Aligning with the health transformative agenda of the government of Nigeria, the World Health Organization (WHO) is reviewing its 3rd generation Country Cooperation Strategy 2018-2022 (CSS III) to identify game-changing strategic directions and alliances to support the country in strengthening its health system, achieving public health impact and better health outcomes in the next five years.
The Country Cooperation Strategy (CCS) is a medium-term
strategic document that presents WHO’s vision for technical cooperation with a
given member state, in support of the country's national health policy,
strategy, or plan.
WHO in Nigeria has developed and successfully implemented
three generations of CCS. The current CSS under review was first developed in
2014, revised in 2018 and extended to 2022 to respond to the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs), in line with the
Nigeria Economic Recovery and Growth Plan, the National Health Policy
2016, the National Strategic Health Development Plan II, the UN Sustainable
Development Partnership Framework 2018-2022, the WHO Transformation Agenda as
well as the WHO’s 13″ General Program of
Work (GPW13).
Addressing participants at the two-day feedback workshop on
the evaluation of the 3rd WHO WHO Country Cooperation Strategy (2018-2022) and
identification of strategic priorities for the 4th WHO-Nigeria Country
Cooperation Strategy in Abuja, Dr Salma Anas-Ibrahim, the Special Adviser,
Health to President Bola Tinubu, says the workshop by WHO is quite timely with
the new government prioritizing and setting its agenda for the different
sectors
Dr Anas-Ibrahim explains that the government’s healthcare
reforms agenda would align with the existing national health plans to improve
the health fortune of the people of Nigeria and shall be hitched and defined by
the concept of Universal Health Coverage (UHC), which shall be a primary
objective towards new job creation that brings greater economic and social
development to the Nigerian people.
“…The health needs of the citizens of this country are
therefore prioritized as a fundamental human right and a matter of national
security which the government shall greatly invest in for national growth,
development and sustainable prosperity.
Consequently, the government shall address the lingering
nation’s healthcare challenges, including inadequate health infrastructure,
fragmentation, an overburdened workforce, poor insurance coverage (catastrophic
out-of-pocket expenditures), high maternal and infant mortality, inadequate
preventative care and dependence on imported medicines, commodities, equipment
and vaccines”, she says.
In his opening remarks, the Permanent Secretary, Federal
Ministry of Health Engr. Olufunso Adebiyi who was represented by Dr Ngozi
Azodoh, says that the Federal Ministry of Health has started the agenda-setting
process for the health sector taking into consideration, the needs of the
people of Nigeria.
“As the WHO is a member state organization, the 4th
Generation CCS would support the government of Nigeria to actualize these
ideas, especially in coordination and building sustainable partnerships,” she
says.
Delivering the welcome address, the WHO Country Representative, Dr Walter Kazadi Mulombo, says
the workshop is to co-create a strategic health agenda which aligns with WHO’s
collaboration with other United Nations bodies and development partners at the
country level based on identified priorities and needs.
Dr Mulombo explains that member states at the recently
concluded 76 World Health Assembly set
the pace for accelerating health to achieve the 13th General Program of Work
(GPW13) and Sustainable Development Goals and targets by 2030. Nigeria, like the
rest of the world, has experienced a setback due to COVID-19, in main health
indices including maternal, neonatal and child health, requiring innovative
ways of working to close the gap.
He says the development of a new CCS usually follows robust
consultative processes and WHO has been engaging with the stakeholders over the
past few months to understand what has been done right, the areas we have not
done well, and the pointers to the priorities in the next five years.
“This workshop is unique in the history of the WHO Nigeria,
considering the critical changes within the global health architecture and
political economy of the country, as demonstrated by (i) the development of the
Nigeria National Development Plan 2021-2025, the UN Sustainable Development
Cooperation Framework 2023-2027, the WHO functional review, and most recently,
the WHOs 5 priorities (promote health, provide health, protect health, power
health, and perform for health. ) to accelerate achievement of the SDGs within
the extended GPW13.
I am confident, that this strategic stakeholders’
engagement, will come up with new realities for joint strategic health agenda
for WHO’s technical cooperation in Nigeria in the next five years so that
jointly, we will promote health, provide health, protect health, power health,
and perform for health”, he says.
A recurring challenge thrown at WHO during the ongoing
review is that the international health agency needs to be more innovative and
agile to adopt a stronger coordination role as a leading authority in support
of the country and partners.
To identify priorities for the fourth CCS, notable
stakeholders including the Special Adviser to the President on Health, the
Permanent Secretary, the Federal Ministry of Health and Senior Directors, Legislators,
Heads of Agencies and Parastatals, State Commissioners of Health, Permanent
Secretaries and health leaders at the sub-national levels, development
partners, civil society groups, the media, private sector, and community member
evaluated the 3rd CCS document and proffered areas for improvement.
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