5. Study: The healthcare professions of tomorrow
The current global shortage of healthcare professionals and the new challenges and needs in the healthcare sector call for in-depth reflection on the future of the healthcare professions, and more broadly of the professions that contribute to the health of populations. This study, written by Maëlle de Sèze, Stéphanie Tchiombiano and Héloïse Mahé on behalf of the think tank Santé mondiale 2030 and financed by the Agence Française de Développement, emphasizes the need to train more, everywhere and differently. It also argues for the need to decompartmentalize healthcare professions, create new professions, and urgently rethink the organization of career paths.
4. Study: Policy brief on the study“Global Fund and Health Systems Strengthening in West and Central Africa”
Discover the policy brief, a summary of the results of the “Global Fund and Health Systems Strengthening” study and recommendations.
3. Study: Full report on the study “Global Fund and Health Systems Strengthening in West and Central Africa”
2. Study: Synthesis of the results of the “Global Fund and Health Systems Strengthening in West and Central Africa”study
This study, conducted between February and September 2020 by Anne Bekelynck, in support with Agence Française de Développement (AFD), aims to analyze Global Fund support for health systems strengthening in West and Central Africa, more specifically since 2014 when the Global Fund’s new financing model was implemented.
1. Investigation: Representations of French global health influence in Geneva-based international organizations
The aim of this investigation, conducted between April and August 2019, is to capture the perceptions of global health players about France’s influence within the international health organizations present in Geneva. It is not an analysis of France’s actual influence, its ability to convince, put a subject on the agenda or get its points of view adopted, but rather of how this influence is perceived by members of the Geneva “global health” community.