This article caught my eye because we don't hear a lot about Eastern Europe and former Soviet countries in current global health news. I was also intrigued by the finding that a money lending program was associated with an increase in TB. Not knowing much about the IMF or structural adjustment programs, I Googled the history of the IMF and found that the UC Atlas of Global Poverty has a nice synopsis here.The article's authors point out that although people have observed negative impacts of IMF programs on health, no outcomes have been quantified until now. I'm sure we'll discuss whether they stepped up successfully! Megan Murray & Gary King have their own Perspective in which, in addition to critiquing the study, they also nicely summarize the history and function of the IMF:
"Founded in the wake of the Great Depression of the 1930s, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was established in 1945 when government representatives met and agreed on a “framework of international economic cooperation” (http:
Additional relevant links:
- What is DOTS? - WHO
- Ecological fallacy - Wikipedia
- Fixed vs. random effect model - UCSD (Word doc; has Stata examples)
- Epidemiology for the Uninitiated - BMJ ("Quantifying Disease" chapter reviews definitions of incidence, prevalence, etc)
