Mortenson Center — Global Health for Engineers
Title
Title Slide Course Structure Instructor
Part 1 - Overview
Slide 4 Consortium of Universities for Glob... Overview, Key Concepts & Disciplines Disease & Determinants of Health Multi-sectoral Dimension of the Det... Governance & Armed Conflict Climate Change, Disasters & Globali...
Part 2 – Global Burden of Disease
Slide 18 Global health burden visualization Regional disease distribution Health indicators comparison Development and health outcomes Global Burden of Disease Walkthroug... Global Burden of Disease – healthda... 4.9 million children under age five... Child mortality trends Communicable Diseases CD- Modes of transmission Impact of Communicable Diseases Malaria Global malaria prevalence Malaria Control Slide 38 Global HIV Burden HIV/AIDS HIV Co-infections Air Quality and Public Health Water and Public Health Sanitation and Public Health
Part 3 - Examples
Slide 49 Example QMRA (Quantitative Microbia... Adherence to Clean Drinking Water C... Dose-Response
Part 3 – Epidemiology
Slide 54 Engineers, Doctors, Epidemiologists... Epidemiology — Defined Epidemiology Purposes in Public Hea... Epidemiology Key Terms Measurement of Health Status Solving Health Problems Scenario: Unexplained Pneumonia Epidemiology Study Types Confounding Measuring the association between e... Rate Formula Equations Based on 2x2 Table Example OR = Expressing RRs as Percentages When does the odds ratio approximat...
Part 4 – Interventions
Develop strategies for particular g... Surveillance Approaches to Interventions Education Why Do People NOT Change Behavior? Perceived susceptibility-risk of ac... Intervention study design Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)
Part 4 – Interventions
Slide 87
Rwanda Case Study
Tubeho Neza Programme Key Results Technology & Monitoring Published Research
GBD Lab Assignment
Lab Overview

Global Health for Engineers

Mortenson Center in Global Engineering

University of Colorado Boulder

1

Course Structure

An introduction to the professional field of Global Health, particularly focused on the areas of global health that engineers often contribute to – i.e. community environmental health. In a short course, we won’t have time to touch on things like health systems organization but there are many resources for additional learning.

We will be reading published peer reviewed studies of global health interventions – learning how to search for, read and analyze these kinds of studies is fundamental to being conversant in the field of global health. Many of these papers have engineers as co-authors.

This class is also an opportunity for group and 1:1 discussion. I am happy to meet with each of you individually to discuss career objectives and networking

Class will be heavy on case studies, with student-led facilitation

All readings posted in Canvas. Textbook is self-paced with online Canvas quizzes

See Canvas Syllabus for link to class schedule

3

Evan Thomas

Professor

  • Environmental Engineering Program
  • Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering Dept.
  • Aerospace Engineering Sciences Department

Mortenson Endowed Chair in Global Engineering

Director, Mortenson Center in Global Engineering

University of Colorado Boulder

  • PhD, Aerospace Engineering Sciences, 2009
  • MS, Aerospace Engineering Sciences, 2006
  • BS, Aerospace Engineering Sciences, 2005
  • BS, Broadcast Journalism, 2005

Oregon Health and Science University

MPH, Master in Public Health, 2014

Fletcher School at Tufts University

Global MBA, 2022

NASA Johnson Space Center, Aerospace Engineer, 2004-2010

Portland State University, Assistant/Associate Professor, 2010-2018

Virridy Inc, Founder and CEO, 2012 – Present

Manna Energy Limited / DelAgua Health, Founder, COO, 2007-2016

~80 journal articles, 10 patents, professional work in 16 countries

Slide 3 Slide 3 Slide 3 Slide 3
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Section

Intro to Global Health
Part 1 - Overview

5

Consortium of Universities for Global Health –

“An area for study, research, and practice that places a priority on improving health and achieving equity in health for all people worldwide.

Global health emphasizes transnational health issues, determinants, and solutions; involves many disciplines within and beyond the health sciences and promotes interdisciplinary collaboration; and is a synthesis of population-based prevention with individual-level clinical care.”

What is Global Health?

6

Overview, Key Concepts & Disciplines

Overview

Define the determinants, including social and economic, that impact health.

Highlight the differences in disease and life expectancy between high- and low-income countries.

Identify some of the dynamics in developing countries that impact health trends.

Key Concepts in Global Health

The determinants of health

The measurement of health status

The importance of culture to health

The global burden of disease

The key risk factors for various health problems

The organisation and function of health systems

Disciplines Involved in Global Health

Public Health

Public Policy

Medicine

Social Sciences

Behavioural Sciences

Law

Economics

History

Engineering

Biomedical Sciences

Environmental Sciences

Anthropology

7

Disease & Determinants of Health

Examples of disease that disproportionately impact developing countries

Malaria

Diarrhea

Pneumonia

HIV / Aids

99% of the children under the age of 5 who die every year lived in developing countries.

Determinants of Health

Genetics

Age

Gender

Lifestyle choices

Community influences

Income status

Geographical location

Urbanization

Climate Change

Governance

Culture

Environmental factors

Work conditions

Education

Access to health services

Source: Dahlgren G. and Whitehead M. 1991

8

Multi-sectoral Dimension of the Determinants of Health

Malnutrition –

  • more susceptible to disease and less likely to recover

Cooking with wood and coal –

  • lung diseases

Poor sanitation –

  • more intestinal infections

Poor life circumstances –

  • commercial sex work and STIs, HIV/AIDS

Advertising tobacco and alcohol –

  • addiction and related diseases

Rapid growth in vehicular traffic often with untrained drivers on unsafe roads-

  • road traffic accidents
9

Governance & Armed Conflict

Governance

Governance has a direct impact on socioeconomic status, health inequalities, and development

Allocation of Resources

Control of policy

Trade agreements

Regional politics

Abuse of power

Education

Image: Lvakurwa, 2009

Armed Conflict

The Results:

Disparities over resources and power

Broken relationship with neighboring countries

Lack of development

Inequality along race/gender lines

Resources diverted from health care to support conflict

Displacement

Health Implications:

Malnutrition

Diarrhea

Respiratory infections

AIDS

Extreme poverty

Negative long-term effects on health

14

Climate Change, Disasters & Globalization

Flooding/Natural Disasters

Indonesia: 2004 Tsunami

Image: DigitalGlobe, 2004

Haiti Earthquake, 2010

Image: Daily Mail, 2010

Globalization

”the way in which nations, businesses, and people are becoming more connected and interdependent through economic integration, communication, cultural diffusion, and travel” (Labonte & Schrecker, 2006, p. 3).

Means: moving goods and services, capital, technology, labor…

Princeton.edu INA, 2003

”Slide
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Section

Intro to Global Health
Part 2 – Global Burden of Disease

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Slide 19

Global health burden visualization

12
Slide 20

Regional disease distribution

13
Slide 23

Health indicators comparison

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Slide 24

Development and health outcomes

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Global Burden of Disease Walkthrough

http://vizhub.healthdata.org/gbd-compare/

http://vizhub.healthdata.org/sdg/

https://ourworldindata.org/burden-of-disease

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Global Burden of Disease – healthdata.org

Slide 27
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4.9 million children under age five died in 2022, 13,000 every day.

99% of children who die under the age of 5 are in low and middle income countries.

Source: UNICEF/WHO, 2023

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Slide 29

Child mortality trends

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Communicable Diseases

Defined as

    • “any condition which is transmitted directly or indirectly to a person from an infected person or animal through the agency of an intermediate animal, host, or vector, or through the inanimate environment”.

Transmission is facilitated by the following (IOM)

  • more frequent human contact due to
    • Increase in the volume and means of transportation (affordable international air travel),
    • globalization (increased trade and contact)
  • Microbial adaptation and change
  • Breakdown of public health capacity at various levels
  • Change in human demographics and behavior
  • Economic development and land use patterns
20

CD- Modes of transmission

Direct

    • Blood-borne or sexual – HIV, Hepatitis B,C
    • Inhalation – Tuberculosis, influenza, anthrax
    • Food-borne – E.coli, Salmonella,
    • Contaminated water- Cholera, rotavirus, Hepatitis A

Indirect

    • Vector-borne- malaria, onchocerciasis, trypanosomiasis
    • Formites

Zoonotic diseases – animal handling and feeding practices (Mad cow disease, Avian Influenza)

21

Impact of Communicable Diseases

Disease Burden

CDs account for about 30% of the global BoD and 60% of the BoD in Africa.

CDs typically affect LIC and MICs disproportionately.

    • Account for 40% of the disease burden in low and middle income countries

Most communicable diseases are preventable or treatable.

Social Impact

Disruption of family and social networks

  • Child-headed households, social exclusion

Widespread stigma and discrimination

  • TB, HIV/AIDS, Leprosy
  • Discrimination in employment, schools, migration policies

Orphans and vulnerable children

  • Loss of primary care givers
  • Susceptibility to exploitation and trafficking

Interventions such as quarantine measures may aggravate the social disruption

Economic Impact

At the macro level

  • Reduction in revenue for the country (e.g. tourism)
    • Drop in international travel to affected countries by 50-70%
    • Malaria causes an average loss of 1.3% annual GDP in countries with intense transmission

At the household level

  • Poorer households are disproportionately affected
  • Substantial loss in productivity and income for the infirmed and caregiver
  • Catastrophic costs of treating illness
22

Malaria

In 2022, there were an estimated 249 million malaria cases worldwide

    • causes 30% of Low birth weight in newborns Globally.

In 2022, malaria killed an estimated 608,000 people. Malaria kills a child under 5 approximately every minute

40% of the world’s population is at risk of malaria. Most cases and deaths occur in SSA.

Malaria is the 9th leading cause of death in LICs and MICs

    • 11% of childhood deaths worldwide attributable to malaria
    • SSA children account for 82% of malaria deaths worldwide

Source: WHO World Malaria Report 2023

23

Global malaria prevalence

Slide 36
24

Malaria Control

Malaria control

  • Early diagnosis and prompt treatment to cure patients and reduce parasite reservoir
  • Vector control:
    • Indoor residual spraying
    • Long lasting insecticide treated bed nets
  • Intermittent preventive treatment of pregnant women

Challenges in malaria control

  • Widespread resistance to conventional anti-malaria drugs
  • Malaria and HIV
  • Health Systems Constraints
    • Access to services
    • Coverage of prevention interventions
25
Slide 38
26

Global HIV Burden

Slide 39
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HIV/AIDS

In 2023, 39.9 million people worldwide were living with HIV, of which 67% live in SSA

  • 4.1 million people worldwide became newly infected
  • 2.8 million people lost their lives to AIDS

New infections occur predominantly among the 15-24 age group.

First identified in the early 1980s. Has affected over 85 million people since the start of the epidemic.

Source: UNAIDS Global AIDS Update 2023

28

HIV Co-infections

Impact of TB on HIV

  • TB considerably shortens the survival of people with HIV/AIDS.
  • TB kills up to half of all AIDS patients worldwide.
  • TB bacteria accelerate the progress of AIDS infection in the patient

HIV and Malaria

  • Diseases of poverty
  • HIV infected adults are at risk of developing severe malaria
  • Acute malaria episodes temporarily increase HIV viral load
  • Adults with low CD4 count more susceptible to treatment failure
29

Air Quality and Public Health

Slide 44
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Water and Public Health

“No other single intervention in the history of medicine has saved as many lives and reduced as much suffering as the provisioning of uncontaminated water,” - Paul Edward

One billion people in the world lack access to clean drinking water

  • A leading cause of death worldwide
  • An estimated 1.4 million people die each year from inadequate water, sanitation and hygiene

Source: WHO, 2023

Slide 46
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Sanitation and Public Health

Minimum Standards

  • Safe disposal excreta and sullage (greywater)
    • Avoid disposal within 15 meters of any water source
  • Provision of drainage
  • Disposal of waste
  • Control of insect and rodents
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Section

Intro to Global Health
Part 3 - Examples

33

Example QMRA (Quantitative Microbial Risk Assessment) dose-response curves for three pathogens

Slide 51
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Adherence to Clean Drinking Water Consumption

Slide 52
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Dose-Response

https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/doi/10.1289/ehp.1206429

Slide 53
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Section

Intro to Global Health
Part 3 – Epidemiology

37

Engineers, Doctors, Epidemiologists, Public Policy Makers and People

38

Epidemiology — Defined

Adapted from: Last JM, ed. A dictionary of epidemiology. 2nd ed. Toronto, Canada: Oxford University Press; 1988.

Study of the distribution and determinants of health-related states among specified populations and the application of that study to the control of health problems

Slide 57
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Epidemiology Purposes in Public Health Practice

Discover the agent, host, and environmental factors that affect health

Determine the relative importance of causes of illness, disability, and death

Identify those segments of the population that have the greatest risk from specific causes of ill health

Evaluate the effectiveness of health programs and services in improving population health

40

Epidemiology Key Terms

epidemic or outbreak: disease occurrence among a population that is in excess of what is expected in a given time and place.

cluster: group of cases in a specific time and place that might be more than expected.

endemic: disease or condition present among a population at all times.

pandemic: a disease or condition that spreads across regions.

rate: number of cases occurring during a specific period; always dependent on the size of the population during that period.

41

Measurement of Health Status

Cause of death

  • Obtained from death certification but limited because of incomplete coverage

Life expectancy at birth

  • The average number of years a new-borns baby could expect to live if current trends in mortality were to continue for the rest of the new-born's life

Maternal mortality rate

  • The number of women who die as a result of childbirth and pregnancy related complications per 100,000 live births in a given year

Infant mortality rate

  • The number of deaths in infants under 1 year per 1,000 live births for a given year

Neonatal mortality rate

  • The number of deaths among infants under 28 days in a given year per 1,000 live births in that year

Child mortality rate

  • The probability that a new-born will die before reaching the age of five years, expressed as a number per 1,000 live births
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Solving Health Problems

Step 1

Data

collection

Action

Solving health problems

Assessment

Hypothesis

testing

Action

Step 2

Step 3

Step 4

Step 1 -

Surveillance; determine time, place, and person

Inference

Determine how and why

Intervention

Step 1 -

Step 2

Step 3

Step 4

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Scenario: Unexplained Pneumonia

July 21–24

July 26–Aug 1

August 2

(Morning)

August 2

(Evening)

American Legion Convention,

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

18 deaths reported among conventioneers

Health care provider at a veterans’ hospital in Philadelphia calls CDC to report cases of severe respiratory illness among attendees of the American Legion Convention

71 additional cases reported

Fraser DW, Tsai, T, Orenstein W, et al. Legionnaires’ disease: description of an epidemic of pneumonia. New Engl J Med 1977;297:1189–97.

44

Epidemiology Study Types

Epidemiology study

types

Experimental

Observational

Descriptive

Analytic

45

Confounding

Occurs when an extrinsic factor is associated with a disease outcome and, independent of that association, is also associated with the exposure

Exposure Outcome

Confounder

46

Measuring the association between exposure and outcome variables

The appropriate measure of association to use depends on the nature of the data

When exposure and outcome variables are dichotomous (two-level nominal data)

  • Odds ratio – use with case-control study (observational)
  • Risk ratio – use with cohort study (controlled)
  • Rate ratio – use with cohort study (controlled)

“Risk” refers to the probability of occurrence of an event or outcome.

“Odds” refers to the probability of occurrence of an event/probability of the event not occurring.

47

Rate Formula

the number of cases of the illness or condition

the size of the population at risk

the period during which we are calculating the rate

To calculate a rate, we first need to determine the frequency of disease, which includes

Slide 67
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Equations Based on 2x2 Table

Slide 68
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Example

OR =

Slide 69
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OR =

OR =

Smokers

Non-smokers

Example

Slide 70
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Expressing RRs as Percentages

We can also express these RRs as percent change

  • RR > 1 % Increase Change = (RR – 1) × 100
  • RR < 1 % Decrease Change = (1 – RR) × 100
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When does the odds ratio approximate the risk ratio?

For health-related states or events that are rare (i.e., affecting less than 10% of the population), a + b can be approximated by b, and c + d can be approximated by d

53

Develop strategies for particular groups to engage in change toward health

Provide a support system to initiate change and sustain positive behaviors

Goal of intervention

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Surveillance

Risk Factor Identification

Intervention

Evaluation

Implementation

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A Public Health Approach

Slide 76 Slide 76 Slide 76 Slide 76 Slide 76
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Approaches to Interventions

Personal responsibility and action

Utilitarian Approaches – “Greatest good for the greatest number”

  • Including non Health Systems Interventions.

Regulations and Laws

Partnerships and Collaboration

Enlightened Self Interest

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Education

Develop favorable attitudes towards the behavior

Training (i.e. Community health workers)

Participatory engagement

Provide sustainable access

Utilizing underlying skills of the local people

Supportive Environment

  • Utilizing families, local organizations, community leaders, policy makers

How?

57

Why Do People NOT Change Behavior?

Do they understand the message?

Do they see themselves as vulnerable?

Do they trust the ones who present the message?

Do they think the benefits of change are worth the long-term benefits?

Is it too costly?

Does change contradict with their religious beliefs?

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Perceived susceptibility-risk of acquiring the disease

Perceived severity-perception on the risk of acquiring the disease

Perceived benefits-is it worth the change?

Perceived barriers-obstacles to achieving health change

Cue to action-what will trigger this change?

Self-efficacy-how confident is the person to successfully perform a behavioral change?

Health Belief Model

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Slide 85

Intervention study design

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Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)

Slide 86
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Section

Intro to Global Health
Part 4 – Interventions

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Case Study

Rwanda Tubeho Neza
Water Filter & Cookstove Programme

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Programme Overview

The Tubeho Neza ("Live Well") programme was one of the world's first carbon-credit-financed health interventions, distributing water filters and improved cookstoves across Western Province, Rwanda.

  • First-ever UN CDM and Gold Standard programmes earning carbon credits for water treatment
  • Carbon credit revenue funded distribution, training, and ongoing monitoring
  • Implemented through Rwanda's existing Community-Based Environmental Health Promotion Programme (CBEHPP)
  • Community health workers (CHWs) served as the primary delivery and behavior change channel
  • Cluster-randomized controlled trial design to rigorously evaluate health impacts

Evan A. Thomas, PhD, PE, MPH — Director, Professor, University of Colorado Boulder

Rwanda programme
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Field Context

Field context 1 Field context 2 Field context 3 Field context 4
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Regional Context — DR Congo

DR Congo context
66

Programme Implementation

Implementation 1 Implementation 2 Implementation 3 Implementation 4
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Monitoring & Data Collection

Monitoring Data collection
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Key Results

29%
Reduction in diarrhea
92%
Increase in clean water access
90
Averted childhood deaths/yr
7,500
Averted DALYs annually
  • 73% reduction in indoor air pollution among outdoor cooks
  • 38% reduction in cryptosporidium exposure seroconversion
  • 97.5% reduction in fecal contamination of drinking water (RCT finding)
  • 48% reduction in cooking area air pollution
  • 25% reduction in acute respiratory infections in children under 5
  • Over 90% adoption rate maintained through CHW-delivered behavior change
Results chart 1 Results chart 2 Results chart 3

Sources: Thomas et al., Lancet Planetary Health (2018); Kirby et al., PLOS ONE (2014)

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Technology & Digital Monitoring

Water Filters

  • LifeStraw Family 2.0 household water filters
  • Significant microbiological effectiveness reducing E. coli contamination
  • Free distribution with carbon waiver for credit generation

Remote Sensing Innovation

  • Electronic sensors remotely transmitting usage data
  • Sensor-reported use was substantially lower than self-reported use
  • Demonstrated critical value of objective digital monitoring
  • Published in ACS Environmental Science & Technology

Carbon Credit Model

  • Pay-for-performance model funded by voluntary carbon credits
  • Health, livelihood, and environmental benefits substantially outweighed costs
  • Fuel savings and averted healthcare costs = largest economic gains
Technology Monitoring tech
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Scale & Lessons Learned

Scale 1 Scale 2 Scale 3

Key Lessons

  • Integration with existing community health infrastructure (CBEHPP) improved scalability
  • Geographic accessibility and CHW engagement were key determinants of sustained adoption
  • Objective sensor monitoring revealed gap between self-reported and actual use
  • Carbon credit financing created sustainable revenue for operations and maintenance
  • Combining hardware distribution with behavior change messaging achieved >90% uptake
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Published Research (13 Papers)

TitleJournalLink
Health, livelihood, and environmental impacts of the Tubeho Neza programmeThe Lancet Planetary HealthOpen
Effects of adding household water filters to Rwanda's CBEHPPNature — npj Clean WaterOpen
Assessing Impact of Water Filters and Cookstoves: A Randomised Controlled TrialPLOS ONEOpen
Designing and Piloting a Program to Provide Water Filters and CookstovesPLOS ONEOpen
Cost-benefit analysis of livelihood, environmental and health benefitsScienceDirectOpen
Use, microbiological effectiveness and health impact of a household water filterScienceDirectOpen
Study design of a cluster-randomized controlled trialScienceDirectOpen
Process evaluation and assessment of useBMC Public HealthOpen
Use of Remotely Reporting Electronic SensorsACS Env. Sci. & Tech.Open
Integration of Household Water Filters with Community-Based SanitationMDPI SustainabilityOpen
Geospatial-temporal, demographic, and programmatic adoption characteristicsCogent EngineeringOpen
Assessing use, exposure, and health impacts (Dissertation)Semantic ScholarOpen
Lessons from Rwanda on tackling unsafe drinking water and air pollutionThe ConversationOpen
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Lab Assignment

Global Burden of Disease Lab

Water quality QMRA & air quality cost-effectiveness analysis using R, GBD Compare, and HAPIT.

Open Full Lab Assignment →
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