Why Health Workers Are TIME Magazine’s Person of the Year
The American magazine has named Ebola fighters as their person of the year. They couldn’t have made a better choice.
A Return to Monrovia in the Time of Ebola
Wash hands, take temperature, no touching. It's a day-to-day mantra in Liberia as country leaders forge partnerships to end Ebola.
One Mother's Story of Giving Birth in a Hospital Instead of at Home
Complications during childbirth kill thirteen mothers every day in the Philippines. What will it take to change that?
iHRIS Champions in Ghana Share Success with Using Health Workforce Data
Ghana has fewer than 14 health workers for every 10,000 people. To fix the shortage, the country needs answers—and data.
5 Ways to End the AIDS Epidemic by 2030
We’ve got 15 years to snuff out a virus that has killed 39 million people. These five approaches are going to help us do it.
Ebola Makes the Definitive Case for Health Workers and Strong Health Systems
Ebola has become a grisly but effective champion for health systems strengthening and frontline health workers.
When Health Workers Aren’t Really Health Workers
He’s a powerful spell-caster who can cure HIV with herbs, and more from my email exchange with a quack.
The Right Knowledge Can Stop Ebola from Widening the Gap in HIV Care
Ebola threatens lives in more ways than one. In Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, people living with HIV are feeling the effects.
“I’m a Health Worker”: Dr. Arturo Carrillo
Meet Dr. Arturo Carrillo. He's fighting to end discrimination and stigma in El Salvador's health services.
New Resource Centers Put Critical Information in the Hands of West Bank Health Workers
A new wealth of information could alleviate some costly strains on the West Bank's overloaded health system.