Meeting the information needs of health workers in developing countries
BMJ 1997; 314 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.314.7074.90 (Published 11 January 1997) Cite this as: BMJ 1997;314:90A new programme to coordinate and advise
- Neil Pakenham-Walsh, Programme manager, INASP-Healtha,
- Carol Priestley, Directora,
- Richard Smith, Editorb
- a The International Network for the Availability of Scientific Publications, PO Box 2564, London W5 1ZD
- b BMJ, London WC1H 9JR
Health workers in the developing world are starved of the information that is the lifeblood of effective health care.1 2 As a direct result, their patients suffer and die. In the words of the late James Grant, former executive director of Unicef, “The most urgent task before us is to get medical and health knowledge to those most in need of that knowledge. Of the approximately 50 million people who were dying each year in the late 1980s, fully two thirds could have been saved through the application of that knowledge.”2
Providing access to reliable health information for health workers in developing countries is potentially the single most cost effective and achievable strategy for sustainable improvement in health care. Cost effective because the …
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