Forum / FORUM
Introducing the Student-Run Global Health Impact Project Blog
Welcome to the first, student-run Global Health Impact (GHI) Project blog. The Global Health Impact Project is an initiative to evaluate and compare medicines’ impact on global health. The GHI Project seeks out a world where people everywhere have access to the necessary lifesaving drugs they need to fight diseases such as tuberculosis, malaria, and HIV/AIDS. The Global Health Impact Index, an index proposed by the GHI Project, opens the door to positive change by considering the impact that essential medicines for the aforementioned diseases are affecting health, on a global scale.
The GHI Project blog is completely organized and orchestrated by students and group members of the GHI Project. Therefore, everything you will read on this blog has been carefully thought of, thoroughly analyzed, and meticulously written by students. The featured blog posts are entirely subjective to the authors’ and their respective viewpoints regarding matters pertinent to global health. Through this blog, you'll be sure to gain access to contrasting and oftentimes controversial views and opinions regarding global health. By straying from the conventional approach to blogging, we hope to engage your attention and interests into the GHI Project and all the great things it’s accomplished, and has, yet to accomplish. Happy blogging!
What Makes this Forum Different?
The Global Health Impact Project forum is student-run. Everything you read on this forum has been carefully thought of, thoroughly analyzed, and meticulously written by members of the GHI project and student researchers involved in the project. Through this forum, you'll gain access to contrasting views and opinions regarding global health, and matters pertaining to it.
About the Global Health Impact Project
The Global Health Impact Project is a collaboration of researchers from universities and civil society organizations from around the world, dedicated to measuring pharmaceutical products' impact on global health to advance acccess to essential medicines.