Women & Youth Take Centre Stage At AHAIC 2023 As Conference Comes To A Close

The Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) 2023 came to a close on the International Women’s Day with a colorful celebration of African women driving change through their visionary leadership in the global health space. As stakeholders from all over the world marked the day with calls to #EmbraceEquity, delegates at the conference plugged into the global conversation by deliberating on key issues affecting health and wellbeing of women. These include enhanced sexual and reproductive health rights, the need for bodily autonomy and access to gender-responsive health systems, the power of investing in women-led health innovations, as well as the role of women in health and climate action. Click HERE to read the full highlights. Key Takeaways from Day 4: The fourth and final day of the conference also saw five African women recognised for their outstanding contributions to improving and safeguarding the health and wellbeing of women, children and entire communities at the AHAIC 2023 Women in Global Health Awards. Congratulations once again to Dr. Sindi van Zyl – Physician, Radio DJ & Health Activist (posthumous award); Dr. Magda Robalo – President and co-founder, Institute for Global Health and Development; Dr. Senait Fisseha – Vice President of Global Programs, Susan Thompson Buffet Foundation; Dr. Lia Tadesse – Minister of Health, Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, and Dr. Matshidiso Moeti – Regional Director, WHO AFRO.

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AHAIC DAY 3: DEMANDING CLIMATE ACTION NOW!

Health challenges affecting Africa continue to be complex and intertwined. In order to prepare for future health threats, stronger collaboration among African countries, and inclusive leadership are needed ~ Hon. Mohammad Abd El Fattah, Undersecretary for Preventive Affairs – Ministry of Health and Population, Egypt Day three of AHAIC 2023 focused on an array of themes with climate change and health interface taking center stage in a series of sessions that included two high-level plenary and 14 parallel sessions. Delegates delved into a range of topics including building climate resilience at the community level, leveraging technology to amplify global health, unlocking the power of public health data and closing the geographic and financial divide to empower African researchers. Click HERE to read the full highlights. Participants engaged in dialogue that explored both challenges and opportunities for sustainable, unified climate action and investment in health workers, with the general consensus being that Africa can – and must – do more to elevate the voices of those working to protect both people and planet and move beyond talk to action. Climate change adaptation and mitigation featured prominently in a rare meeting between World Health Organization (WHO) and the private sector – including Pharmaceutical companies, where the need for collective effort in adaptation, and mitigation were discussed. Decarbonizing health system through measures such as proper waste management and industry approach must be prioritized. In other considerations, the need for pharmaceutical manufacturing, genomic data, and harmonized regulatory frameworks were recognized as critical in creating strong mechanisms for pandemic preparedness. Key takeaways from the day’s sessions:

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Road to AHAIC 2023: Mainstreaming climate discourse into health policy

On March 5th – 8th 2023, Africa’s top thought leaders, political figures, innovators, researchers, policy makers, health workers and community mobilisers will convene in Kigali, Rwanda for the much needed, long awaited and probably long overdue dialogue and action on mainstreaming climate discourse into health policy conversations and vice versa at the Africa Health Agenda International Conference 2023. In this conversation, Dr. Sabin Nsanzimana, Rwanda’s Minister of Health and Dr. Ahmed Ogwell Ouma, the Acting Director AFRICA CDC put perspective on Africa’s progress in strengthening its ability to detect and manage outbreaks of diseases in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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#AHAIC2023 Day 2 Highlights

#AHAIC2023 Day 2 Highlights

At least 1000 participants from across the world gathered on the second day of AHAIC 2023 to discuss health challenges impacting the continent. Participants shared solutions, best practices, recommendations and next steps to bolster health systems in Africa. Day two of AHAIC 2023 featured two plenary sessions and thirteen parallel sessions covering a range of topics including climate change and health, sustainable manufacturing, global health security, cervical cancer elimination, and building resilient health systems. Click here to read the full highlights. Key takeaways from today:

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AHAIC 2023 Highlights: What You Missed Day 1 and What to Expect

The Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) 2023 kicked off on a high note on Sunday 5th March with a wogging (walk, jog and run) event to promote health and climate action during the Kigali Car Free Day. The first day of the conference saw hundreds of participants take to the streets of Kigali to raise awareness on the need for urgent action to address climate change and the spread of both infectious and non-communicable diseases on the continent, key themes that will take centre stage at AHAIC 2023. From 6th to 8th March, over 1,000 delegates from across Africa and beyond are convening at the Kigali Conference Centre to engage in discourse centred on this year’s conference theme: Resilient Health Systems for Africa: Re-envisioning the Future Now. Dozens of sessions curated to explore key issues at the nexus of health and climate change will take place each day, giving participants the opportunity to network, share learnings and develop solutions to advance Africa’s health and climate agenda. Click here to read the full day 1 highlights.

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AHAIC 2023 to Drive United Africa Agenda to Achieve Equitable Health Access and Address Climate Change

The biennial conference will convene African stakeholders in health, climate, and development to foster regional collaboration and create a unified position on climate action and health system resilience ahead of UNGA 78 and COP 28. 4th March 2023, Nairobi, Kenya: When stakeholders in health, development and climate convene in Kigali, Rwanda, for the fifth edition of The Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) 2023, top on the agenda will be the urgent need for African countries to unite in their efforts to strengthen health systems and address climate-related health challenges. The biennial conference, which will take place from 5th – 8th March under the theme “Resilient Health Systems for Africa: Re-envisioning the Future Now”, will bring together representatives from African States to advocate for a unified continental voice ahead of their participation at the 78th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA 78), and the 28th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 28) taking place in September and November respectively this year. “If we are to address the emerging threats at the intersection of health and climate change, African countries must present a united front at global health and climate forums. We need to have one message for one Africa when we present our asks and demands at UNGA 78 and COP 28 because it is only then that we can influence the global policy changes required to meet the needs of the African people,” said Dr Sabin Nsanzimana, Minister of Health, Rwanda. AHAIC will provide a platform to deepen African unity at a time when the ripple effects of the three-year COVID-19 pandemic and a global recession have caused an increase in nationalism in the global north, denying Africa much-needed access to funding for health and climate adaptation and mitigation. The event will also address the fragmented efforts that have long stood in the way of holistic progress on the continent. “We know that multilateral systems have not always delivered equitably for us, and the COVID-19 pandemic served as a poignant reminder of Africa’s ranking within the hierarchy of global health. While we acknowledge that African countries must also take responsibility for their role in underinvesting in their health systems, we must also recognise that African-led solutions to African challenges still require some level of global support because there can be no global health security if Africa continues to be left out,” said Dr. Ahmed Ogwell Ouma, Acting Director, Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC). Over the four days, policymakers, technocrats, thought leaders, innovators, researchers, and civil society will explore how African countries can foster regional cooperation by creating common guidelines, governance structures and regulatory procedures to harmonise health systems and climate adaptation and mitigation measures across the continent. “For us to create lasting health change in Africa, we must build more equal partnerships and unite to drive a common African agenda on climate and health. In doing so, we can address the emerging twin threats of climate crises and future pandemics in a more sustainable manner, including by strengthening primary health care and addressing the social determinants of health that are impacting the wellbeing of populations across the continent,” said Dr Githinji Gitahi, Group CEO, Amref Health Africa. “These social determinants include education, economic opportunity, conflict and gender equity – all of which are central to Amref Health Africa’s mission to catalyse and drive people-centred health systems as outlined in our 2023-2030 corporate strategy, which we will unveil at AHAIC 2023.” Jointly convened by Amref Health Africa, Ministry of Health Rwanda, African Union and Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), AHAIC 2023 is the first global health conference held in Africa to focus on mainstreaming climate into health policymaking and vice versa. The conference will act as a springboard to global health and climate conferences where it will present an African-led global petition for urgent climate action and sustainable global health policies that will support Africa’s journey towards resilient health systems. The conference will kick off with a wogging event on 5th March during the Kigali Car Free Day, as part of efforts to promote climate action for health. This will be followed by three days of plenaries, high-level meetings, workshops, and networking sessions that will take place from 6th to 8th of March. ### Notes to Editors: About AHAIC The Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) is a flagship convening of Amref Health Africa and is the largest health and development conference held in Africa every two years. Now in its fifth round, AHAIC 2023 will bring together the African community, world leaders, financiers, innovators, technologists, scientists, and experts across domains to discuss health policies for Africa in response to the most pressing challenges of our times – conflict, climate change, food insecurity and human rights violations. AHAIC 2023 puts people at the centre of all discussions and recognises the unique needs of the global south. We encourage minority populations, African nations and other low- and middle-income countries to get involved in re-shaping Africa’s health and development trajectory. Run by and for the people of Africa in Africa, AHAIC 2023 is designed to tackle complex issues in a practical manner and promises to be more challenging, innovative, and fun than other global health events. Additional Resources:  To learn more about AHAIC 2023, please visit www.ahaic.org. Get real-time updates from the conference by following Amref Health Africa on Twitter | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram and via #AHAIC2023. To participate in the conversation online and share information about AHAIC 2023 use the AHAIC 2023 Social Media Toolkit. Media Contacts: Erick Achola, Global Communications Manager, Amref Health Africa Erick.Achola@Amref.org Julien Niyingabira Mahoro, Rwanda Biomedical Centre/Ministry of Health Rwanda niyingabira@gmail.com or Magnifique Muhoza (Office of the Government Spokesperson) mmuhoza@ogs.gov.rw Liliane Bilogho Ndong Nang, Technical Officer Risk Communication and Community Engagement, Africa CDC Nangl@africa-union.org

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Dr Githinji Gitahi Speaking at AHAIC 2023

Africa needs resilient health systems to survive pandemics – Dr Githinji Gitahi

The Group Chief Executive Officer (GCEO) of Amref Health Africa, Dr Githinji Gitahi, has underscored the importance of making Africa’s health delivery systems more resilient, to be able to deal decisively with future pandemics.  Dr Gitahi pointed out that the COVID-19 pandemic had exposed Africa’s health systems and so in the event of yet another pandemic, “Africa must have the right structures, it must have robust disease surveillance and laboratory systems to ensure that, “we have an adequate response that will protect lives and livelihoods.” According to the Amref Health Africa Group CEO, “the last two years have been difficult for Africa as the experiences of the loss of lives, loss of livelihoods readily come into sharp focus for Africans.” He wondered if Africa would be ready for a recurrence of happenings in the past two years. Amref Health Africa is Africa’s leading health Non-Governmental Organisation (NGO), working with communities in 35 countries to secure the right to health and break the cycle of poverty. Amref has teamed up with the Ministry of Health in Rwanda, the African Union and Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC) to convene the fifth edition of the Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) 2023 to be held in Kigali from March 5-8th. The conference is themed “Resilient Health Systems for Africa: Re-envisioning the Future Now”. Dr Gitahi who is a strong believer in Africa’s socio-economic development noted that Africa was far from ready should happenings in 2020 reoccur in future. “We have challenges with health financing, We do not have what it takes to respond to pandemics, we do not have the right structures, hence the need to engage health experts and researchers from Kenya and across the world for lasting solutions,” he stated. Dr Githati pointed out that climate change was affecting how disease patterns are going, noting that “we have more outbreaks on the continent than ever before, higher frequency, increased regularity.” Climate change is changing how diseases like malaria and other ailments spread and affect communities,“ so we have to reimagine the future health systems now.” He stressed the importance of the Africa Health Agenda International (AHAIC) in finding solutions to the teething challenges in Africa’s health Confirming Dr Githati’s submissions, the Global Preparedness Monitoring Board (GPMB), an independent monitoring and accountability body to ensure preparedness for global health crises has in a statement noted that the world is overshadowed by the risk of pandemics. The statement issued in Geneva on February 22, 2023, said “H5N1 is circulating widely in global animal populations, m-pox remains a public health emergency of international concern (PHEIC), outbreaks of Ebola have happened regularly, coronaviruses continue to pose a threat of spillover, and the COVID-19 pandemic is still causing devastation across the world. Yet worse may be in store. While we cannot tell the precise form that it will take, we do know that the next pandemic is coming.” Article first published on https://energynewsgh.com/africa-needs-resilient-health-systems-to-survive-pandemics-dr-gitahi/

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Opinion: Rethinking global health funding for the good of all

By Githinji Gitahi, Camilla Knox-Pebbles  The United Kingdom is no longer a development superpower — as demonstrated by its own action and admission. In 2020, it cut its aid budget from 0.7% of gross national income to 0.5%, which meant £4.5 billion less committed to supporting the world’s poorest people. Two further rounds of cuts to account for refugee hosting costs in the U.K., and reduced pledges for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and other global health initiatives further eroded its status. And the U.K. is not alone in this: overseas aid budgets of other high-income countries are following similar trends. This has a direct impact on the ability of global health funding initiatives and development organizations to deliver essential health services. Although African nations responded to the call to increase Global Fund pledges, they are faced with their own domestic health financing challenges. African governments continue to struggle to achieve the 15% allocation of their national budgets to health, as outlined by the 2001 Abuja Declaration. And even if they did, with low economic power and low tax efficiencies, this allocation would hardly be adequate. Rather than view it as charity, development assistance should be viewed as a strategic investment aimed at … the global good.— Between dwindling domestic budgets and reduced donor government funding, Africa’s $66 billion annual health funding gap is only set to widen. This means that many people living on the continent are losing their right to health — and their lives. Conflict, poverty, food insecurity, and climate change all act as barriers to closing the gap, yet a healthy Africa would contribute to a healthier world, as proven by the COVID-19 pandemic, which has shown how interlinked our health is across the globe. If we are to address that funding gap, we need to rethink global health and development financing. Stronger systems, structures, and policies The calls for increased and more targeted funding for key health programs in low- and middle-income countries are heartening. However, for global development funding to evolve and guarantee health security for all, we need stronger systems, structures, and policies that will optimize the collection and deployment of funds from donors and ensure funds are used for their intended purposes. In parallel, African governments must be intentional about domestic resource mobilization and resource allocation and utilization. Together, domestic policy reforms combined with donor financing reforms that empower poorer nations to strengthen their health systems can help break the cycle of dependency on development aid. All contribute, all benefit, and all decide Moreover, we require a shift in mindset that will change the way we perceive development financing. Rather than view it as a charity, development assistance should be viewed as a strategic investment aimed at addressing the biggest social, economic, and environmental challenges in low-, middle-, and high-income countries alike — for the global good. This idea, put forward by the Global Public Investment network launched at the United Nations General Assembly in September last year, aims to inspire the world to move away from the “old-fashioned aid mentality” toward a common framework based on the principles of “all contribute, all benefit, and all decide.” It’s a bold idea. Not just for its clear stance on the inability of current international finance mechanisms to meet the challenges of climate change, disease outbreaks, and conflict, but for its desire to uphold the ideals of equity and inclusion in global health and development — both of which have long been elusive for recipients of development assistance. Having lost over 6.8 million lives to the COVID-19 pandemic, we know all too well the cost of failing to invest in the right resources to protect the world before and during times of crisis. Knowing what we stand to lose should we fail to act, we must move with haste to restructure global health and development financing to fulfil the expectations of countries and to meet populations at their points of need. These conversations will be front and centre at the upcoming Africa Health Agenda International Conference on March 5-8 in Kigali. The conference is convened by Amref Health Africa, the Government of Rwanda, and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention, and it is a platform for us to rethink global health funding for the good of all. The views in this opinion piece do not necessarily reflect Devex’s editorial views. About the authors Githinji Gitahi Dr. Githinji Gitahi is the group chief executive officer of Amref Health Africa, the largest Africa-led international organization, reaching more than 11 million people each year through 150 health-focused projects across 35 countries. Previously, Dr. Githinji was vice president and Africa regional director for Smile Train International; managing director for Monitor Publications in Uganda; and general manager for marketing and circulation in East Africa for the Nation Media Group. Dr. Githinji also sits on the boards of the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention and The Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations. Camilla Knox-Pebbles Camilla Knox-Peebles has been the chief executive of Amref Health Africa UK since 2019. She has 25 years of experience in the humanitarian and international development sectors. Prior to joining Amref, she worked for Oxfam where she led the organization’s disaster response and oversaw its work on water and sanitation, public health and resilience building. She is an expert in public health and food security and has a particular interest in the intersection between health and climate change Article first published on https://www.devex.com/news/sponsored/opinion-rethinking-global-health-funding-for-the-good-of-all-104999

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Desta Lakew - Group Director of Partnerships & External Affairs

“We have to move quickly to strengthen fragile health systems,” says Amref director

At #AHAIC2023, Africa’s leaders will talk about climate change and how to build resilient health systems. Amref Health Africa’s Desta Lakew talks about the key issues. There is an undeniable link between health and climate change, and Africa is especially vulnerable. For example, coastal waters have become more suitable for the transmission of Vibrio pathogens, according to the 2022 Lancet Countdown on health and climate change. The report compares the period of 2012 to 2021 with a similar span a half century earlier: 1951 to 1960. Researchers found that the number of months suitable for malaria transmission increased by 13·8% in the highland areas of Africa, while the likelihood of dengue transmission increased by 12%. More recently, the COVID-19 pandemic precipitated decline of already struggling health systems. Recently, I spoke with one of our Amref colleagues about the correlations between climate change and health. Desta Lakew is Group Partnership and External Affairs Director for Amref Health Africa — which is leading the upcoming Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) in Kigali, Rwanda, from March 5 to 8. The theme for this year’s AHAIC is “Resilient Health Systems for Africa: Re-envisioning the Future Now.” What are the major challenges you see facing healthcare systems in Africa? Africa’s health systems face a myriad of challenges. These include longstanding ones such as inadequate infrastructure and financing, insufficient health workforce and a high infectious and non-communicable disease burden, as well as the more recent climate-related health crises like rising food insecurity, frequent outbreaks of diseases such as malaria, monkeypox and Ebola and limited access to clean water and sanitation. Since we held the first AHAIC in 2014, we have seen a significant increase in the number of climate and health emergencies recorded on the continent and survived a global pandemic that threatened to completely decimate our fragile health systems. In that time we have also seen the establishment of the African Medicines Agency (AMA), the achievement of autonomy for the African Centres of Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), capacity building for vaccine manufacturing in Africa and growing regional cooperation, all of which point to our potential to surmount these challenges — no matter how daunting they seem. Are there major steps forwards that you’d like to see actualized in the near future, for building resilient healthcare systems in Africa? The past few years have shown us that strong and resilient health systems are critical for our continent to ensure equitable access to health for our people. This year’s conference theme is a call to action to guide what we feel needs to be done to move united in our purpose to strengthen Africa’s health systems and ready ourselves for the future now. Perhaps one of the crucial steps towards achieving this is strengthening regional cooperation and speaking in one voice. We need to leverage our diversity and strengths to come up with sustainable, inclusive, equitable health policies for Africa by Africa while at the same time acknowledging that we have no time to waste if we are to recalibrate the course of climate change and health on the continent. It is time for us to move beyond the same rhetoric we have heard for the past few years and commit to action. The conference program is an ambitious one. What are you most looking forward to discussing at AHAIC 2023? We are very excited about all of the conversations that will be taking place. However, what makes me super excited is an area that we have not seen adequately addressed, which is the intersection of climate change and health. This is such a critical and timely issue for us, and based on our experience and the ominous projections of the impact of climate change in Africa’s health outcomes, this could not have come at a more important time. We have to move quickly to strengthen fragile health systems through greater regional and global cooperation, scaling up health financing in the midst of economic crises, bridging the global north-south divide, building a fit-for-purpose African health workforce, and tapping into the power of communities to drive innovation and solidify ownership of Africa’s health agenda. Amref has long been a champion of enhanced regional cooperation, and this conference offers us — and our partners — a platform to bring Africa’s leaders across all levels to find a means to achieving the goal of a united, prosperous, healthy continent. We are also very excited to be the first global health conference held in Africa that is seeking to mainstream climate into health talks and vice versa. With mounting evidence on the strong linkages between the two, we believe that the only way to tackle these intertwined challenges is to address them together, and AHAIC will be the first convening of its kind to focus on climate change as a key determinant of health. Is there a call to action — or hope for the future — you’d like to share with readers? There is the saying that “insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results.” My call to action is that we as leaders of this continent, advocates for our people, re-think how we work in partnership and across sectors to own our narrative, leverage opportunities for collective action and ensure that we work find tangible solutions for improving the health of our continent. This means alignment, prioritization and responsible investment in our health systems. Everyone can use their voices and platforms to bring attention to the issues that truly matter — the collective health and wellbeing of both people and planet being one of them — and to actively participate in discourse and action that will bring us closer to creating the world we want for ourselves and future generations.

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Placing Women At The Centre Of Health Leadership In Africa Key To Achieving UHC

Author(s): Dr. Norah Obudho, Health Integration and East Africa Director, WomenLift Health; Dr. Florence Temu, Country Director, Amref Health Africa in Tanzania  Over a decade ago, Pan African Parliament Women’s Conference President, Mavis Matladi of South Africa, declared that it was “more dangerous to be a woman than a soldier” in Africa. In that time much has changed, but at the same time, too much has remained the same. While women and girls now have more access to education and economic opportunities and are better represented in politics and other spheres of leadership, they remain the most vulnerable to the impacts of disease outbreaks, fragile health systems, conflict, domestic abuse, economic instability, and climate change.  African women and girls for example still account for about 66 per cent of global maternal mortality rates and are twice as likely as boys to miss out on formal education. Additionally, approximately 63 per cent of the world’s extremely poor women live in Sub-Saharan Africa, limiting their ability to access essential health services and pushing the continent further away from achieving its health targets. Much of this has been driven by sociocultural norms skewed towards enforcing patriarchal structures that have traditionally subdued women and denied them access to the same rights as men. The same structures have also perpetuated the gender inequities that keep women from attaining leadership positions, which are often assumed to be reserved for men despite the presence of numerous, qualified women on the continent. Consequently, decisions in health are frequently made without women’s input, even when the issues at hand directly affect them, as with maternal and reproductive health. While it would be unfair and simplistic to blame one gender for the loss of millions of lives due to infectious and non-communicable diseases, poor quality health services, and lack of access to essential care, there is a direct correlation between Africa’s health outcomes and its health leadership. Considering the majority of positions in health leadership are occupied by men, and that nearly all decisions affecting the resilience and responsiveness of our health systems are made by men, one could then rightly say that Africa’s homogenous health leadership has been – and continues to be – a key determinant in the continent’s (in)ability to achieve health for all. Now, as we stand at the midway point of the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 target, it would benefit us to have candid conversations about leadership and the role it plays in either bringing us closer to the goals or taking us further away from them.  The simple truth is that leadership that is not representative of the people it serves, be this across racial, gender, or socio-economic lines, will not and cannot address the challenges preventing us from ensuring the highest attainable level of health for all. We need to reimagine the face of health leadership if we are to rebuild our health systems and equip them to move towards and sustain universal health coverage (UHC).  By placing the needs of women at the centre of health system design and delivery and elevating our voices in health, we can unlock gender equity at the leadership level and add impetus to Africa’s journey towards UHC. In doing so, we would also allow women to not only be consumers of health services but to be the leaders that our health systems need if they are to meet our needs and withstand future health shocks. This is not to discount the contribution of male leadership. It’s simply to say that there is a need for balanced representation in leadership to include women and other minority groups. By excluding key groups in decision-making, we fail to benefit from the knowledge and wisdom provided by their lived experiences. For it is only those who feel the weight of the burdens they bear that can help create solutions to those burdens.  Achieving health for all is within reach, but it requires a seismic shift in leadership to create and implement uniquely African solutions to the challenges we face on this continent. If more governments embrace the role of women and girls as leaders and bring them to decision-making tables, we can come closer to achieving UHC.  Africa is ripe for this change. It is indeed exciting to see this agenda being driven by development leaders such as Amref Health Africa through their upcoming Africa Health Agenda International Conference, which will provide a platform for discussions on gender equity, health leadership, and the role of women in health.  By strengthening male allyship, engaging women at all levels, and working together to promote inclusive leadership that considers the needs of the most vulnerable among us, we can achieve the goals that have been for far too long eluded us.  In accomplishing this we can make Africa a continent where women and girls do not simply try to survive, but where they thrive – in every sense of the word – alongside men and boys. Article first published on https://www.africa.com/placing-women-at-the-centre-of-health-leadership-in-africa-key-to-achieving-uhc/

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Youth-led digital transformation of health systems

CAROLINE MBINDYO, SAM MWANGI and ALICE KAMPENGELE FOR years now, the global technology community has touted Africa as the next frontier for growth, with tech hubs in Nairobi, Lagos, Cairo, and Cape Town attracting Silicon Valley investors and developing home-grown innovations. With a ready market for digital technologies created by the ubiquity of the mobile phone, investment in internet connectivity, and Africa’s young, educated and tech-savvy population, the continent should be championing digital transformation of health systems. Africa faces a formidable task in eradicating endemic diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and HIV alongside the growing burden of non-communicable diseases on the continent, which is higher than the global average. With only 1.55 doctors per 1,000 people, according to World Health Organisation, digital health may offer most efficient means of scaling access to quality health services. While digital technologies are not a panacea for Africa’s relatively weak health systems, innovation in digital health can address high financial costs of delivering health care and increase the number of people in contact with the formal health system. These technologies may offer a more efficient approach to responding to challenges of overburdened health workers and high burden of disease on the continent. Technologies such as the internet of things and virtual care, for example, can bring doctors into patients’ homes, cutting transport costs, reducing the need for referrals to major hospitals and the number of consultations needed. Tele-health can also support self management of care so that patient care is not solely reliant on health professionals. E pharmacy would allow patients to receive their medications at home, cutting the need to travel to multiple pharmacies to fulfil prescriptions. This has been particularly beneficial for individuals in rural or remote areas who would otherwise have limited access to health care services. Data captured during these digital health transactions can be stored and shared across the health ecosystem, creating a continuum of care to enhance health outcomes. This can be achieved by improving medical diagnosis, data riven treatment decisions, digital therapeutics, self-management of care, as well as creating more evidence-based knowledge. These factors are especially critical on a continent where more people have access to mobile phones than to clean water and basic sanitation. Digital health is no longer about leveraging digital tools in the health sector, but how we can transform health services in a digital world. Young Africans are not just consumers of these innovations, but also creators. They bring with them a unique perspective and understanding of digital technologies and their potential to revolutionise the health care industry. From solar-powered hearing aids to cloud-based hospitals, to improving access to mental health in Africa, creative start-ups across the continent are developing disruptive digital health solutions. However, increasing innovation in digital health and creating a ready market for these innovations is dependent on our ability to leverage Africa’s youth demographic dividend and narrow the digital and financing divide. The narrowing of digital and financing divide is between urban and rural youth, and between African youth and their counterparts from high-income countries. Digital technology has the power to fundamentally change health outcomes of the continent’s population. With an estimated 70 percent of its 1.2 billion population under the age of 30, Africa’s youth present an enormous opportunity for the continent to lead the way in digital health innovations. They are hungry to participate in re imagining health in Africa as innovators, leaders, and adopters of technology. However, despite the wide access to mobile connectivity, 60 percent of African adolescents are not connected to the internet, compared to four percent of those in Europe. Allowing this digital divide to persist perpetuates inequities that bar those who lack digital skills or access to the internet from harnessing opportunities in health, education, commerce, and beyond. With so much at stake, African youth need to take a front seat in the digital transformation of the continent and use their bargaining power to advocate for more resilient health systems. Africa is home to seven of the world’s fastest-growing economies. This makes the region a fertile ground for innovative market based solutions. Youth-led digital transformation of health systems has potential to drive and deliver universal health coverage to Africa. Moreover, the involvement of youth in development of health technologies leads to their increased participation in the health sector, creating opportunities for growth and innovation. Yet, despite this promising outlook, health innovators in Africa face numerous challenges in getting their innovations to scale. Some analysis suggests that local innovators in Africa are less likely to be funded despite annual growth in venture capital investments on the continent. There is an urgent need for governments and other duty bearers to act and make funding and financing mechanisms accessible to young African innovators, to include not just capital, but also investments in infrastructure, human capital, and science and technology. There is also need to build the right regulatory environment for piloting innovations and develop conducive policies related to regional cooperation and ease of doing business. Such investment would also address inequalities in health to ensure a more inclusive approach to the design and delivery of health care – one that considers the heterogeneous nature of the population and offers care that is responsive to the needs of communities and individuals. It is estimated that in just seven years, 40 percent of the world’s youth will be in Africa. Imagine what we could achieve if we empowered them to lead the continent’s digital health transformation. Conversations on driving youth led digital transformations in Africa will be front and centre at the Africa Health Agenda International Conference, which will take place from March 5 to 8 in Kigali, Rwanda. The authors are Caroline Mbindyo, Amref Health Innovations CEO; Sam Mwangi, Amref Health Africa head of digital transformation; and Alice Kampengele, Amref Health (Zambia) programme

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Climate Change to Take Centre Stage at Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) in March 2023

Political leaders, policy makers, civil society, health, and climate leaders convene in Kigali, Rwanda, to discuss health policies for Africa against backdrop of global challenges, including climate change, food insecurity, conflict and economic recession. 7th February 2023, Nairobi, Kenya: Stakeholders in health and development from all over the world will, from 5-8 March, assemble in Kigali, Rwanda, for the fifth edition of The Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) 2023, whose theme is “Resilient Health Systems for Africa: Re-envisioning the Future Now”. Jointly convened by Amref Health Africa, Ministry of Health Rwanda, African Union and Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC), the biennial conference will bring together the continent’s top thought leaders, political figures, innovators, researchers, policy makers and civil society for dialogue and action aimed at mainstreaming climate discourse into health policy conversations and vice versa. “This will be the first time that a global health conference in Africa focuses on climate change as a key determinant of health. We know that climate change and health are intrinsically intertwined, yet they have for decades now been treated as two separate issues,” said Dr Githinji Gitahi, Group CEO, Amref Health Africa. “At AHAIC 2023, we will be exploring themes at the nexus of climate change and health including a rapidly warming planet, pandemic preparedness, food security and nutrition, innovation, research and development, gender, and conflict.” AHAIC 2023 comes against the backdrop of renewed calls by African leaders for more urgent action against climate change as its impacts continue to be acutely felt on the continent. At the heart of the conference will be sessions curated to find sustainable and inclusive solutions to Africa’s most pressing climate change and health challenges. “African nations remain particularly vulnerable to the effects of climate change. We are already feeling the effects of deteriorating global health through extreme weather events and food insecurity, limited access to clean water, and frequent epidemics. Yet these issues remain on the periphery of climate conversations despite the existence of scientific evidence that climate change threatens our well-being,” said Dr Sabin Nsanzimana, Minister of Health, Rwanda. As the world inches closer to the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals deadline, African leaders at the conference will be urging the global community to renew its commitments to end poverty and improve health and wellbeing while at the same time protecting the planet. With a youthful population of 1.2 billion people likely to bear the brunt of climate change, participants at the conference will also be advocating for more resources to be allocated to resolving the global health and climate crises as the world slowly emerges from the three-year grip of the COVID-19 pandemic.  “While we remain cautiously optimistic about the world’s ability to prevent and withstand the next global pandemic, we must also be cognisant that we cannot survive what we do not prepare for. It is, therefore, imperative that we come together to find solutions to today’s and tomorrow’s challenges while we still have the opportunity. Together with Member States and partners such as Amref, the Africa CDC will continue to implement the New Public Health Order to drive Africa’s health security,” said Dr Ahmed Ogwell Ouma, Acting Director General, Africa CDC. AHAIC 2023 aims to shape a joint African position on climate and health ahead of critical conversations that will take place at the World Health Assembly, the 78th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA 78), and the 28th session of the Conference of the Parties (COP 28) later in the year. The conference will kick off with the AHAIC 2023 Wogging event on 5th March to coincide with the Kigali Car Free Day, which takes place every first and third Sunday of the month as part of efforts to make Kigali a green city and to fight non-communicable diseases (NCDs). This will be followed by three days of plenaries, high level meetings, workshops and networking sessions that will take place from 6th to 8th March. ### Notes to Editors: About AHAIC The Africa Health Agenda International Conference (AHAIC) is a flagship convening of Amref Health Africa and is the largest health and development conference held in Africa every two years. Now in its fifth round, AHAIC 2023 will bring together the African community, world leaders, financiers, innovators, technologists, scientists, and experts across domains to discuss health policies for Africa in response to the most pressing challenges of our times – conflict, climate change, food insecurity and human rights violations. AHAIC 2023 puts people at the centre of all discussions and recognises the unique needs of the global south. We encourage minority populations, African nations and other low- and middle-income countries to get involved in re-shaping Africa’s health and development trajectory. Run by and for the people of Africa in Africa, AHAIC 2023 is designed to tackle complex issues in a practical manner and promises to be more challenging, innovative, and fun than other global health events. Additional Resources:  To learn more about AHAIC 2023, please visit www.ahaic.org. You can also view the conference programme online at: https://ahaic.org/conference-programme/ Get real-time updates from the conference by following Amref Health Africa on Twitter | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram and via #AHAIC2023. Media Contacts: Erick Achola, Global Communications Manager, Amref Health Africa Erick.Achola@Amref.org Julien Niyingabira Mahoro, Rwanda Biomedical Centre/Ministry of Health Rwanda niyingabira@gmail.com or Magnifique Muhoza (Office of the Government Spokesperson) mmuhoza@ogs.gov.rw Liliane Bilogho Ndong Nang, Technical Officer Risk Communication and Community Engagement, Africa CDC Nangl@africa-union.org

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Placing Women At The Centre Of Health Leadership In Africa Key To Achieving UHC

Author(s): Dr. Norah Obudho, Health Integration and East Africa Director, WomenLift Health; Dr. Florence Temu, Country Director, Amref Health Africa in Tanzania  Over a decade ago, Pan African Parliament Women’s Conference President, Mavis Matladi of South Africa, declared that it was “more dangerous to be a woman than a soldier” in Africa. In that time much has changed, but at the same time, too much has remained the same. While women and girls now have more access to education and economic opportunities and are better represented in politics and other spheres of leadership, they remain the most vulnerable to impacts of disease outbreaks, fragile health systems, conflict, domestic abuse, economic instability, and climate change.  African women and girls for example still account for about 66 percent of global maternal mortality rates and are twice as likely as boys to miss out on formal education. Additionally, approximately 63 percent of the world’s extremely poor women live in Sub-Saharan Africa, limiting their ability to access essential health services and pushing the continent further away from achieving its health targets. Much of this has been driven by sociocultural norms skewed towards enforcing patriarchal structures that have traditionally subdued women and denied them access to the same rights as men. The same structures have also perpetuated the gender inequities that keep women from attaining leadership positions, which are often assumed to be reserved for men despite the presence of numerous, qualified women on the continent. Consequently, decisions in health are frequently made without women’s input, even when the issues at hand directly affect them, as with maternal and reproductive health. While it would be unfair and simplistic to blame one gender for the loss of millions of lives due to infectious and non-communicable diseases, poor quality health services, and lack of access to essential care, there is a direct correlation between Africa’s health outcomes and its health leadership. Considering majority of positions in health leadership are occupied by men, and that nearly all decisions affecting the resilience and responsiveness of our health systems are made by men, one could then rightly say that Africa’s homogenous health leadership has been – and continues to be – a key determinant in the continent’s (in)ability to achieve health for all. Now, as we stand at the midway point of the Sustainable Development Goals 2030 target, it would benefit us to have candid conversations about leadership and the role it plays in either bringing us closer to the goals or taking us further away from them.  The simple truth is that leadership that is not representative of the people it serves, be this across racial, gender, or socio-economic lines, will not and cannot address the challenges preventing us from ensuring the highest attainable level of health for all. We need to reimagine the face of health leadership if we are to rebuild our health systems and equip them to move towards and sustain universal health coverage (UHC).  By placing the needs of women at the centre of health system design and delivery and elevating our voices in health, we can unlock gender equity at leadership level and add impetus to Africa’s journey towards UHC. In doing so, we would also allow women to not only be consumers of health services, but to be the leaders that our health systems need if they are to meet our needs and withstand future health shocks. This is not to discount the contribution of male leadership. It’s simply to say that there is need for balanced representation in leadership to include women and other minority groups. By excluding key groups in decision-making, we fail to benefit from the knowledge and wisdom provided by their lived experiences. For it is only those who feel the weight of the burdens they bear that can help create solutions to those burdens.  Achieving health for all is within reach, but it requires a seismic shift in leadership to create and implement uniquely African solutions to the challenges we face on this continent. If more governments embrace the role of women and girls as leaders and bring them to decision-making tables, we can come closer to achieving UHC.  Africa is ripe for this change. It is indeed exciting to see this agenda being driven by development leaders such as Amref Health Africa through their upcoming Africa Health Agenda International Conference, which will provide a platform for discussions on gender equity, health leadership, and the role of women in health.  By strengthening male allyship, engaging women at all levels, and working together to promote inclusive leadership that considers the needs of the most vulnerable among us, we can achieve the goals that have for far too long eluded us.  In accomplishing this we can make Africa a continent where women and girls do not simply try to survive, but where they thrive – in every sense of the word – alongside men and boys.

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