FLIP-LAC user guide
This is version 6.4 of the FLIP-LAC manual. The Food Labeling Information Program for Latin America (FLIP-LAC) for data collection and registration is a smartphone-based technology developed by the University of Toronto, Canada.
This is version 6.4 of the FLIP-LAC manual. The Food Labeling Information Program for Latin America (FLIP-LAC) for data collection and registration is a smartphone-based technology developed by the University of Toronto, Canada.
We examined the impact of tobacco prices or taxes on tobacco use in Latin America and Caribbean countries. We searched MEDLINE, EconLit, LILACS, unpublished literature, 6 specialty journals, and reviewed references.
A fly carrying a deadly parasite is endemic in the jungles of the Iguazu Falls, located where the borders of Brazil, Argentina and Paraguay meet.
The study assesses availability of child-oriented snack foods in school kiosks and convenience stores near public schools in Guatemala, and identifies marketing techniques used in packaging.
This evaluation’s focus is on how CoPEH LAC (Community of Practice in Ecohealth in Latin America and the Caribbean) has contributed to the development of regional knowledge and capacities in EcoHealth and how it has contributed to the development,
The report covers the role of the Centre interdisciplinaire de recherche sur la biologie, la santé, la société et l’environnement (CINBIOSE), Université du Québec à Montréal.
Project researchers discovered important legal best practices, and practical means of integrating health, indigenous rights and gender dimensions in environmental impact assessment methods and policies, through the adoption of new indicators and c
The Centre for International Sustainable Development Law (CISDL) promotes sustainable societies and the protection of ecosystems by advancing the understanding, development and implementation of international sustainable development law.
The emerging and re-emerging zoonotic diseases affecting Brazil today result from complex interactions between natural and human systems.
Vector-borne diseases make a significant contribution to the disease burden in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), amounting to about one million years of potential life lost due to premature mortality or disability (DALYs).