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AU Experts deliberate on actions to end AIDS, TB, Malaria by 2030

by Muhammad Sani
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By Haruna Gimba

The African Union (AU) Experts are deliberating on priority actions to end AIDS, TB and Malaria as public health threats by the year 2030.

Ahead of the meeting of African Heads of State and Government on 3 July 2017, the experts working in AIDS, TB and Malaria has adopted the AIDS Watch Africa Strategic Framework last week. The new strategy will further strengthen AIDS Watch Africa as the Heads of State and Government level continental vehicle for joint action, advocacy and accountability towards ending AIDS, TB and Malaria.

A statement issued by the African Union Commission, Directorate of Information and Communication, said the Heads of State will roll out this strategy within the framework of the Africa Health Strategy and the Catalytic Framework to End AIDS, TB and Eliminate Malaria in Africa by 2030 adopted by African leaders in July 2016 at the Kigali Summit.

Mr Abdourahmane Diallo

The statement added that these frameworks provide a clear policy direction for strengthening health systems and achieve universal health coverage. “We are now in a new era for global health and development where Africa is increasing commitments to transform health systems, build community resilience and contribute to better health outcomes through increased investments in health” Minister of Health of Guinea, Mr Abdourahmane Diallo said.

While there has been significant progress in the reduction of deaths and new rates of HIV infection, the West and Central Africa region is lagging behind. An emergency plan is needed urgently to accelerate the HIV response. The Director for Social Affairs at the African Union Commission, Ambassador Olawale Maiyegun said addressing the broader health agenda is a catalyst for inclusive economic growth and development.

“However under investments in health threaten Africa’s demographic dividend, an enabler for the achievement of Agenda 2063’s socio-economic development and structural transformation aspirations,” he said.

Health Reporters gathered that the Africa Scorecard on Domestic Financing for Health adopted last year is a critical tool that countries have started using to track progress in health financing including monitoring progress towards meeting the ambitious 15 per cent Abuja target and donor commitments.

Efforts are currently ongoing to institutionalise regular, systematic and routine annual implementation of National Health Accounts that will improve the quality of data on health financing in Member States.

Enhancing improved delivery systems at the community level with better diagnostics, medicines, information and systems there is need to mobilise community workers and train them to play an important role to end epidemics, the statement added.

The Ebola epidemic in West Africa and the recent resurgence of Malaria in Namibia and Mozambique, Lassa fever and Meningitis in Nigeria and Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo demonstrates that new threats will continue to emerge.

Engaging at the community level to prevent, manage and respond quickly to emergency disease outbreaks is thus a clear priority. The Executive Director of UNAIDS, Michel Sidibé, said there is need to transform the interface between the last service provider and the community to better manage health risks.

“Creating a working sub-system of health with paid community health workers will transform our health architecture. But we cannot achieve set targets if we do not build strong and well trained human resources for health,” he said.

UNAIDS and partners are driving an initiative to recruit 2 million paid community health workers to improve community health delivery systems.

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