Population Council Research that makes a difference

Achieving success with a multi-disciplinary approach

The Population Council is an international, nonprofit, nongovernmental organization that conducts research worldwide to improve policies, programs, and products in three areas: HIV and AIDS; poverty, gender, and youth; and reproductive health.

Approaching problems from multiple disciplines affords us fresh insights about how to address the most pressing issues. The diagram below shows the topics addressed by each of our programs.

    RH Family planning services
  PGY RH Female genital mutilation/cutting
  PGY Financial literacy/livelihoods
HIV HIV biomedical research
HIV   RH HIV care, support, and treatment
HIV PGY   HIV and children
HIV PGY RH HIV prevention
HIV     Microbicides
HIV PGY RH Integrating health services
HIV PGY RH Maternal and newborn health
    RH New and improved reproductive technologies
  PGY   Population policy and demographic analysis
    RH Reproductive health biomedical research
HIV   RH RTIs/STIs
HIV PGY RH Sexual and gender-based violence
  PGY   Social isolation/support
HIV PGY RH Strengthening health systems
  PGY RH Urbanization, health, and the environment
HIV PGY RH Vulnerable populations
HIV PGY   Youth/transitions to adulthood

 

 

What's New

Schooling and Conflict in Darfur: A Snapshot of Basic Education Services for Displaced Children. The Population Council, in collaboration with the Women’s Refugee Commission, conducted a survey of basic educational services and facilities in North and West Darfur in 2008. Read about their findings in this report, forthcoming in March. To order a copy, contact publications@popcouncil.org

BMJ has announced the nominees for its prestigious annual award for "Getting Research into Practice." The Sexual Health and HIV Evidence into Practice (SHHEP) group—to which ABBA, a Population Council–led consortium, belongs—was nominated for successfully "advocating research findings to change the law in Ghana so that survivors of gender based and sexual violence are no longer forced to pay for their own medical tests to prove assault in court." Read more about this on page 6 of the linked PDF. (offsite link)

New statistics project more than five million fewer deaths from AIDS in 2030 than previously estimated. The Population Council's John Bongaarts and co-authors François Pelletier and Patrick Gerland address the cause and implications of the revised estimate in a recent article in The Lancet, "How many more AIDS deaths?" (more)

The Population Council applauds the US government’s renewed support and dedication to meeting the health and development goals laid out in the ICPD and other related UN agreements. (more)

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