Skip to content.
|
Skip to navigation
Make a Gift
Search Site
only in current section
Advanced Search…
Navigation
Home
About
Services
CPC History
Contact CPC
Employment Opportunities
Make a Gift
People
Faculty Fellows
Postdoctoral Scholars
Predoctoral Trainees
Contacts for CPC Training Programs, CPC Administrative Services, and CPC Research Services
CPC Director’s Advisory Council
Other CPC Experts
Phone Directory
Research
CPC’s Primary Research Areas
CPC’s Signature Research Approaches
Projects
Data
Publications
Tools & Resources
Training
Population Science Training Program
Biosocial Training Program
PIRE Program in Energy Poverty
2018 Summer Undergraduate Internship Program
Seminars
You are here:
Home
/
News
/
Features
/
Malawi study may lead to new approach to improve health and survival of HIV-positive mothers and their infants
/
maize_varieties.jpg
Info
maize_varieties.jpg
Full-size image:
24.0 KB
|
View
Download
Navigation
News
Features
CPC Fellows Popkin, Ng & Taillie funded to evaluate the implications of policies on food purchasing patterns, diets, & health
Speizer to lead $4M grant for evaluation of expanded contraceptive method choice for youth in Africa and Asia
CPC's Transfer Project awarded new grant by Hewlett Foundation to study national cash transfer projects in sub-Saharan Africa
CPC Moves to Carolina Square in November
Tom Heath, Carolina Population Center’s Deputy Director for Finance and Administration, retires after 28 years at CPC
Grabbing the Golden Goose
Add Health Releases Codebook Explorer (ACE)
CPC’s Summer 2015 Undergraduate Intern Research program begins Tuesday, May 26th
Big Data and Important Questions
Six new Faculty Fellows elected to the Carolina Population Center
Largest National Study on Adolescent Health Receives $28 Million from NIH
CPC On The Move
The Next Phase of MEASURE Evaluation
USAID Awards UNC’s MEASURE Evaluation Project with Two Science and Technology Pioneers Prizes
Carolina Population Center Launches Carolina Demography to Help NC Communities Make Informed Decisions about Population Changes
CPC Faculty Fellow Paul Voss honored with the Robert J. Lapham Award from the Population Association of America
Meet the recently elected Carolina Population Center Faculty Fellows
UNC Epidemiology Professor Jim Thomas to be Director of UNC’s largest project
CPC Fellow Amy Herring receives APHA’s Mortimer Spiegelman Award
J. Richard Udry, esteemed population studies scholar and Carolina Population Center’s Director from 1977 – 1992, died at his home on Sunday, July 29, 2012.
Morgan named new director of UNC’s Carolina Population Center
7 Billion: what does it mean for global population trends?
New Faculty Fellow profile: Clark Gray
Family and community-based support systems critical to better mental health for Latino immigrants
Interdisciplinary study in South Africa examines whether paying girls to attend school reduces their risk of acquiring HIV
Institutional and policy changes affect economic reality of Russian people
Malawi study may lead to new approach to improve health and survival of HIV-positive mothers and their infants
Economic and cultural factors lead to China's low fertility rate, more so than government's one-child policy
CPC studies link neighborhood characteristics to obesity, other health outcomes
Hope for Haiti comes from within: religion, resilience, and recovery
Changes in ecosystem of humans and land in Eastern and Southern Africa are focus of CPC study
Wink Plone Theme
by
Quintagroup
© 2013.
The Carolina Population Center
is a community of scholars and professionals collaborating on interdisciplinary research, methods, and training that advance understanding of population issues.
Site Map
Accessibility
Contact
Personal tools
Log in
This is themeComment for Wink theme