Title: Diapositive 1
1Human Capacity building for Global Health
EFC AGA and Conference Pre-conference
eventGlobal health What Role for
Foundations? May 31, 2007 Madrid, Spain
2Some facts on Global Health
- Developing countries carry 90 percent of the
world's health burden, but account for only 12
percent of spending. - Poor countries can be described as the breeding
ground for diseases infectious disease epidemics
(mostly preventable with existing medical
knowledge) are most likely to occur in the
poorest 20 of the worlds population that lives
in Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. - Infectious diseases are a neglected concern
within this neglected sector. In 2002, bilateral,
multilateral, foundation and NGO partners
provided just over 800 million to help
developing countries control infectious diseases.
This represents less than 2 of total donor
funds. This sum is considerably stretched since
50 of deaths in low-income countries are caused
by infectious diseases. - Efforts to decrease the disease burden of
developing countries create positive global
externalities through indirect effects of
improved health, such as poverty alleviation,
fostered economic development, augmented
political stability and decreased political
unrest.
3Fondation Mérieux Global Health A long history
(1)
Marcel Merieux
Louis Pasteur
A familial foundation, it was granted charity
status, a non profit foundation
4Fondation Mérieux Global Health A long history
(2)
-
-
- Summer of 1974, in the midst of a meningitis
outbreak in Brazil, Charles Mérieux kept his
staff at work during the traditional August
vacation break to produce 100 million doses of
meningitis vaccine, with 90 million of those
doses given over the next 6 months.
5Our Global Health Mission
- To fight infectious diseases affecting developing
countries, with innovate approaches in
prevention, diagnostics and therapeutics.
Health is a human right and a global public good
that needs to be protected and promoted by the
global community.
6Our contributions to Global Health
1. SUPPORTING APPLIED RESEARCH
2. KNOWLEDGE SHARING
3. STRENGTHENING HEALTH STRUCTURES
4. SUPPORTING MOTHERS AND CHILDREN
7Our activities in the field
8Contribution to the UNs Millennium Development
Goals (UNMDG)
9Prospects of Meeting Millennium Development Goal
4
Reduce Child Mortality
Source World Bank Group, 2003
10Needs for Human Capacity Building
- "Unless we focus on the human component of health
systems development, it seems fair to predict
that the goals of the global health community and
the large scale improvements reflected in the
UNMDGs will not be met ". (Global Health Trust,
Joint Learning Initiative)
11Distribution of health workers by level of
health expenditure and burden of disease, by WHO
region
Source WHO, World Health Statistics, 2006
12Countries identified human ressources as the area
of the health system most in need of investment
WHO, Opportunities for global health initiatives
in the health systems action agenda, 2005
13Key Challenges for human capacity building
- Global shortages of health professionnals (more
than 4 million workers Sub-Saharian countries
must nearly triple their current number of
workers if they want to come close to MDGs) - Skill imbalance countries must revamp their
health plans toward a workforce that more closely
reflects the health needs of their populations - Labor migration / "brain drain"
- Chronic underinvestment in human ressources
- Lack of motivation
14Fondation Mérieuxs contribution to human
capacity building on global health
2. International advanced training sessions
3. Electronic knowledge and experience sharing
1.Build local capacity
151. Local capacity building
-
- MALI ACTION BIOMALI nationalwide capacity
building for a network of gt80 biomedical
laboratories via the Charles Mérieux Centre
(national reference laboratory) -
16Situation
- Project set-up in close collaboration with the
Ministry of Health following a needs analysis - The Ministry of Health of Mali is an official
partner institution of the project and
co-responsible for its implementation and
sustainability - Overall Objective improve diagnostic and
biological follow-up of patients suffering from
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria all over the
country of Mali relying on existing health
structures (Infrastructure, Training, Networking) - Correct diagnostic is an essential basis for
treatment
17Levels of human capacity building
- Bachelor of Science of Biological and Applied
Medical Science (in collaboration with ESTBB) - Training of technicians at district level
(South-South) - Continuing training for trainers at regional
level (North-South) -
-
18Lessons from first experience
- Needs identified by local authorities
- Pedagogical staff from the North should transfer
knowledge to the staff from the South
(co-animation of training sessions) - Mutual benefit from lessons learned
- Avoid ad-hoc and ensure long-term training
- Compensation essential for motivation
(collaboration with local authorities
indispensable for sustainability)
192. International advanced capacity building
- Advanced course on vaccinology
- (co-financed by EC and BMG-Foundation)
- 2 weeks intensive training course with lectures
and group work in Annecy - Objective facilitate critical decision making in
vaccinology - Faculty international top experts in the field
- Participants government, industry, NGO and
university representatives coming from
developing and industrialised countries (50-50)
20Results of a long-term evaluation
- 91 said that the course helped them to
strenghthen the mutual understanding in the field
of vaccinology - 65 of out of 160 respondants said that the
course expanded their career opportunities - 50 agreed that the course helped them to improve
their professionnal position and even their
income (20) - For 50 of respondants, the course improved the
immunisation policy in their country - And.. 96 of respondants expressed their need for
electronic knowlegde and experience sharing
213. Electronic capacity building
- Electronic version of capacity building globally
accessible to complement local and international
capacity building - Web-portal for professionnals giving access to
relevant scientific information, e-learning,
expert advice and electronic tools (software,
forum, electronic conferences etc.) - Starting with two domains vaccinology
diagnostic -
- Based on positive experience in the
Euro-Mediteerranean region participants
appreciated advantages of this type of learning
as it allows flexibility in time and location,
easy update of information (CD-Rom where Internet
connection is not available), easy contact to
international expertise - Possibility of collaboration with other
Foundations
22WHO Proposition from World Health Report
- An extraordinary global solidarity is needed to
address issues on human ressources for global
health International action necessites - Coalitions around emergency national plans for
health professionnals - Catalyse knowledge and learning invest in
development of better matrics and common
technical frameworks - Strike cooperative agreements to protect rights
and safety of workers and avoid brain drain - To respond to health workforce crisis donors
must facilitate immediate and longer-term
financing of human resources as health systems
investment - An annual increase of 1.60 US per capita
expenditure on health needed for scaling up the
workforce over a 20-year period - GAVI (Global Alliance for Vaccines and
Immunisation) supports health systems
strengthening strategy inclusive health workforce
through country applications 500 million US
over 5 years - Emergency Health Workforce Plan in Malawi has
dedicated US 278 million over six years through
a coalition of country and global partners
23Political will is considered as a key determinant
- The lack of robust sectoral strategies, plans and
budgets - Weak linkages between the health sector and
broader development processes - Limited attention to the staffing and systems
issues that impede service delivery - Inadequate monitoring systems for tracking
resource flows, progress and outcome - Limited progress in translating global
commitments on aid effectiveness into concrete
action at country level
24Conclusions
- Problems of corruption and necessity to follow
actions on a field level - Collaborate with local health actors (Ministries,
NGOs, local initiatives) - Written engagement with participating actors,
assure regular follow-up and evaluation (local
representatives) - Creation of a network of interested actors with
the need for catalysation
Efforts should consequently be made to facilitate
the dialogue between policy makers, civil
society, donors, workers, NGOs in order to better
match the needs of afflicted populations and to
help targeting actions more efficiently