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Community intervention trials
Social audit of public services
Impact evaluation
Knowledge synthesis
CIETmap
Countries
Bangladesh
Canada
Mexico
Nepal
Nicaragua
Pakistan
South Africa
Southern Africa
United States of America
Themes
Capacity building
Projects
Canada: Anisnabe Kekendazone - Network Environment for Aboriginal Health Research (AK-NEAHR) [formerly ACADRE]
Canada: Cigarette use among Native Canadian youth in Winnipeg, Manitoba, 1995
Canada: First Nations Youth Inquiry into Tobacco Use, 1996
Canada: Local Public Health Infrastructure Development (LoPHID), 1998-2000
Canada: Problems of Urban Aboriginal Youth, 1996
Pakistan: Skills training in evidence-based planning, 2005
Pakistan: Social audit focus district scheme, 2004-2009
Southern Africa: A decision tool for the SADC countries on HIV/AIDS prevention
Southern Africa: building capacity for AIDS prevention trials
United States: Support to commuity organizations in North Brooklyn, 1998-99
United States: The CIET-El Puente Partnership, 1995-2003
Related Documents
Mexico
  
The Centro de Investigación de Enfermedades Tropicales (CIET) at the Autonomous University of Guerrero in Acapulco, Guerrero, was founded in 1985 and has trained over 600 planners and researchers from 58 countries, and many more Mexican health workers and officials, through an array of courses. Training usually involves extensive field work in urban and rural communities, from the sprawling barrios of Acapulco to remote indigenous villages in the mountains.
  
Over the years, CIET has worked in the Costa Chica region of Guerrero in close partnership with indigenous people who are among the most disadvantaged rural populations in Mexico. We have helped these communities carry out
Amuzgo women gather to talk with community health promoters
in Xochistlahuaca, Mexico, where CIET has been working with
Aboriginal rural populations since 1986
action-oriented research and planning on critical health issues such as child diarrhoea, parasites, scorpion sting and safe motherhood.
 
In Xochistlahuaca, a remote municipality with majority Amuzgo population we have trained and supported indigenous health promoters who have become a valuable and respected community health resource for the region. We are currently working with them to improve maternal and perinatal health without destroying traditional childbirth-related roles and culture.
  
We have conducted numerous studies in Guerrero throughout the years, including: