Meg Wirth
- Antenatal Care
- Antenatal Corticosteroids
- Asphyxia
- Behavior Change Communication / Community Mobilization
- Breastfeeding
- Childbirth Care
- Chlorhexidine for umbilical cord care
- Continuum of Care
- Data and Epidemiology
- Equity
- HIV/AIDS / PMTCT
- Human Resources for Health
- Immunization
- Infections
- Intrapartum-related neonatal deaths
- Kangaroo Mother Care (KMC)
- Malaria
- mHealth
- Monitoring and Evaluation
- Newborn Health in Emergencies
- Newborn Illnesses and Conditions
- Policy and Advocacy
- Postnatal Care
- Preterm Birth
- Quality Improvement
- Reproductive Health / Family Planning
- Research
- Scale-up
- Stillbirths
Biography
Meg Wirth is the founder of Maternova and a S.E.VEN fellow. She has worked on women's health throughout her career in areas as diverse as starting a home visiting program for teen mothers in Appalachia to monitoring and evaluating a major Safe Motherhood initiative--funded by USAID and implemented by John Snow International's Mothercare project-- in Jakarta and South Kalimantan, Indonesia. Meg has also worked as a member of the Rockefeller Foundation’s Health Equity team and co-edited a major volume called Challenging Inequities in Health: From Ethics to Action. She was a co-author of the UN Millennium Project’s final report on child and maternal health. An innovator at heart, over the last several years she co-developed the strategy for the first global health social venture capital fund with a focus on women's health in low-income countries. She has a BA from Harvard University and an MPA in international development from Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School.
