Health Care and Facilities
Found in 26 Collections and/or Records:
#15011. Evaluation of VN population health program, 2007
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in Vietnam between 1998 and 2011, representing $381.5 million in grants given primarily for libraries, universities and public health transformation. Major program area classifications were Population Health, Higher Education, and Peace and Reconciliation. Atlantic identified key issues as being Population Health, Palliative Care, and Higher Education.
#15011. Evaluation of VN population health program. 2nd file, 1949, 1971, 2006-2007
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in Vietnam between 1998 and 2011, representing $381.5 million in grants given primarily for libraries, universities and public health transformation. Major program area classifications were Population Health, Higher Education, and Peace and Reconciliation. Atlantic identified key issues as being Population Health, Palliative Care, and Higher Education.
#15707. Program evaluation: population health in Vietnam, 1949, 1971, 2003-2009
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in Vietnam between 1998 and 2011, representing $381.5 million in grants given primarily for libraries, universities and public health transformation. Major program area classifications were Population Health, Higher Education, and Peace and Reconciliation. Atlantic identified key issues as being Population Health, Palliative Care, and Higher Education.
#15876. APSAS Charitable Trust Population Trust, 2008-06-04
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in Vietnam between 1998 and 2011, representing $381.5 million in grants given primarily for libraries, universities and public health transformation. Major program area classifications were Population Health, Higher Education, and Peace and Reconciliation. Atlantic identified key issues as being Population Health, Palliative Care, and Higher Education.
#15876. Laboratory needs assessment in Danang City and Khanh Hoa Province. DF/GL/CMC, 1985, 2007
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in Vietnam between 1998 and 2011, representing $381.5 million in grants given primarily for libraries, universities and public health transformation. Major program area classifications were Population Health, Higher Education, and Peace and Reconciliation. Atlantic identified key issues as being Population Health, Palliative Care, and Higher Education.
#17165. Improving the health referral system in KwaZulu-Natal Province, 2010-2013
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in South Africa between 1991 and 2013. $422 million in support was given to this country in order to promote equity, opportunity, dignity, and democracy. Major program area classifications were Reconciliation and Human Rights, Higher Education, and Population Health. Atlantic identified key issues as being LGBT, Delivering on Democracy, Nursing, and Population Health.
#19001. Global consensus conference on social accountability of medical schools, 2010-2011
Dublin office audit file
#20286. National nursing summit, 2008-2012
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in South Africa between 1991 and 2013. $422 million in support was given to this country in order to promote equity, opportunity, dignity, and democracy. Major program area classifications were Reconciliation and Human Rights, Higher Education, and Population Health. Atlantic identified key issues as being LGBT, Delivering on Democracy, Nursing, and Population Health.
#20286. National nursing summit, 2011
Dublin office audit file
#20489. Community-oriented transformation of health professional education and training, 2011
Files for grants The Atlantic Philanthropies made in Vietnam between 1998 and 2011, representing $381.5 million in grants given primarily for libraries, universities and public health transformation. Major program area classifications were Population Health, Higher Education, and Peace and Reconciliation. Atlantic identified key issues as being Population Health, Palliative Care, and Higher Education.