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It is accessible with clear language, skills oriented, with practical examples combining public health, service delivery and the health systems building blocks - on which quality prevention and care depends.
List of contents
- 1: Public Health and the burden of disease by John Walley
- 2: Public health interventions by John Walley
- 3: Epidemiology in practice by John Wright
- 4: Assessing health needs by John Wright
- 5: Choosing the best Public Health interventions by John Walley
- 6: Health Economics by Sophie Witter
- 7: Leadership, governance and policy by Ian Smith
- 8: Health financing by Sophie Witter
- 9: Health workforce by Silvia Tilford and John Walley
- 10: Managing medicines by Kathy Holloway
- 11: Health promotion by Silvia Tilford, Rebecca King and John Hubley
- 12: Ensuring quality, safety and better practice by Ian Smith
- 13: Developing a district health system by John Walley
- 14: Planning and managing interventions by Silvia Tilford and John Walley
- 15: Non-communicable diseases by John Walley and Andy Snell
- 16: Maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health by John Walley and Laura French
- 17: Communicable disease control principles by Laura French, Martin Schweiger and John Walley
- 18: Controlling major communicable diseases by John Walley and Roger Webber
About the author
John Walley lived and worked in Africa and Asia, with international agencies and ministries of health: in Vietnam with Swedish aid; in Switzerland, Malawi and Uganda with the World Health Organisation; in Ethiopia at a regional health office, and in Zimbabwe as a provincial medical officer of health. I've been responsible for maternal and child health, TB and HIV and non-communicable diseases, while strengthening systems and service delivery. Since 1993, I've been a Clinical Professor in International Public Health at the Nuffield Centre for Health, LIHS, Medical School, Leeds, UK, including leading the £20 million COMDIS health service delivery research programme in 7 African and Asian countries over 12 years - leading to policy change and national scale improvement in the quality of health services.
John Wright is a doctor and epidemiologist with a background in hospital medicine and public health in the UK and in southern Africa. He established and leads the Bradford Institute for Health Research
and Wolfson Centre for Applied Health Research, working to speed-up the translation of medical research into practice and policy. He is Visiting Professor in Clinical Epidemiology at the Universities of York, Leeds and Bradford and has authored of over 500 papers and three textbooks and been awarded over £150 million in research award funding, £50 million as chief investigator.
Ian Smith was senior advisor to the World Health Organization Director-General, Dr Tedros Ghebreyesus, having served as Executive Director and Advisor to the two previous Director-Generals, Dr Margaret Chan and Dr Lee Jong-wook. Prior to joining WHO, Ian and his wife worked in Nepal for 16 years as medical missionaries, in a remote rural hospital, community health project, district TB control project, and the National Tuberculosis Programme. Ian qualified from Leeds Medical School, holds a Masters of Public Health (with distinction), was elected a Fellow of the Faculty of Public Health, and is an honorary assistant professor at the School of Public Health of the University of Hong Kong.