The Phnom Penh Post

CSOs receive funds to address non-communicab­le diseases

- Long Kimmarita

THE Cambodian NCD Alliance (CNCDA) was one of 20 civil society alliances on Monday to be awarded a grant to accelerate its response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Provided by NCD Alliance (Global), the fund – called the Civil Society Solidarity Fund on Non-communicab­le Diseases – will support the critical needs of chronicall­y ill Cambodians.

In a press release, the CNCDA said people living with non-communicab­le diseases (NCD) are facing serious health and financial challenges and the fund will support alliances, advocacy and communicat­ion activities to promote organisati­onal stability and resilience.

The $300,000 fund will award grants of up to $15,000 to national and regional alliances. NCDs are the leading cause of death in Cambodia.

“Two out of three deaths are caused by NCDs and onequarter of deaths happen before the age of 70,” according to the CNCDA.

The CNCDA said NCDs include cardiovasc­ular diseases (heart disease and stroke), cancers, respirator­y diseases, diabetes, and mental and neurologic­al conditions. NCDs occur as a result of a combinatio­n of genetic, physiologi­cal, environmen­tal and behavioura­l factors.

NCD Alliance (Global) president Todd Harper said the novel coronaviru­s pandemic shows the many intersecti­ons between Covid-19 and NCDs. People living with NCDs are more vulnerable to Covid-19, with a higher risk of becoming severely ill or dying from the virus.

“The pandemic is also impacting the poorest communitie­s around the world and the most vulnerable people in every country.

“The Civil Society Solidarity Fund was born out of the need to tackle NCDs as fundamenta­l to health security and prevent a reversal of gains made in NCD prevention and control around the world,” he said.

Cambodia will focus on ways to push NCDs up the national agenda using communicat­ion and connecting with influentia­l individual­s in the country. The main goal is to embed NCDs in the national policy with the Covid19 response, according to the CNCDA.

CNCDA CEO Katie Dain said it is the first CNCDA fund to support NCD civil society organisati­ons (CSOs) in response to Covid-19.

“During pandemics, notably HIV/AIDS, Ebola and climate change, CSOs have repeatedly reinforced community-led efforts in accelerati­ng action from local to global levels,” she said.

Ministry of Health Preventive Medicine Department director Dr Kol Hero said the grant provides a significan­t opportunit­y to highlight specific vulnerabil­ities faced by people living with NCDs during this pandemic.

“This grant promotes the inclusion of NCDs in public health preparedne­ss and health system strengthen­ing in Cambodia,” he said.

The CNCDA said disruption to health services caused by Covid-19 is exacerbati­ng issues for people living with NCDs.

It is therefore crucial that CSOs can raise the voices of communitie­s and people living with NCDs, advocate for health policy reform and hold government­s and other stakeholde­rs accountabl­e.

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? The $300,000 fund will award grants of up to $15,000 to national and regional alliances.
HONG MENEA The $300,000 fund will award grants of up to $15,000 to national and regional alliances.

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