United Nations
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Subject Areas on Research
- A crucial role for surgery in reaching the UN millennium development goals.
- An overview of advances in global maternal health: From broad to specific improvements.
- Avoiding 40% of the premature deaths in each country, 2010-30: review of national mortality trends to help quantify the UN sustainable development goal for health.
- Change over time in parents' beliefs about and reported use of corporal punishment in eight countries with and without legal bans.
- Child Development in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.
- Children in dark times.
- Fish is food--the FAO's fish price index.
- Informing the 2011 UN Session on Noncommunicable Diseases: applying lessons from the AIDS response.
- Mapping 123 million neonatal, infant and child deaths between 2000 and 2017.
- Measuring progress from 1990 to 2017 and projecting attainment to 2030 of the health-related Sustainable Development Goals for 195 countries and territories: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2017.
- Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): a global policy paradox.
- Millennium Development Goals (MDGs): a global policy paradox.
- Results of efforts by the Convention on Biological Diversity to describe ecologically or biologically significant marine areas.
- Scaling up oral rehydration salts and zinc for the treatment of diarrhoea.
- Success hinges on support for treatment.
- The Rights of Children for Optimal Development and Nurturing Care.
- The children's vaccine initiative...and other promises to keep.
- The politics of assessment: water and sanitation MDGs in the Middle East.
- Trends in relative mortality between Hispanic and non-Hispanic whites initiating dialysis: a retrospective study of the US Renal Data System.
- UN condemns Australian plans for "safe injecting rooms".
- [Revolution for the benefit of the children?].
- [The WHO program for controlling diarrheic diseases: its status and developmental outlook--the organizational and operative components of the program].
- [UNICEF--the vulnerable years].