- All
- Adolescent
- Children
- Community
- Community Health Workers (CHWs)
- COVID-19
- Curriculum design
- Gender
- Governance
- Health Information Systems (HIS)
- Health Policy and Systems Research (HPSR)
- Health Professions Education
- Health Promotion
- Higher Education
- HIV
- Human Resources for Health (HRH)
- Maternal and Child Health (MCH)
- Mental Health
- Multi-sectoral
- Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs
- Nutrition
- Pharmaceutical Public Health
- Rural
- Sexual and Reproductive Health
- Urban Health
- Violence
- The African Regional Community of Practice (CoP) for Gender and Health in Africa was formed to facilitate a space in which the African community can engage in greater discussions and share ideas on matters of Gender and Health, especially after the Covid-19 global pandemic. It aims to advance African initiatives that facilitate regional understanding, collaboration, and policy-relevant knowledge production and practice on gender and health.
- The overall aim of the project (February 2022-May 2025) is to foster a strengthened community of researchers and policymakers informed, connected and empowered to use gender-transformative frameworks and methods in their research and practice.
- The School of Public Health (SOPH) has held a series of a sub-grants from UNICEF USA to support the health policy and systems-related work of the Countdown to 2030 programme, for the period 2017 to 2025.
- The study is being undertaken in selected health facilities in Mpumalanga and the Western Cape.
- The study seeks to better understand the context of respectful maternal care and the barriers to quality of care throughout the continuum of maternal health care in South Africa.
- An evaluation of process and contextual factors in the implementation of the National Department of Health-led Mphatlalatsane quality improvement initiative in three provinces of South Africa
- The School of Public Health, with its South African partners, are exploring how child health and wellbeing indicators can drive change through multisectoral policy processes in the Western Cape, South Africa.