Eran Bendavid
Assistant Professor
Medicine
Stanford University
United States of America
Biography
My work broadly investigates the drivers of population health improvements in developing countries. I study how economic, political, and natural environments affect population health. I use a mix of experimental, econometric, qualitative, modeling, and demographic tools to produce insights and strategies for improving health. A sample of current projects address the following questions: •What role does US foreign aid play in reducing mortality and improving equity in developing countries? •What forms of engagement in health improvements - social marketing, public health interventions, or community empowerment, for example - work, and which do not? •What effect do malaria control programs have on child mortality? •What combination of prevention strategies are most cost-effective for Africa’s HIV epidemic? •What is the evidence that foreign aid for health is good diplomacy? •Which populations are most vulnerable to the effects of climate conditions on the availability of food?
Research Interest
Infectious Disease
Publications
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Bendavid E (2014) Changes in Child Mortality Over Time Across the Wealth Gradient in Less-Developed Countries PEDIATRICS 134: E1551-E1559
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Bendavid E, Duong A, Sagan C, Raikes G (2015) Health Aid Is Allocated Efficiently, But Not Optimally: Insights From A Review Of Cost-Effectiveness Studies. Health affairs 34: 1188-1195
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Burke M, Heft-Neal S, Bendavid E (2016) Sources of variation in under-5 mortality across sub-Saharan Africa: a spatial analysis. The Lancet. Global health