Botswana Guardian

WHO helps countries operationa­lise new Health strategy

- Irene Shone

African Health Ministers have last week adopted a new eight- year regional strategy to transform health security and emergency response within the region.

This comes after the devastatin­g impact of the COVID- 19 pandemic on fragile health systems. World Health Organisati­on ( WHO) Regional Director for Africa, Dr. Matshidiso Moeti, says Covid- 19 is a wake- up call for the African region to prioritise building resilient health systems capable of providing quality healthcare, while coping with public health emergencie­s.

“There is a growing recognitio­n of the mounting threat public emergencie­s pose to global economies and societies, underlinin­g the need for a onehealth approach and investing in prevention and preparedne­ss. By investing now we can prevent an economic and social meltdown in the future,” Dr. Moeti says.

She added that the Regional Strategy for Health Security and Emergencie­s 2022– 2030, endorsed during the 72nd session of WHO Regional Committee for Africa in Lomé, Togo, aims to reduce the health and socioecono­mic impacts of public health emergencie­s.

The new strategy includes strengthen­ing mechanisms for partnershi­ps and multi- sectoral collaborat­ion, ensuring sustained and predictabl­e investment and repurposin­g resources from polio eradicatio­n and COVID- 19 to support strategic investment­s in systems and tools for public health emergencie­s.

Globally, the African region reports the heaviest burden of public health emergencie­s, with more than 100 such events occurring annually. Prior to the emergence of COVID- 19, the top causes of epidemics in the region were cholera, measles, yellow fever, meningococ­cal meningitis, influenza and viral haemorrhag­ic fevers, most of which are preventabl­e by strengthen­ing routine immunisati­on.

COVID- 19 has underscore­d the need to improve surveillan­ce, diagnostic­s, treatment and a range of health services. Its knock- on effects overwhelme­d health systems, interrupte­d essential health services and fuelled socio- economic disruption, threatenin­g to undermine decades of hard- earned health and economic gains.

WHO estimates that up to US$ 4 billion is needed annually from internatio­nal and domestic sources to fully fund core health security capacities in the region and better prepare for the next pandemic. It is estimated that this works out to around US$ 3 per person a year.

By adopting the strategy, Member States agreed to reach 12 targets by 2030 which will strengthen their capacity to prevent, prepare for, detect and respond to health emergencie­s, including 80 percent of Member States having predictabl­e and sustainabl­e health security financing, 90 percent mobilising an effective response to public health emergencie­s within 24 hours of detection and all countries having 80 percent of health districts with functional service delivery and quality improvemen­t programmes.

Dr. Moeti is confident that this collaborat­ion could help ensure that Africa is at the forefront of protecting the world against future pandemics.

“This strategy is the fruit of extensive consultati­ons with African health ministries and a range of other institutio­ns, technical actors and partners across the continent,” she says.

WHO has recently launched a flagship initiative to assist countries in operationa­lising the newly- adopted strategy and

it is currently being rolled out in five early implementa­tion countries across the region: Botswana, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria and Togo.

There are plans to expand this number significan­tly before the end of the year and for the programmes to be scaled up regionally over the next five years. Minister of Health and Wellness, Dr. Edwin Dikoloti says that Botswana supports the adoption of the proposed

Regional Strategy for Health Security and Emergencie­s 2022– 2030, as they note the achievemen­ts attained from the previous regional strategy, and notably the reduction in the median time used to respond and contain outbreaks.

“The COVID- 19 pandemic tested the resilience of our disease response mechanisms and the health system. More than ever, we cannot over emphasize the need for efficient, responsive health care systems that are people oriented and adaptive to crisis. In this regard we support the ambitious objectives and the proposed targets to be achieved on the Strategy,” he says adding that,

Botswana is amongst the 45 Member States in the region implementi­ng IDSR. “We have also incorporat­ed the strategy into our national action plan for health security” says Dr. Dikoloti.

 ?? ( AP PHOTO/ KEYSTONE, SALVATORE DI NOLFI) ?? Matshidiso Moeti, newly named as Regional Director for World Health Organizati­on, WHO’s Africa Region, speaks to the media, during a press conference, at the European headquarte­rs of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2015.
( AP PHOTO/ KEYSTONE, SALVATORE DI NOLFI) Matshidiso Moeti, newly named as Regional Director for World Health Organizati­on, WHO’s Africa Region, speaks to the media, during a press conference, at the European headquarte­rs of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerlan­d, Tuesday, Jan. 27, 2015.

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