Overview
Global health action refers to coordinated efforts, policies, and interventions designed to improve health outcomes and reduce health disparities across populations worldwide. Research published in the International Journal of Global Health examines diverse dimensions of this field, including comparative analyses of national dietary education programs that inform nutritional policy development, investigations into how infectious disease pressures such as malaria contribute to the emergence and geographic spread of antimicrobial resistance, and empirical assessments of how public financing mechanisms, economic development, and governance quality influence immunization coverage in resource-limited settings. These studies address critical questions about what drives health system performance, how educational interventions can be optimized across different cultural contexts, and the complex interplay between disease control efforts and unintended consequences like resistance patterns. The topic matters because effective global health action requires evidence-based understanding of both direct health interventions and the broader economic, political, and social determinants that shape population health outcomes, particularly in regions facing substantial disease burden and health system constraints.
Research published in this journal
3 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Malaria: A Driving Force to the Emergence and the Global Spread of Antibiotics Resistance
The Impact of Public Financing, Economic Growth, and Corruption on Immunization Performance: Evidence from 37 Sub-Saharan African Countries
How this research is being cited
The 3 articles above have been cited 3 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
-
2026 · BMC Public Health
-
2025 · Pharmaceuticals
-
2025 · Pharmaceuticals
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Global Health Action, linking to each citing work.