Accra, Nov. 21, GNA - While Africa confronts the
world’s most dramatic public health crisis, it can
over time meet the challenges; given sufficient
international support, a first-ever report to focus
on the health of the 738 million people living in
the United Nations Health Agency’s African Region
released on Tuesday said.
“Every year millions of Africans are dying
needlessly of diseases that are preventable and
treatable,” UN World Health Organization (WHO)
Regional Director, Luis Gomes Sambo said of the
study, The Health of the People: the African
Regional Health Report.
“The vast majority of people living in Africa have
yet to benefit from advances in medical research and
public health. The result is an immense burden of
death and disease that is devastating for African
societies,” he said of the Report, which looks at
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria, and
pregnancy-related conditions that kill mothers and
babies.
A statement issued in Accra on Tuesday by the UN
Information Centre said it also highlighted the
lesser known problems of chronic diseases, such as
diabetes and hypertension, and other
non-communicable conditions, such as mental illness
and injuries.
“The challenge for African governments and their
partners is to coordinate the provision of health
care more effectively than ever before, and to
ensure that all funds are used in an accountable
manner to the benefit of the African people,” Mr
Gomes Sambo said.
WHO’s African Region has 46 Member States, covering
all parts of the Continent except Djibouti, Egypt,
Libya, Morocco, Somalia, Sudan, Tunisia and Western
Sahara.
The Report says its central message is clear:
“African countries will not develop economically and
socially without substantial improvements in the
health of their people.”
The health-care interventions – treatments,
diagnostic and preventive methods – that are needed
in this Region are known. The challenge for African
countries and their partners is to deliver these to
the people who need them.”
On the positive side, the Report notes that there
are signs everywhere that Africa is finding African
approaches to solving its health problems.
In Uganda, 50 per cent of all HIV/AIDS patients have
been reached with life-saving antiretroviral
medicine through an innovative programme that trains
nurses to do work traditionally done by doctors.
The number of HIV-positive people on antiretroviral
medicines across the Region increased eight-fold,
from 100,000 in December 2003 to 810,000 in December
2005.
The statement said river blindness had been
eliminated as a health problem in the Region, and
guinea worm control efforts have slashed cases by 97
per cent since 1986. Leprosy is near elimination,
with less than one case per 10,000 people.
Most States were making good progress on preventable
childhood illness, with polio close to eradication,
and 37 countries reaching 60 per cent or more of
children with measles immunization, it said.
The Report also provides the measure of the
challenges Africa faces. HIV/AIDS continues to
devastate the Region, which has 11 per cent of the
world’s population but 60 per cent of people with
HIV/AIDS. And more than 90 per cent of the estimated
300 million to 500 million malaria cases worldwide
each year are in Africa, mainly children under five
years of age, although most countries are moving
towards better treatment policies, including
artemisinin-based combination therapy.
GNA