Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
PolyU Scholars Hub Home
Help & FAQ
Home
Researchers
Units
Research output
Prizes
Activities
Press/Media
Student theses
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Tracking development assistance for health from China, 2007-2017
Angela E. Micah
, Yingxi Zhao
, Catherine S. Chen
, Bianca S. Zlavog
, Golsum Tsakalos
, Abigail Chapin
, Stephen Gloyd
, Jost Jonas
, Paul H. Lee
, Shiwei Liu
, Man Tat Alexander Ng
, Michael R. Phillips
, Enrico Rubagotti
, Kun Tang
, Shenglan Tang
, Mustafa Younis
, Yunquan Zhang
, Christopher J.L. Murray
, Joseph L. Dieleman
School of Nursing
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Research output
:
Journal article publication
›
Journal article
›
Academic research
›
peer-review
22
Citations (Scopus)
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Tracking development assistance for health from China, 2007-2017'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
China
100%
Development Assistance for Health
100%
Government Agencies
18%
Multilateral Agencies
18%
Population Size
9%
Development Rate
9%
Growth Rate
9%
Plateaued
9%
Lack of Data
9%
International Development Agencies
9%
Publicly Available
9%
World Bank
9%
Government Spending
9%
National Health
9%
Economic Development Level
9%
Trends in Development
9%
Development Assistance
9%
Health Focus
9%
Health System Strengthening
9%
Ministry of Commerce
9%
Track Development
9%
Financial Revenue
9%
Financial Account
9%
China's Contribution
9%
International Engagement
9%
Global Health Financing
9%
Traditional Donors
9%
Social Sciences
Development Aid
100%
China
100%
Government Agency
16%
Commerce
8%
Economic and Social Development
8%
USA
8%
Public Expenditure
8%
World Bank
8%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Government Agencies
100%
World Health Organization
100%
Population Size
50%
Economics, Econometrics and Finance
Government Agency
100%
Commerce
50%
Economic developments
50%
Public Expenditure
50%
Engineering
World Health Organization
100%
Health System
50%
World Bank
50%