Fact sheet -Updated November 2015
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2016 NEPAL DHS
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2014 CAMBODIA DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEY
FAST FACTS FROM THE PHASE 4 OF THE SENEGAL CONTINUOUS SURVEY MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2016 GHANA MIS
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2015-16 MALAWI MDHS
Do men and women experience different types of security events? Are there differences in the attitudes within humanitarian agencies towards the same type of events affecting men or women? In this paper, using the Security in Numbers Database (SiND), the differences and similarities in men’s and wo...men’s experiences of security events are analyzed to help agencies think about the potential gender implications of security management.
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These forms are intended only for clinicians and nurses taking care of patients with Ebola virus disease. They provide standardized information that needs to be collected by the clinicians at admission time, every day and at time of discharge.
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2015 ZIMBABWE DHS
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2013-14 ZAMBIA DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEY
FAST FACTS FROM THE 2015-16 TANZANIA DHS-MIS
How do security events affecting humanitarian agencies differ between urban and rural environments?
Info-graphic on Fast Facts from the 2014-15 Rwanda Demographic and Health Survey.
Accessed on 31.01.2020
The Senegal Continuous Survey is designed to provide yearly data for monitoring the population and health situation in Senegal through both a Demographic and Health Survey and Service Provision Assessment. The 4th phase of the five-year Continuous Survey was implemented in... 2016.
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Yemen remains the world’s worst humanitarian crisis with staggering levels of humanitarian need. Eighty per cent of the population – 24.1 million people – need some form of humanitarian assistance. Economic decline, restrictions on imports, shortages of foreign exchange and liquidity, and fluc...tuations in the value of the currency continues to put millions of people at risk of famine. Key assessments remain blocked, complicating efforts to adjust programmes based on the latest evidence. This makes it difficult to know with certainty whether there are large pockets of unmet needs across the country.
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Climate change is resulting in poorer health outcomes, increasing mortality and is a driver of health inequities. However, health is well placed to be a significant part of the solution; the positive health impacts from stronger climate change action can motivate stronger global ambition; health sys...tems which are resilient to climate change can help protect their populations from the negative impacts (in the short and longer terms); and sustainable low carbon health systems can make a substantial contribution to reducing national and global emissions.
This fact sheet on climate change and health is part of the Climate Fast Facts series of the United Nations Climate Action team.
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