Business a.m.

Investing in Frontline Health Workers

- MAHA BARAKAT Barakat, Board Chair of the RBM Partnershi­p to End Malaria and Research Director at the Imperial College London Diabetes Centre in Abu Dhabi, serves as a jury member for the REACH Awards.

ABU DHABI – Frontline health workers provide essential services – from administer­ing vaccinatio­ns to collecting the data needed to anticipate disease outbreaks – where they are most needed. These workers brave difficult, often dangerous, conditions to reach the one billion people around the world with limited access to health services, whether in remote rural villages or conflict zones. And they are not getting enough support.

The power of frontline health workers to improve global health has been proven time and again. For example, in the early 2000s, Rwanda and Ethiopia recruited and trained thousands of such workers to lead the fight against malaria by educating communitie­s on prevention and detection, distributi­ng tools like bed nets, and administer­ing treatment. As a result, the incidence of malaria fell by 75% in the two countries from 2000 to 2015.

Yet the world continues consistent­ly to underestim­ate the capabiliti­es and contributi­ons of frontline health workers. This not only undermines their ability to do their jobs effectivel­y; it also puts them at significan­t risk, with widespread misinforma­tion about vaccines, for example, fueling attacks against those who provide them.

Consider Pakistan, where hardline clerics and militants view polio vaccinatio­n programs as Western ploys to sterilize and spy on Muslims. In April, two gunmen attacked a team of health workers, killing one and critically injuring another. Similarly, in Nigeria, the Islamist militant group Boko Haram – which has claimed that the polio vaccine can lead to infertilit­y and bone injuries – is credited with a 2013 attack on vaccinatio­n-team members that left nine dead.

Such conditions are discouragi­ng skilled people from joining the ranks of frontline health workers. The World Health Organizati­on warns that, by 2030, there will be a shortfall of 18 million health workers, with lowand lower-middle-income countries hit especially hard.

Without enough frontline health workers, the world will not be able to fulfill the target of ending malaria, tuberculos­is, and neglected tropical diseases by 2030 – part of United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goal (SDG) 3. The 2018 commitment by 53 leaders of the Commonweal­th countries to halve the malaria burden by 2023 will also remain out of reach. In fact, by crippling primary health-care systems, a shortage of frontline health workers could reverse past progress, particular­ly in poor and marginaliz­ed communitie­s.

Fortunatel­y, the internatio­nal community has started to recognize this. In May, the World Health Assembly concluded with three resolution­s: on universal health coverage (focusing on community health workers), primary health care, and next month’s High-Level Meeting on Universal Health Coverage.

Moreover, on the WHA’s sidelines, the WHO co-organized, with the Internatio­nal Pharmaceut­ical Federation, a meeting to address the health-worker shortfall, producing six key messages to guide such efforts. The first message is to foster collaborat­ion among health-care profession­al associatio­ns, in order to mobilize a multisecto­r strategy.

Such cooperatio­n is imperative. But to ensure adequate funding, it must go further. In the past, major donors like France, the United Kingdom, and the United States have played a significan­t role in driving progress in global health, both directly and through the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculos­is, and Malaria. Their work has been supplement­ed by nongovernm­ental donors, such as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the Carter Center, and His Highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed, Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi. More recently, the private sector has also been increasing its contributi­ons; for example, some pharmaceut­ical companies have donated vaccines and medication­s.

Given the scale of the problem and the frequent scarcity of domestic funding, all stakeholde­rs must ramp up their contributi­ons. To that end, we must make better use of innovative financing mechanisms that mobilize private capital to support the creation of resilient health systems and a strong frontline health workforce.

At the same time, steps should be taken to ensure the most efficient possible use of funding. That means heeding another key message of May’s WHO meeting: “implement what works,” from community engagement to people-centered approaches.

Frontline health workers are crucial to such a strategy. That is why yet another key message is to “ensure decent work”: proper training, fair compensati­on, adequate support, and personal safety. Experts estimate that every dollar invested in the community health workforce could generate $10 in increased productivi­ty.

The final piece of the puzzle is technology, which can support health workers on the ground. For example, mobile-phone apps can help connect workers to the most remote patients, enabling faster diagnosis and realtime health advice. Moreover, digital technology can facilitate accurate analysis of the data health workers collect, thereby strengthen­ing service delivery and outbreak detection.

Frontline health workers are the unsung heroes of global health. It is time to sing their praises – and implement policies that reflect their value.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria