International collaborations at the Harvard School of Public Health involve 90 countries and include major initiatives in Africa, China, India, and Cyprus, a pivotal gateway to the Middle East, North Africa, and Europe.
Press Releases
- Cyprus commits $8.8 million to HSPH to extend public health partnership
- Lives lost due to delay in antiviral drug use for HIV/AIDS in South Africa
- Smoking and Solid-Fuel-Burning in China Projected to Cause Millions of Deaths in Next Three Decades
Related Links
- HSPH AIDS Initiative
- HSPH China Initiative
- World map of HSPH activity
- Department of Global Health and Population
Related Stories
- Premature deaths due to delay in antiretroviral use in South Africa
- Smog reduces Mexicans' lives by two months
- HSPH expands HIV/AIDS work in Tanzania
- HSPH Senior Lecturer Yuanli Liu on a healthier China
ASIA
China's leaders, HSPH experts unite in reform effort
Keeping 1.3 Billion People Healthy
Obesity in China Portends A Diabetic Disaster
Can brown rice blunt an epidemic?The Lessons of Oral Rehydration Therapy
The co-discoverer of a simple solution to a global killer passes all he has learned to public health's next generation
What's Behind Asia's Gold Rush?
For both China and India, advances in health have helped fuel prosperity
Passages to China and India
In the transitions of these countries toward greater wealth and health, the School is playing a valuable role
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AFRICA
Making Sense of Sexual Violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo
South Africa's Misguided HIVAIDS Policies
Saving Mothers and Infants from HIV
New drug regimen could revolutionize care in the developing worldThe Wily Malaria Parasite
Genetically diverse P. falciparum strains add up to one virulent, drug resistant foeRefugee from the Congo
Mastering languages of public health and biostatistics
Read more stories.
EUROPE and the MIDDLE EAST
Making Smoking History Worldwide
HSPH's push toward a tobacco-free planet
A Geographer of Health
Mapping health risks in Cyprus and Boston
HSPH-Cyprus Initiative
Bringing Public Health Innovation to the Eastern Mediterranean
Review