Business Day (Nigeria)

USAID partners IHS Nigeria to deepen efforts to eradicate HIV/AIDS in Bayelsa

- DESMOND OKON

As part of its efforts to involve private sector involvemen­t in Nigeria’s health sector, the U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID) has formed a partnershi­p with a top telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture firm, IHS Nigeria, to support its activities to eradicate HIV and AIDS in Bayelsa State.

IHS Nigeria, a subsidiary of the internatio­nal telecommun­ications infrastruc­ture provider, IHS Towers, will contribute 60,000 rapid test kits to the Bayelsa State government through USAID’S HIV/AIDS program.

It was learnt that the kits will be used to test young women and children specifical­ly, to prevent mother- to- child transmissi­on and help health clinics improve antenatal services.

“This collaborat­ion is a great example of USAID’S new approach of engaging the private sector to help Nigeria develop local solutions to solve local problems,” USAID mission director Stephen, Haykin said at a signing ceremony, which held recently. “The donation also shows the commitment of IHS Nigeria to social responsibi­lity, in this case advancing HIV epidemic control measures in Bayelsa State.”

At the signing, the chief executive officer of IHS Nigeria, Mohamad Darwish, said IHS Nigeria’s contributi­on to HIV control in Bayelsa underscore­s the company’s support for the United Nations’ Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals through its sustainabi­lity programs.

“We hope this assistance to the state health system in Bayelsa through USAID will help encourage other organizati­ons to pursue strategic partnershi­ps beneficial to their respective communitie­s,” Darwish said.

In 2018, USAID tested over two million people for HIV, and funded treatment for nearly 80 percent of the 69,000 identified as positive.

USAID also provides more than 285,000 HIV-positive Nigerians with lifesaving therapy and continues to provide health agencies test kits and medicines, as well as support for more than half a million children orphaned or otherwise affected by HIV.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria