%0 Journal Article %T Achieving a “Grand Convergence” in Global Health by 2035: Rwanda Shows the Way; Comment on “Improving the World’s Health Through the Post-2015 Development Agenda: Perspectives From Rwanda” %J International Journal of Health Policy and Management %I Kerman University of Medical Sciences %Z 2322-5939 %A Yamey, Gavin %A Fewer, Sara %A Beyeler, Naomi %D 2015 %\ 11/01/2015 %V 4 %N 11 %P 789-791 %! Achieving a “Grand Convergence” in Global Health by 2035: Rwanda Shows the Way; Comment on “Improving the World’s Health Through the Post-2015 Development Agenda: Perspectives From Rwanda” %K Grand Convergence %K Equity %K Pro-poor Universal Health Coverage %K Domestic Financing of Health %K Population %K Policy %K and Implementation Research %K Intersectoral Collaboration %K Global Health %K Aid Effectiveness %R 10.15171/ijhpm.2015.143 %X Global Health 2035, the report of The Lancet Commission on Investing in Health, laid out a bold, highly ambitious framework for making rapid progress in improving global public health outcomes. It showed that with the right health investments, the international community could achieve a “grand convergence” in global health—a reduction in avertable infectious, maternal, and child deaths down to universally low levels—within a generation. Rwanda’s success in rapidly reducing such deaths over the last 20 years shows that convergence is feasible. Binagwaho and Scott have argued that 5 lessons from this success are the importance of equity, quality health services, evidence-informed policy, intersectoral collaboration, and effective collaboration between countries and multilateral agencies. This article re-examines these lessons through the lens of the Global Health 2035 report to analyze how the experience in Rwanda might be generalized for other countries to making progress towards achieving a grand convergence. %U https://www.ijhpm.com/article_3070_b044cf8d7474a9e3b7cbbcdb5d7db237.pdf