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Africa Unites to Take Stock of Disease Burden and Financial Needs towards Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)s Elimination by 2030
Africa Unites to Take Stock of Disease Burden and Financial Needs towards Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)s Elimination by 2030

Zawya

timea day ago

  • Health
  • Zawya

Africa Unites to Take Stock of Disease Burden and Financial Needs towards Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD)s Elimination by 2030

Fifty African Union Member States have endorsed a ground-breaking digital micro-planning portal co-created by Africa CDC to accelerate the elimination of Neglected Tropical Diseases — a diverse group of infectious diseases that primarily affect impoverished communities in tropical and subtropical areas. This innovative platform developed with inputs from Member States, World Health Organization (WHO), END Fund, and other technical partners will track resource utilisation, advocate for sustainable financing and domestic resource mobilisation, and drive Africa-owned solutions to end these diseases of poverty by 2030. Each Member State shared a country-specific micro-plan for the top six high-burden NTDs guided by existing national Masterplans. This continental NTD microplanning workshop, held from 17 to 20 June occurred in the context of the recent reduction in funding from key global partners, which has disrupted essential NTD programmes and exposed the vulnerabilities in current financing models. 'Public health efforts across Africa are under threat, funding is among the challenges, noting that this makes the continued engagement and energy around NTD elimination even more commendable,' said Dr Raji Tajudeen, Africa CDC Acting Deputy Director General and Head, Division of Public Health Institutes and Research. Dr Dereje Duguma Gemeda, Ethiopian State Minister for Health said the workshop will help countries have a practical and data driven NTDs plan that will improve efforts to accelerate elimination efforts. Currently, 'The African Region is endemic for 20 of the 21-priority neglected tropical diseases; affecting over 565 million people and comprising 35 per cent of the global disease burden,' said Dr Ibrahima Soce Fall – Global NTD Director at the WHO. These diseases lead to significant morbidity, including physical and visual impairments, severe malnutrition, chronic pain, disfigurement, stigma and mental health issues, and death,' he said. Common NTDs include Intestinal worms, lymphatic filariasis, river blindness, Schistosomiasis, trachoma, and Visceral leishmaniasis. This new approach of micro-planning is designed to drive integrated country and regional planning, streamline resource mobilisation, and enhance budget efficiency—minimising duplication and maximising impact—to accelerate the elimination of NTDs. 'This situation underscores the urgent need for sustainable, country-owned solutions that leverage existing national capacities, optimize domestic resources, and identify key areas requiring targeted external investment,' said Dr states and partners over the 4 days immersed opportunity for cross country experience sharing and planning are keen to find a financial solution for integrated multi-sectoral NTD elimination. 'We stand at a critical juncture, not just for NTD elimination, but for rethinking health financing in Africa. Traditional reliance on foreign aid has demonstrated its limits. It's time for collaborative, country-led financing strategies that harness catalytic opportunities from residual foreign assistance while boosting efficiency in programming and domestic resource mobilization,' said Dr Solomon Zewdu, CEO, The END fund. 'This approach will drive the needed long-term sustainability and resilience. The END Fund is committed to being a trusted partner in this transformation, supporting governments and partners in developing co-financing models that deliver results and leave no community behind,' said Dr Zewdu. The meeting ensured countries have a comprehensive and costed country, and regional specific microplan for NTDs, identified country-specific technical assistance needs and detailed existing resources and partners within each member state to enhance collaboration and resource sharing. 'The elimination of NTDs is more than a public health objective: it is a lever for development and a decisive step towards achieving the African Union's Agenda 2063,' said Professor Julio Rakotonirina, Director for Health and Humanitarian Affairs, African Union Commission. 'The development of the micro-plan is only the first step. Success will lie in national ownership, resource mobilization, and, above all, operationalization on the ground.'Africa CDC, The END Fund and partners solidified their partnership with the micro-planning platform to accelerate ending NTD's by 2030. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (Africa CDC).

What we know about photo allegedly showing $300M worth of meds set to expire due to USAID cuts
What we know about photo allegedly showing $300M worth of meds set to expire due to USAID cuts

Yahoo

time20-02-2025

  • Health
  • Yahoo

What we know about photo allegedly showing $300M worth of meds set to expire due to USAID cuts

In mid-February 2025, a photograph spread on social media purportedly showing $300 million worth of medication sitting in a warehouse and about to expire due to U.S. President Donald Trump's freeze on foreign aid spending. Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., posted the image to X (archived) on Feb. 12, 2025, saying the drugs depicted would have prevented people "from going blind from a preventable tropical disease." He added, "Trump would rather waste them in an East African warehouse." His post also circulated on Threads and Facebook (archived, archived, archived). One X user who reposted the claim said it was an example of medicine nearing expiration "sitting in warehouses around the globe, unable to be used because of Trump's foreign aid halt" (archived). On Jan. 20, 2025, Trump announced an executive order that imposed a 90-day freeze on U.S. foreign aid programs. The administration also took an axe to the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the main U.S. federal agency providing foreign aid. The Trump administration said it would put all directly hired employees of USAID on leave and recall thousands working overseas. However, on Jan. 29, Secretary of State Marco Rubio then issued a waiver of the 90-day pause, which allowed implementers of existing lifesaving humanitarian assistance programs to continue or resume their work. A spokesperson from Coons' office said via email that the medications depicted in the photograph were part of the USAID-funded Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTD) program, which Rubio's waiver did not exempt from the freeze. Coons is co-chair of the Senate Caucus on Malaria and NTDs. According to Coons' spokesperson, an individual affiliated with the NTD program took the photograph on Feb. 6 at a warehouse in Tanzania. The spokesperson said the individual wished to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal. The spokesperson also said most of the boxes visible in the photo contained the antibiotic Zithromax, which the pharmaceutical corporation Pfizer produced and donated to the program, and that the drugs could potentially go to waste. According to the spokesperson, "These drugs are at risk of expiration, as unless NTDs are added to the waiver, the program these medicines were donated for will not restart and there will be no way to get these medicines out of the warehouse." The spokesperson did not detail how many doses of Zithromax were in the boxes, nor the price per dose. Snopes contacted the drug's manufacturer, Pfizer, for comment. We will update this story if we receive a response. On Feb. 13, a federal judge in Washington, D.C., ordered a temporary thaw on Trump's foreign aid freeze. The ruling demanded the administration notify every organization with an existing contract with the federal government of the temporary stay. It also set a deadline of Feb. 18 for the government to inform the court of its compliance. However, some confusion remains over how funding will resume. We previously reported on the sequence of decisions that briefly froze the distribution of lifesaving HIV medication. "Bimmatrice (@Bimmatrice) on Threads." Threads, 12 Feb. 2022, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. Blue, Craig. "$300 Million Worth of Medications Are Sitting on Pallets about to Expire Thanks to Trump's Effort to Gut Foreign Aid." 12 Feb. 2023, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. Coons, Chris. "$300 Million Worth of Medications Are Sitting on Pallets about to Expire Thanks to Trump's Effort to Gut Foreign Aid." X (Formerly Twitter), 12 Feb. 2025, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. "Emergency Humanitarian Waiver to Foreign Assistance Pause - United States Department of State." United States Department of State, 29 Jan. 2025, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. Gharib, Malaka. "A Judge Orders a Temporary Thaw to Trump's Foreign Aid Freeze. What Will That Mean?" NPR, 14 Feb. 2025, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. "Larry Evans (@Larrye2334) on Threads." Threads, 12 Feb. 2022, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. "Reevaluating and Realigning United States Foreign Aid – the White House." The White House, 20 Jan. 2025, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. "Trump Ordered to Temporarily Lift USAid Freeze and Allow Foreign Aid Funding." The Guardian, The Guardian, 14 Feb. 2025, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025. Wong, Edward. "Medicine with Expiration Dates Is Sitting in Warehouses around the Globe, Unable to Be Used because of Trump's Foreign Aid Halt." X (Formerly Twitter), 12 Feb. 2025, Accessed 18 Feb. 2025.

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