. (edwardlowe.org)
  • Childhood characteristics as indicators of adult health status. (cdc.gov)
  • Other neuropathies may be associated with the Zika virus and could have passed unnoticed through health information systems. (cdc.gov)
  • Despite national efforts to facilitate transitions of care and improve interaction between providers, health systems remain fragmented when delivering care. (oecd-ilibrary.org)
  • The process involves a self-assessment of the company's performance in relation to standardized statements about the level of implementation of the company's own health management systems. (ipieca.org)
  • At the current time, Oregon generates the 25 occupational health indicators listed below. (oregon.gov)
  • The Report on the Environment facilitates tracking the state of the nation's environment and human health over time. (enn.com)
  • When comparing the more conventional indicator calculated from mean daily concentrations in urban monitoring sites with an indicator also taking into account the concentrations observed in roadside stations, relative changes appear for more than ten cities. (witpress.com)
  • The Indicators seek to enhance active monitoring of service delivery by policymakers and citizens, as well as to increase accountability and good governance. (cmi.no)
  • The Malaria Monitoring and Evaluation Reference group and UNAIDS Monitoring and Evaluation Reference Group facilitate partner alignment, harmonize indicators, and communicate key measurement issues [ 7 , 8 ]. (springer.com)
  • The study analyzed 140,000 patients aged between 35 and 70 in 17 countries, monitoring their health over 4 years. (zmescience.com)