Hello, Please, find the attached papers and rewrite the papers with clear understanding, and make it plagiarize free. Also, please rewrite it from paragraph to paragraph and do not mix up the paragrap

Introduction

Cash transfer programs, widely recognized as one of the most effective tools in social protection, are expanding rapidly into the world’s poorest economies. As these programs support more of the world’s most vulnerable populations, they face growing demands to increase their effectiveness. Research from behavioral science suggests that light touch interventions that help programs become more adaptive to the psychological phenomena that influence beneficiaries’ decisions and actions may improve outcomes at little, if any, additional cost. These programs are done in collaboration with government and government agencies of respected counties. The textbook “millions saved” discussed in dept of the Punjab districts in Pakistan. The PBS documentary video also explain the program impact in a village in Mexico, and the HEALTHY people 2020 video discussed the social determinants of health.

In my opinion, the textbook “millions saved” and other resource materials provided shown governments given money to individuals to engage in behaviors that might improve their health are proven positive. For instance, The Punjab experience shows that girls’ education can be an excellent health investment, even in challenging settings. Building on efforts to combat child marriage and early pregnancy is of utmost importance to ensure that millions of girls can access their basic human rights and thrive (Glassman, A., & Temin, M., 2016 p. 142-3). The FSSP cost a total of US$400 per newly enrolled girl.[5] Between 2011 and 2012 the program cost PKR1.5 billion (US$17.4 million) in stipends for 380,000 girls. In 2013, 411,000 girls in grades 6 to 10 were enrolled, receiving a combined US$14.2 million each year (Glassman, A., & Temin, M., 2016 p. 146).

On the other hand, the PBS video examines the ways in which the Mexican Oportunidades program, a neo-liberal social investment program, is applied in Mexico. It comments on both the efficacy of the program and the ways in which motherhood and citizenship are redefined. The oportunidades program is a conditional cash transfer program that provides money for nutrition and educational scholarships to poor mothers on condition that the funds are used toward enhancing their children's human capital development. These conditions are intended to lead to the eventual integration of the children into the market economy as skilled individuals. The video points out how the Mexican conditional cash transfer program has shifted the responsibility for social security from the state to the non-state sector, namely to mothers and families, banks and markets. The investment in children is done through mothers' regulated participation, based on conditions, and designed along gendered, cultural norms of mothering. I argue that the conditional cash transfer system attempts to insert mothers into the market as creditworthy consumers, yet it has inserted them into the economy and into political discourse not as citizens with rights, but as mothers with increased social responsibilities.

The Healthy People 2020 video clearly explain determinants of health by using an illustration of an African American little girl and a Caucasian old man. The determinants of health encompass wide range of areas such as policymaking, social factors, health services, individual behavior, biology, and genetics. It is the interrelationships among these factors that determine individual and population health. Because of this, interventions that target multiple determinants of health are most likely to be effective. Determinants of health reach beyond the boundaries of traditional health care and public health sectors; sectors such as education, housing, transportation, agriculture, and environment can be important allies in improving population health

Reference

Fiszbein, Ariel; Schady, Norbert; Ferreira, Francisco H.G.; Grosh, Margaret; Keleher, Niall; Olinto, Pedro; Skoufias, Emmanuel. 2009. Conditional Cash Transfers: Reducing Present and Future Poverty. World Bank Policy Research Report. Washington, DC: World Bank. https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2597 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”

Glassman, A., & Temin, M. (2016). Millions Saved: New cases of proven success in global health (3rd ed.). Washington DC: Center for Global Development.

https://www.healthypeople.gov/2020/about/foundation-health-measures/Determinants-of-Health

http://www.pbs.org/newshour/video/2009/12/29/20091229_6_mexican_poverty.mp4