FINANCING HEALTHY FUTURES TO MEET THE SDGS
Opinion:
Global health is rapidly changing. Often we influence and affect those developments, and sometimes, we do so successfully through learning based on evidence of what works. One of the lessons learned is that we can accomplish more when we work together toward common goals, aligning our resources and bringing complementary competencies, skills and experiences.
Global health is rapidly changing. Often we influence and affect those developments, and sometimes, we do so successfully through learning based on evidence of what works. One of the lessons learned is that we can accomplish more when we work together toward common goals, aligning our resources and bringing complementary competencies, skills and experiences.
Our
partnerships are paramount as countries face one of their greatest challenges:
Saving and improving the lives of women, children and adolescents everywhere.
Still, 300,000 mothers and 2.8 million newborns die annually. 1 million of them
die on their birthdays. Almost all of these deaths occur in poor communities
and most of them are preventable.
Last
month, Senegal’s Minister of Health Awa Marie Coll-Seck issued a statement
shared at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, emphasizing how a
public-private partnership in Senegal helped ensure that contraceptives reached
women who did not previously have access through a supply system that reaches
the last mile. Doing so consistently made a difference. These contraceptives
help women and men safely plan their families and boost families’ economic
prospects, as well as the country’s prospects.
With
the support of MSD for Mothers and the Bill &
Melinda Gates Foundation, working through IntraHealth
International and other partners, stock outs in health
facilities fell significantly, and the contraceptive prevalence rate almost
doubled, from 12 percent in 2012 to more than 21 percent in 2015.
This
is an example of a government-led effort to tackle a health services delivery
problem in partnership with the private sector developing and deploying the
solution. To further scale and sustain these lifesaving efforts, the Senegalese
government will use the Global Financing
Facility to expand the supply system and distribute other
life-saving interventions for mothers and children under 5, including vaccines
and medicines for malaria, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis. Through the GFF, the many
partners who work in health come together to align their support for greater
impact, with the government also contributing its domestic resources.
Many
of the world’s poorest countries, with many dollars from donors, have made
progress toward improving the health of their people in recent decades. But their
efforts are unprepared for today and for the future without a more coordinated
— and country-driven — effort to reach the communities in greatest need with
high-impact health interventions. Efforts will also need to focus on those
critical social determinants of health that will save and improve many more
lives for generations to come. Many countries are beginning to prepare for a
future in which they must increasingly finance the health demands of their
people, especially those with the greatest needs.
The
GFF helps provide smart, scaled and sustained funding by supporting countries
to identify and prioritize high-impact interventions for reproductive,
maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health and nutrition, through
approaches that ensure more equitable access. It reduces the financial gap
through a combination of domestic resources, funds from donors aligning their
investments, private sector financing and concessional lending, with the GFF
Trust Fund linked to World Bank financing.
In
this new development era of the Sustainable Development Goals, countries are
charting a healthier future for women, children and adolescents through the GFF
partnership. The World Bank Group, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Gavi, the
Vaccine Alliance, and the Global Fund
to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, along with the private
sector and government donors such as Canada and Norway are aligning their
funding, in partnership with the United Nations, to support one country-driven
investment case and strategy that strengthens the health system by focusing on
high-impact, fiscally efficient solutions, like the one described in Senegal.
MSD
for Mothers recently announced a $10 million
commitment to the GFF Trust Fund — the first from the private
sector — which will be used for innovative financing and public-private
partnerships to scale up high-impact interventions to help women and children
survive and thrive through the critical periods of life: birth, the early years
and adolescence.
With
leadership and partnerships like these, countries will make a much greater
impact on the lives of their most vulnerable citizens. Together, we can go
further, faster and finance much healthier futures.
FINANCING HEALTHY FUTURES TO MEET THE SDGS
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