NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Let’s all contribute towards a fairer, healthier world

- Matshidiso Moeti

THIS World Health Day, World Health Organisati­on (WHO) is calling on everyone to participat­e in building a fairer, healthier world. The COVID-19 pandemic has shone a light on inequaliti­es between countries.

Amid shortages of essential supplies, African countries have been pushed to the back of the queue in accessing COVID-19 test kits, personal protective equipment and now vaccines.

Of the 548 million COVID-19 vaccine doses administer­ed worldwide, Africa only had 11 million or 2%, whereas the continent accounts for around 17% of the global population.

There are also inequities within countries.

Discrimina­tion based on gender, place of residence, income, educationa­l level, age, ethnicity and disability disadvanta­ge vulnerable population­s.

Recent data from 17 African coun- tries show, for example, that a person with secondary school education is three times as likely to have access to contracept­ion as someone who has not attended school. Those in the highest economic quintile are five times more likely to deliver their babies in health facilities and have their babies vaccinated with BCG compared to those in the lowest quintile. To improve this situation, we need to act on the social and economic determinan­ts of health, by working across sectors to improve living and working conditions, and access to educaBUSIN­ESSES tion, particular­ly for the most marginalis­ed groups.

Communitie­s need to be engaged as partners, through their networks and associatio­ns, to shape and drive health and developmen­t interventi­ons.

A key challenge in overcoming inequities is that there is limited data showing who is being missed and why.

To address this, national health informatio­n systems need to capture age, sex and equity stratified data.

This informatio­n can then be used to inform decision and policy-making.

At WHO, we are working with countries to strengthen capacities to collect, manage and use data, and to enhance monitoring and action to address avoidable inequities.

In the past year we have disseminat­ed technical guidance on gender, equity and COVID-19 and trained 30 country teams in gender and health equity integrated programmin­g.

The teams are using skills gained to support equitable health response, including to deal with gender-based violence in the context of COVID-19.

Investment is also needed to accelerate progress towards universal health coverage, to protect individual­s from financial hardship in accessing needed care and to improve service coverage.

Most African countries have initiated reforms in these areas believing that these reforms will in turn contribute to building more resilient health systems and societies. Moving forward, leaders need to work together to address inequities in their own countries and abroad in the spirit of internatio­nal solidarity.

Specifical­ly, on COVID-19 vaccines, we strongly encourage pharmaceut­ical companies to expand their manufactur­ing capacities to overcome current supply shortages.

We also encourage wealthy countries to share their doses with poor ones, so that the mostat-risk population­s in all countries can be protected, to save lives and speed-upw recovery from this global crisis.

This World Health Day I call on member States, partners, civil society, communitie­s, and other stakeholde­rs to intensify work with WHO to achieve universal health coverage, and to invest in addressing the social and economic determinan­ts of healthcare, to tackle inequities and build a fairer, healthier world.

As WHO we remain committed to ensuring that all people in Africa, and globally, realise the right to good health.

Matshidiso Moeti is WHO regional director for Africa.

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