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Faculty
W. Henry Mosley
Professor
- Emeritus
Academic Degrees
MD, MPH
Joint Departmental Affiliations
International Health
Departmental Address
615 N. Wolfe St.
Baltimore, MD 21205
Phone: (410) 955 7956
Fax: (410) 955 0792
Research and Professional Experience

Currently focus of my effort has conducting Strategic Leadership Seminars in developng countries. Working in collaboration with Ben Lozare, Director of Training at CCP, we have developed the curriculum and the STARGuide computer software for the Seminar in Strategic Leadership and for Health System Transformation in Developing Countries. In the years 1998-2008 we have conducted 9 international Leadership Seminars in Baltimore, national Seminars in Philippines, China, Pakistan, Nepal, Indonesia, Uganda, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, Peru and a regional Seminar for five Central American Countries in Nicaragua. We now have Chinese and Indonesian and Spanish versions of the STARGuide seminar materials. Ten universities in 8 developing countries have now incorporated this leadership training into their academic programs.

Currently I am engaged in collaborative research projects assessing the outcomes of leadership programs in Indonesia, China and Uganda.

Keywords

Population and Family Health Sciences, population change, OpenCourseWare

health policy,

demographic and epidemiological change,

developing countries,

health transition,

disease control priorities,

strategic leadership,

reproductive health

child survival,

family planning,

international health,

distance education

Honors and Awards

Phi Beta Kappa - Rhodes College, 1955

Alpha Omega Alpha - University of Oklahoma School of Medicine, 1958

United States Public Health Service Meritorious Service Medal, 1970

Delta Omega - Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 1965

Advising, Mentoring and Teaching Recognition Award - Johns Hopkins Student Assembly, 1996 and 2002

Golden Apple Award - Johns Hopkins Student Assembly, 1997

Ernest L. Stebbins Award - Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, 2000

Selected Publications

Rahman, MH, Mosley, WH, Ahmed, S and Akhter, H. Does service accessibility reduce socioeconomic differentials in maternity care seeking? Evidence from Rural Bangladesh. J. Biosocial Science 40: 19 – 33, 2008.

Ahmed, S, and Mosley, WH. Joint determination of use of contraceptives and maternal and child health interventions in six developing countries. Demography 39 (1); 75-93, 2002

Reed H, Koblinski M, and Mosley WH,(eds). The Consequences of Maternal Morbidity and Maternal Mortality. Report of a Workshop, National Research Council, Washington, DC, National Academy Press, 2000

Jamison DT, Mosley WH. Disease control priorities in developing countries: health policy responses to epidemiological change. Chapter in WC Cockerham (ed) The Sociology of Medicine, The International Library of Critical Writings in Sociology Series, Aldershot, UK;Brookfield, VT: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited, 1995.

Wilopo SW, Mosley, WH. Child survival intervention programs and the practice of contraception in West Timor Island, Indonesia. Pages 42-69 in Child Survival, Health and Family Planning Programmes and Fertility. United Nations, New York, 1996.

Aziz KMA, Mosley WH. The History, Methodology, and Main Findings of the Matlab Project in Bangladesh. In MD Gupta, P Aaby, M Garenne, G Pison (eds) Prospective Community Studies in Developing Countries. Clarendon Press, 1998.

Mosley WH. Potential for social science research to inform and influence the delivery of health care in less developed countries. In Chen LC, Kleinman AM, Ware NC (eds) Advancing Health in Developing Countries: The Role of Social Research. Westport, CT: Auburn House, 1992.

Mosley WH, Bobadilla JL, Jamison DT. The health transition: implications for health policy in developing countries. Chapter 28 in Jamison DT, Mosley WH, Measham AR, and Bobadilla J-L (eds) Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries. New York: Oxford University Press for the World Bank, 1993.

Mosley WH, Gray RH. Childhood precursors of adult morbidity and mortality in developing countries: implications for health programs. Pages 69-100 in Gribble JN, Preston SH (eds) The Epidemiological Transition: Policy and Planning Implications for Developing Countries. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press, 1993.

Mosley WH, Cowley P. The challenge of world health. Population Bulletin 46(4):December 1991. Washington, D.C.: Population Reference Bureau, 1991.

Jamison DT, Mosley WH, Measham AR, and Bobadilla J-L (eds). Disease Control Priorities in Developing Countries. New York: Oxford University Press for the World Bank, 1993

Mosley WH, Jamison DT, Henderson DA. The health sector in developing countries: problems for the 1990s and beyond. Pages 335-58 in Breslow L, Fielding JE, Lave LB (eds) Annual Review of Public Health Volume 11. Palo Alto, CA: Annual Reviews, Inc., 1990.

Jamison DT, Mosley WH. Disease control priorities in developing countries: health policy responses to epidemiological change. American Journal of Public Health 81(1):15-22, 1991.

Mosley WH, Becker S. Demographic models for child survival and implications for health intervention programmes. Health Policy and Planning 6(3):218-233, 1991.

Spencer HC, Kaseje DCO, Mosley WH, Sempebwa EKN, Huong AY, Roberts JM. Impact on mortality and fertility of a community-based malaria control program in Saradidi, Kenya. Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology 81:36-45 (supplement 1) 1987.

Spencer HC, Kaseje DCO, Sempebwa EKN, Huong AY, Roberts JM, Mosley WH. The Saradidi, Kenya, rural health development programme: retrospective demographic analysis. Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology 81:24-35 (supplement 1) 1987.

Mosley WH, Chen LC (eds). Child Survival: Strategies for Research. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984.

W. Henry Mosley Photo
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