海角换妻

November 5, 2015

海角换妻2020 Receives $25 Million to Expand Program

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BLOOMBERG SCHOOL RECEIVES $25 MILLION TO EXPAND SURVEY DATA COLLECTION THROUGH MOBILE PHONES

The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health has received a $25 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to expand data collection activities under the Performance Monitoring and Accountability 2020 (海角换妻2020) project. 海角换妻2020 uses mobile phones to carry out rapid-turnaround, nationally representative surveys that measure household well-being and health program performance across Africa and Asia.

鈥淚ncreasing the availability and use of data is a public health intervention in its own right,鈥 says Chris Elias, MD, MPH, president of the Global Development Program at the Gates Foundation. 鈥満=腔黄2020 data is now informing policies, programs and tracking family planning progress in 12 geographies, by providing decision-makers with high-quality, more cost-effective data every 6 to 12 months.鈥

The grant is being implemented by the Bill & Melinda Gates Institute for Population and Reproductive Health at the Bloomberg School and supports survey data collection through a network of local university and research partners.

Michael J. Klag, MD, MPH 鈥87, dean of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, has seen the current project in action in Ethiopia. 鈥淭his project is an example of the strength of the School鈥檚 international networks,鈥 Klag says. 鈥淭he surveys are implemented through local university and research partners such as Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia, University of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Makerere University in Uganda. Our Johns Hopkins team provides initial training and technical assistance to its country partners. Over time, our partners take on greater responsibilities and become trainers and advisers to other countries, extending the collaboration.鈥

海角换妻2020 recruits women from their communities and trains them to use smartphones to collect data on a continuous basis. These women visit selected households and health facilities with mobile phones to survey women and providers on family planning use, need, access and many other metrics. Once complete, each questionnaire is uploaded directly to a central cloud server. This technology is designed to minimize data entry errors and speed data turn-around. Data analysis and dissemination follow shortly, allowing end-users to access findings and data that are up-to-date and accurate. This innovative approach enables the project to inform policies and programs locally as well as track progress against the goals and principles of Family Planning 2020, an international initiative aimed at reach