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Sonja Tanaka

Researcher at Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS

Publications -  8
Citations -  267

Sonja Tanaka is an academic researcher from Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS. The author has contributed to research in topics: Global health & Public health. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications receiving 176 citations.

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Healthy people and healthy profits? Elaborating a conceptual framework for governing the commercial determinants of non-communicable diseases and identifying options for reducing risk exposure

TL;DR: Reforms are identified that will be needed to the global health architecture to govern NCD risks, including to strengthen its ability to consolidate the collective power of diverse stakeholders, its authority to develop and enforce clear measures to address risks, as well as establish monitoring and rights-based accountability systems across all actors to drive measurable, equitable and sustainable progress.
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Global public-private health partnerships: lessons learned from ten years of experience and evaluation.

TL;DR: In a context of an increasingly complex global health landscape, resource scarcity and a shift from disease-specific to systems strengthening approaches, it is important to continually enhance and apply our understanding of how to improve GHP performance as mentioned in this paper.
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The bit in the middle: a synthesis of global health literature on policy formulation and adoption

TL;DR: A narrative synthesis of 28 articles on health policy in low- and middle-income countries provides insight on what kinds of activities take place in these phases, the actors crafting policies and the institutions in which policy making occurs.
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The gender and geography of publishing: a review of sex/gender reporting and author representation in leading general medical and global health journals.

TL;DR: In this article, a review of medical and global health journals' sex/gender reporting, and the gender and geography of authorship, was conducted using a retrospective survey design, with descriptive statistics and regression analyses calculated from the coded data.