WHO ‘scales up’ health interventions in Africa

A mother and child receive nutritional advice. The World Health Organization has unveiled a new set of priority actions to better address preventable health conditions in Africa. Photo by: Noor Khamis / Department for International Development / CC BY-NC-ND

The World Health Organization has unveiled a new set of priority actions to better address preventable health conditions in Africa.

The U.N. agency presented its updated health promotion strategy at the 62nd WHO Regional Committee for Africa session in Luanda, Angola.

The new 10-year strategy highlights what WHO, member states and other stakeholders can do to “scale up” efforts to reduce primary causes of preventable deaths, illnesses, injuries, and new and re-emerging threats to health in the African region, WHO Regional Director for Africa Luis Sambo said.

The seven proposed actions are:

At the regional committee session, which runs Nov. 19-23, Sambo noted the progress made in advancing access to and use of vaccines and antiretroviral drugs. He also proposed to create a regional medicines agency to fortify Africa’s pharmaceutical industry.

More than 350 delegates are attending the five-day session. Health promotion, HIV treatment and prevention, and human rights are among the topics for discussion. WHO’s work plan for the next two years and its proposed budget for 2014-2015 are on the agenda as well.

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