Nigeria Health Online

African Health Ministers reaffirm joint determination to regain impact on TB

          

African Health Ministers at the recently concluded 33rd ‘Stop TB Partnership’ Board Meeting  held virtually on November 18-20 have reaffirmed their joint determination and collective efforts to regain impact on TB and revitalize efforts towards saving lives

The ministers restated their commitments in a joint statement issued after the High Level Roundtable  with the theme: “TB Response in the African Region: Unprecedented Actions for Unprecedented Times” held in  collaboration with The African Union, The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria and Nigeria’s Federal Ministry of Health.

The statement  noted that  an unprecedented global health emergency, caused by COVID-19 pandemic, has jeopardized the results achieved in saving millions of lives and providing access to essential TB care and prevention.

“In spite of all efforts, health systems resources are overstretched due to COVID-19 response, leading to serious disruptions in the functioning and access to TB diagnosis, treatment and prevention services. Globally, these disruptions could result in an additional 6.3 million people developing tuberculosis and 1.4 million deaths between 2020 and 2025.”

The ministers also  noted a setback towards the attainment of the 2022 UNHLM targets and commitments as  “financing of COVID-19 mitigation measures, coupled with economic slowdown, has diminished governments’ ability to meet domestic funding commitments for tuberculosis, the world’s top infectious disease killer.”

They however reaffirmed  their joint determination and collective efforts “to regain impact on TB, ensure access to essential care and prevention and revitalize efforts towards saving lives.

“While we applaud each other countries’ individual accomplishments in addressing TB, this Joint Ministerial Statement aims to accelerate the alleviation of the impact of COVID-19 pandemic, through an inclusive, multisectoral and action-driven TB response,” the statement said.

The Ministers resolved to maintain and increase domestic financing for TB “Pursuant to the united vision and shared solidarity to recover the impact of TB and accelerate towards the targets of the Political Declaration during the UN High-Level Meeting in September 2018 (UNGA) as well as the African Union Catalytic Framework to End HIV/AIDS, TB and Eliminate Malaria by 2030 targets, and to address the existing and projected TB funding gaps, secure sustainable domestic financing and strengthen the national programs”

 They pledged to work towards increasing investments in TB response by:

“We, the Ministers of health are determined to work together to minimize the impact of ongoing COVID-19 pandemic on TB services and programming. We affirm the importance of putting in place key actions for implementation that are tailored to the context of our countries,” the statement further said.

Countries represented at the High Level Roundtable include Cameroon, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda and Zambia.

 

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