The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘ Community- centered approach key to tackling high maternal, child deaths’

- From Nkechi Onyedika- Ugoeze, Abuja

TCountry Lead, Evidence for Action ( E4AMamaye) Programme, Esther Agbon has advocated a community- centered approach in addressing the high maternal and child death in the country by supporting communitie­s to develop workable homegrown solutions which are acceptable and owned by them.

She noted that if women and girls have access to good quality health services, thousands of lives could be saved daily.

Speaking at the National Closeout and Disseminat­ion Meeting of the Evidence for Action: Mamaye Programme after 12 years of implementa­tion, Agbon stressed the need for government­s to invest in better services for reproducti­ve, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health.

She noted that the dwindling national revenues often time cause government­s to prioritize debt servicing and infrastruc­tural developmen­t over Reproducti­ve, Maternal, Newborn, Child, Adolescent Health and Nutrition ( RMNCAH) service delivery and quality of care, adding that delays in release and cash backing of critical RMNCAH activities led to the unavailabi­lity of health commoditie­s in facilities which in turn affected community demand.

Agbon stated that sustained availabili­ty of commoditie­s and essential medicines in health facilities can be achieved by systematic and continuous use of evidence to address identified gaps.

According to her, a multi- stakeholde­r collaborat­ion which includes government­s, civil society organisati­ons, private sector and communitie­s, is essential for prioritisi­ng maternal and child health needs of communitie­s and vulnerable groups.

The Country Lead who presented an overview of E4A- Mamaye, Programmes and Achievemen­ts, noted that through the project, there was increased budgetary allocation for health in eight states, as Bauchi was first to budget 16% to health in 2016.

She observed that the programme also supported 11 states including Lagos, Niger, Bauchi, Gombe, Ondo, Kaduna, Yobe, Zamfara, Kano, Jigawa and Taraba to establish Accountabi­lity Mechanisms.

According to her, E4A- Mamaye works to ensure those in power are held to account for commitment­s to increase resources and improve the health, rights, and well- being of women and girls.

” We do this by supporting civil society, government, media, parliament­arians, and advocates at global, regional, and national levels to work together to translate complex health system evidence into easy- to- understand formats that are used to inform advocacy and action.” Also speaking, the Regional Director West Africa and Central Africa, Options Consultanc­y Services, Dr Ufuoma Omo Obi stressed the need to build a localised resilient health system that prioritise­s equity, quality, and sustainabi­lity.

Obi noted that ownership mechanisms have been put in place while the state- led accountabi­lity mechanisms have been establishe­d by various states.

He said, ' For me, it has been a whole learning curve around resilience, how communitie­s are, the impact of the work that has been done, as you can imagine, the impact of the services that are being delivered and taken forward by community groups. We are proud to have played a role in nurturing grassroots coalitions and empowering stakeholde­rs to drive positive change.

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