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World Tuberculosis Day 2019 – It’s time ! ”Find Treat All #EndTB”

by Public Health Update March 23, 2019
written by Public Health Update

World Tuberculosis Day 2019 – It’s time ! ”Find Treat All #EndTB” – It’s time for action! It’s time to End TB.

Each year we commemorate World TB Day on March 24 to raise public awareness about the devastating health, social and economic impact of tuberculosis (TB) and urge acceleration of efforts to end the global TB epidemic.

This year, we commemorate the 137th anniversary of Dr. Robert Koch’s announcement in 1882 of his discovery of the TB bacillus, the cause of TB. His groundbreaking research opened the way toward diagnosing and curing this disease.

TB remains the world’s deadliest infectious killer. Each day, nearly 4500 people lose their lives to TB and close to 30,000 people fall ill with this preventable and curable disease. Global efforts to combat TB have saved an estimated 54 million lives since the year 2000 and reduced the TB mortality rate by 42%. To accelerate the TB response in countries to reach targets – Heads of State came together and made strong commitments to end TB at the first-ever UN High Level Meeting in September 2018.

The theme of World TB Day 2019 – ‘It’s time’ – puts the accent on the urgency to act on the commitments made by global leaders to:

  • scale up access to prevention and treatment;
  • build accountability;
  • ensure sufficient and sustainable financing including for research;
  • promote an end to stigma and discrimination, and
  • promote an equitable, rights-based and people-centered TB response.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has launched a joint initiative “Find. Treat. All. #EndTB” with the Global Fund and Stop TB Partnership, with the aim of accelerating the TB response and ensuring access to care, in line with WHO’s overall drive towards Universal Health Coverage. 

This World TB Day, WHO calls on governments, affected communities, civil society organizations, health-care providers, and national/international partners to unite forces under the banner “Find. Treat. All. #EndTB” to ensure no one is left behind. 

It’s time for action! It’s time to End TB.

SOURCE OF INFO: WHO, STOP TB

 

tb day 2019 animated logo

EN GIF 1

Global Tuberculosis Report 2018 overview

  • 54 million lives saved between 2000 and 2017 TB deaths fell by 33% in the same period.
  • TB is the top infectious killer worldwide TB is also the leading cause of deaths among people with HIV & a major cause of antimicrobial resistance related deaths.
  • MDR-TB crisis with gaps in detection and treatment Only 1 in 4 needing MDR-TB treatment were enrolled on it
  • Funding shortfall for TB implementation Gap of over US$ 1.3 billion per year for TB research

READ MORE: Global Tuberculosis Report 2018

#ItsTimetoEndTB @StopTB #WorldTBDay2019

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Call for Expression of Interest for Institutions or Consortium of Institutions to Work with the Asia Pacific Observatory on Health Systems and Policies

MEAL Specialist – World Vision International Nepal

Partnerships and Deployment Consultant- Medic Mobile

March 23, 2019 0 comments
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International Plan, Policy & GuidelinesPublic HealthResearch & Publication

Building a tuberculosis-free world: The Lancet Commission on tuberculosis

by Public Health Update March 22, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Building a tuberculosis-free world: The Lancet Commission on tuberculosis

The Lancet Commission on tuberculosis published a report on 20 March 2019. The Commission recommends five priority investments to achieve a tuberculosis-free world within a generation.

These investments are designed to fulfil the mandate of the UN High Level Meeting on tuberculosis. In addition, they answer the question of how countries with high-burden tuberculosis and their development partners should target their future investments to ensure that ending tuberculosis is achievable. Following are the key five recommendations to achieve TB-free world;

  • Invest first to ensure that high quality rapid diagnostics and treatment are provided to all individuals receiving care for tuberculosis, wherever they seek care.
  • Reach people and populations at high risk for tuberculosis (such as household and other close contacts of people with tuberculosis, and people with HIV) and bring them into care.
  • Increase investment to accelerate tuberculosis research and development and bring new diagnostics, therapeutic strategies, and vaccines to clinical practice to quickly end the pandemic.
  • Make investment in tuberculosis programmes a shared responsibility, increasing development assistance for tuberculosis according to the financial needs of individual low-income and middle-income countries.
  • Hold countries and key stakeholders accountable for progress made towards ending tuberculosis.

NEPAL
Deaths (thousands) in 2000:  4·8

Deaths (thousands) in 2017 : 6·9 
Cumulative percentage deaths in 2017 (% of total tuberculosis deaths) : 91%
Death rate in 2000 (%): 20
Death rate in 2017 (%): 24
Rate of decline in deaths from 2000-17: –2·1%
Rate of decline in death rates from 2000–17: –1·1%
Demographic headwinds: 1·1%
More info Table 1:
Building a tuberculosis-free world: The Lancet Commission on tuberculosis

FULL REPORT: Building a tuberculosis-free world: The Lancet Commission on tuberculosis


New WHO recommendations to accelerate progress on TB

World Tuberculosis Day 2019 – It’s time ! ”Find Treat All #EndTB”

March 22, 2019 0 comments
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Global Health NewsInternational Plan, Policy & GuidelinesPublic Health NewsResearch & Publication

New WHO recommendations to accelerate progress on TB

by Public Health Update March 22, 2019
written by Public Health Update

New WHO recommendations to accelerate progress on TB

20 March 2019, News Release(WHO)

WHO has issued new guidance to improve treatment of multidrug resistant TB (MDR-TB). WHO is recommending shifting to fully oral regimens to treat people with MDR-TB. This new treatment course is more effective and is less likely to provoke adverse side effects. WHO recommends backing up treatment with active monitoring of drug safety and providing counselling support to help patients complete their course of treatment.
The recommendations are part of a larger package of actions designed to help countries increase the pace of progress to end tuberculosis (TB) and released in advance of World TB Day.

“The theme of this year’s World TB Day is: It’s time to end TB,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “We’re highlighting the urgent need to translate commitments made at the 2018 UN High Level Meeting on TB into actions that ensure everyone who needs TB care can get it.”

Since 2000, 54 million lives have been saved, and TB deaths fell by one-third.  But 10 million people still fall ill with TB each year, with too many missing out on vital care.

The WHO package is designed to help countries close gaps in care ensuring no one is left behind. Key elements include:

  • An accountability framework to coordinate actions across sectors and to monitor and review progress
  • A dashboard to help countries know more about their own epidemics through real-time monitoring – by moving to electronic TB surveillance systems.
  • A guide for effective prioritization of planning and implementation of impactful TB interventions based on analyses of patient pathways in accessing care.
  • New WHO guidelines on infection control and preventive treatment for latent TB infection
  • A civil society task force to ensure effective and meaningful civil society engagement

 

“This is a set of pragmatic actions that countries can use to accelerate progress and act on the high-level commitments made in the first-ever UN High Level Meeting on TB last September,” said Dr Tereza Kasaeva, Director WHO’s Global TB Programme.

On 22 March, key partners will come together at a World TB Day symposium at WHO in Geneva to develop a collaborative multi-stakeholder and multisectoral platform to accelerate actions to end TB. WHO will present the new package at the meeting.  

TB is the world’s top infectious disease killer, claiming 4 500 lives each day. The heaviest burden is carried by communities facing socio-economic challenges, those working and living in high-risk settings, the poorest and marginalized.

News Release(WHO)

DOWNLOAD :WHO consolidated guidelines on drug-resistant tuberculosis treatment


World Tuberculosis Day 2019 – It’s time ! ”Find Treat All #EndTB”

World TB Day, 24 March 2018: “Wanted: Leaders for a TB-free world”

World TB Day 2017 – Unite efforts to leave no one behind #UnitetoEndTB

2018 World TB Day Theme Announced

National Strategic Plan for Tuberculosis Prevention, Care and Control 2016 – 2021

Global Tuberculosis Report 2018

March 22, 2019 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic HealthPublic Health Events

World Water Day 2019: Leaving no one behind

by Public Health Update March 22, 2019
written by Public Health Update

World Water Day is celebrated on 22 March every year, is about focusing attention on the importance of water. The theme for World Water Day 2019 is World Water Day 2019 is ‘Leaving no one behind’

Sustainable Development Goal 6 (SDG 6) aims to ensure availability and sustainable management of water for all by 2030. By definition, this means leaving no one behind.

In 2010, the UN recognized “the right to safe and clean drinking water and sanitation as a human right that is essential for the full enjoyment of life and all human rights.”

The human right to water entitles everyone, without discrimination, to sufficient, safe, acceptable, physically accessible and affordable water for personal and domestic use; which includes water for drinking, personal sanitation, washing of clothes, food preparation, and personal and household hygiene.

Theme

The theme for World Water Day 2019 is ‘Leaving no one behind’. This is an adaptation of the central promise of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: as sustainable development progresses, everyone must benefit.

Problem

Today, billions of people are still living without safe water – their households, schools, workplaces, farms and factories struggling to survive and thrive. 

Marginalized groups – women, children, refugees, indigenous peoples, disabled people and many others – are often overlooked, and sometimes face discrimination, as they try to access and manage the safe water they need.

Facts

  • 1 billion people live without safe water at home.
  • One in four primary schools have no drinking water service, with pupils using unprotected sources or going thirsty.
  • More than 700 children under five years of age die every day from diarrhoea linked to unsafe water and poor sanitation.
  • Globally, 80% of the people who have to use unsafe and unprotected water sources live in rural areas.
  • Women and girls are responsible for water collection in eight out of ten households with water off-premises.
  • Around 159 million people collect their drinking water from surface water, such as ponds and streams.
  • For the 68.5 million people who have been forced to flee their homes, accessing safe water services is highly problematic. 
  • Around 4 billion people – nearly two-thirds of the world’s population – experience severe water scarcity during at least one month of the year.
  • Over 800 women die every day from complications in pregnancy and childbirth.
  • 700 million people worldwide could be displaced by intense water scarcity by 2030.

SOURCE OF INFO: WORLD WATER.ORG


World Water Day 2017 : Why waste water?

World Water Day 2018 ”Nature for Water”

Message from RD, WHO South-East Asia Region on the occasion of World Water Day

Classification of Water-related diseases

March 22, 2019 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic HealthPublic Health Events

World Kidney Day: Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere

by Public Health Update March 14, 2019
written by Public Health Update

World Kidney Day: Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere

Theme

Theme for 2019 is “Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere”, aiming to highlight the growing burden of kidney disease and kidney health disparity and inequity worldwide.

Facts

  • 850 million people worldwide are now estimated to have kidney diseases from various causes. 
  • Chronic kidney disease(CKD) causes at least 2.4 million deaths per year and is now the 6th fastest growing cause of death.
  • Chronic Kidney Disease is likely to be the 5th leading cause of Years of Life Lost by 2040. 
  • Acute kidney injury affects over 13 million people worldwide and 85% of these cases are found in low and middle-income countries (LMICs).
  • Around 1.7 people are estimated to die annually because of AKI.

Call

This year, World Kidney Day sets out to raise awareness of the high and increasing burden of kidney diseases worldwide and the need for strategies for kidney diseases prevention and management.

Kidney Health for Everyone Everywhere calls for universal health coverage (UHC) for prevention and early treatment of kidney disease.

The ultimate goal of a UHC policy is to promote population health by ensuring universal, sustainable and equitable access to essential healthcare of high quality, protecting people from health impoverishment and improving equity in health across socioeconomic groups.

Specifically, WKD calls on everyone to advocate for concrete measures in every country to improve kidney care:

  • Encourage and adopt healthy lifestyles (access to clean water, exercise, healthy diet, tobacco control. Many types of kidney diseases can be prevented, delayed and / or kept under control when appropriate prevention measures are in place.
  • Make screening for kidney diseases a primary healthcare intervention including access to identification tools (e.g. urine and blood tests). Screening of high risk individuals and early diagnosis and treatment is cost effective to prevent or delay end-stage kidney diseases.
  • Ensure kidney patients receive basic health services they need (e.g. blood pressure and cholesterol control, essential medications) to delay disease progression without suffering financial hardship.
  • Call for transparent policies governing equitable and sustainable access to advanced health care services (e.g. dialysis and transplantation) and better financial protection (e.g. subsidies) as more resources become available. Breaking down socioeconomic barriers and expanding access to comprehensive services in order to meet the needs of the population is essential to guarantee equitable kidney care and increase quality.

WORLD KIDNEY DAY


World Hearing Day 2019: Check your hearing!

International Condom Day: Condoms are ‘Always in Fashion’

March 14, 2019 0 comments
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WHO launches new global influenza strategy for 2019-2030

by Public Health Update March 13, 2019
written by Public Health Update

WHO launches new global influenza strategy for 2019-2030

11 March 2019 

News Release
WHO released a Global Influenza Strategy for 2019-2030 aimed at protecting people in all countries from the threat of influenza. The goal of the strategy is to prevent seasonal influenza, control the spread of influenza from animals to humans, and prepare for the next influenza pandemic.
“The threat of pandemic influenza is ever-present.” said WHO Director-General Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus. “The on-going risk of a new influenza virus transmitting from animals to humans and potentially causing a pandemic is real.   The question is not if we will have another pandemic, but when.  We must be vigilant and prepared – the cost of a major influenza outbreak will far outweigh the price of prevention.”
Influenza remains one of the world’s greatest public health challenges. Every year across the globe, there are an estimated 1 billion cases, of which 3 to 5 million are severe cases, resulting in 290 000 to 650 000 influenza-related respiratory deaths. WHO recommends annual influenza vaccination as the most effective way to prevent influenza. Vaccination is especially important for people at higher risk of serious influenza complications and for health care workers.
The new strategy is the most comprehensive and far-reaching that WHO has ever developed for influenza.  It outlines a path to protect populations every year and helps prepare for a pandemic through strengthening routine programmes. It has two overarching goals:
  1. Build stronger country capacities for disease surveillance and response, prevention and control, and preparedness. To achieve this, it calls for every country to have a tailored influenza programme that contributes to national and global preparedness and health security.
  2. Develop better tools to prevent, detect, control and treat influenza, such as more effective vaccines, antivirals and treatments, with the goal of making these accessible for all countries.

“With the partnerships and country-specific work we have been doing over the years, the world is better prepared than ever before for the next big outbreak, but we are still not prepared enough,” said Dr Tedros. “This strategy aims to get us to that point. Fundamentally, it is about preparing health systems to manage shocks, and this only happens when health systems are strong and healthy themselves.”

To successfully implement this strategy, effective partnerships are essential.  WHO will expand partnerships to increase research, innovation and availability of new and improved global influenza tools to benefit all countries.  At the same time WHO will work closely with countries to improve their capacities to prevent and control influenza.

The new influenza strategy builds on and benefits from successful WHO programmes.  For more than 65 years, the Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System (GISRS), comprised   of WHO Collaborating Centres and national influenza centres, have worked together to monitor seasonal trends and potentially pandemic viruses. This system serves as the backbone of the global alert system for influenza. 

Important to the strategy is the on-going success of the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness Framework, a unique access and benefit sharing system that supports the sharing of potentially pandemic viruses, provides access to life saving vaccines and treatments in the event of a pandemic and supports the building of pandemic preparedness capacities in countries through partnership contributions from industry.

The strategy meets one of WHO’s mandates to improve core capacities for public health, and increase global preparedness and was developed through a consultative process with input from Member States, academia, civil society, industry, and internal and external experts.

Supporting countries to strengthen their influenza capacity will have collateral benefits in detecting infection in general, since countries will be able to better identify other infectious diseases like Ebola or Middle East respiratory syndrome-related coronavirus (MERS-CoV).

Through the implementation of the new WHO global influenza strategy, the world will be closer to reducing the impact of influenza every year and be more prepared for an influenza pandemic and other public health emergencies.

DOWNLOAD STRATEGY (Global influenza strategy 2019-2030): WHO


KNB Indonesian Government Scholarship Program 2019

ESCMID Postgraduate Technical Workshop, Florence, Italy

Nutrition Specialist – Helen Keller International (HKI)/Nepal

March 13, 2019 0 comments
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Report of the Study on Early Impacts of the Expanded Global Gag Rule in Nepal

by Public Health Update March 8, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Report of the Study on Early Impacts of the Expanded Global Gag Rule in Nepal

Press release
March 8, 2019

Expanded Global Gag Rule impacting the availability of reproductive and sexual health care services, undermining the progress Nepal has recently made in improving women’s health. Filling gaps in funding to ensure service accessibility is urgently required to minimize the effects, says a new report by the Center for Research on Environment Health and Population Activities (CREHPA) and the International Women’s Health Coalition (IWHC).

Access to reproductive and sexual health care services is essential for promoting the well-being of Nepali women, men, and their children, but a new report published by CREHPA and IWHC shows that the US government’s expanded version of the Mexico City Policy, also known as the ‘Global Gag Rule,’ has damaging effects on women’s health, the Nepali health sector, and civil society.

“Though the negative impacts of the Global Gag Rule are still unfolding, there is no doubt that the policy undermines sexual and reproductive health and rights and reverses the progress Nepal has made on improving women’s health,” says lead author Dr. Mahesh Puri, associate director of CREHPA. “Early impacts include a loss of US government funding, the cessation of US funded health programs and projects, and the weakening of civil society partnerships, collaboration, and voices.”

After the reinstatement and expansion of the Global Gag Rule in 2017, Nepali non-governmental organizations that receive US global health assistance now need to certify that they do not provide, counsel, refer, or advocate for abortion as a method of family planning – even with their own funds – as a condition to continue to receive funding. Since the new policy applies to all global health funds, this may mean losing grants for programs targeting HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, infectious diseases, neglected tropical diseases, and water, sanitation, and hygiene. As a result, many national and international organizations working in reproductive and sexual health services, including abortion, are experiencing the negative impacts of the Global Gag Rule on their programing and services.

“Since the expanded policy applies to sectors beyond family planning, many organizations are having to choose whether to meet the conditions under the policy or sacrifice US government funding,” says co-author Vanessa Rios, program officer for learning, monitoring, and evaluation at IWHC. “This policy is already curtailing efforts to expand health services and sustain progress towards making healthcare accessible in Nepal.”

The study, which interviewed 39 stakeholders, found that the implementation of the expanded Global Gag Rule is creating gaps in sexual and reproductive health service availability and utilization, which predominantly affects already marginalized and underserved populations. The US government funding cuts has affected sexual and reproductive health and rights program activities like supply of equipment and service demand-generating activities, ultimately leading to low or no utilization of services. This policy also creating funding gaps and halting implementation of US funded programs. Three organizations receiving US government funding for family planning projects were forced to end the projects before the scheduled completion date due to cutbacks related to the Global Gag Rule. These organizations have been working for the promotion of family planning and safe abortion for years and were impacted because they refused to sign the policy.

Despite many challenges, Nepal has made significant improvements in women’s health, particularly maternal and newborn health and safe abortion care in recent years. However, health disparities across gender, regions, and social groups remain. In addition, illegal abortions remain a concern in Nepal. An estimated 323,000 abortions were performed in Nepal in 2014, 58 percent of which were illegal. Though Nepal’s government is committed to providing better health services to its people, this is generally not reflected in the budget allocation. As one of the largest health sector donors, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) should be playing a strong role in supporting the Nepal government and other actors towards improving the survival and quality of life of all Nepali through equitable and well-governed health systems, rather than undermining their priorities through a policy that conflicts national laws.

The responsibility for fulfilling this funding, service availability and accessibility gaps created by the Global Gag Rule will have to be shared by the government and other international donor agencies and private sectors to minimize the effects of policy in Nepal. Government and parliamentarians should discuss foreign policies that are affecting national programs with high level government officials and in the parliament, and identify ways to mitigate the short and long term impacts of the Global Gag Rule.

For more information, see the full report: Early Impacts of the Expanded Global Gag Rule in Nepal, by Mahesh Puri, Kusum Wagle, Vanessa Rios, and Yasaswi Dhungel.

FULL REPORT 
More documents: CREHPA.ORG


Health authorities across the WHO South-East Asia Region must recognize and embrace their role in promoting gender equality

Scholarships for Master of Applied Science in Humanitarian Health

Technical Officers – Strengthening Systems for Better Health (SSBH)


March 8, 2019 0 comments
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Health authorities across the WHO South-East Asia Region must recognize and embrace their role in promoting gender equality

by Public Health Update March 7, 2019
written by Public Health Update

Health authorities across the WHO South-East Asia Region must recognize and embrace their role in promoting gender equality

March 7, 2019, WHO – Nepal

International Women’s Day is an opportunity to celebrate the courage, strength and capacity of ‘ordinary’ women to drive extraordinary change. It is also an opportunity to recommit to our common goal: gender equality and the empowerment of women. Though achieving this outcome requires a whole-of-society approach, the health sector has a crucial role to play. Health authorities across the WHO South-East Asia Region must recognize and embrace it.

Recent progress demonstrates the impact health sector initiatives can have on women’s well-being, a key dimension of their empowerment. Between 1990 and 2015, for example, the Region reduced maternal mortality by 69%. Between 2001 and 2015 contraceptive use increased from 46% to 60%. In the same period, the total fertility rate dropped from three to 2.4 children per woman. The human papilloma virus vaccine, so crucial to preventing cervical cancer, is meanwhile gaining traction as global calls to eliminate the disease grow.

Women’s empowerment is a public health imperative: WHO

There is, however, a long way to go: In the health sector and beyond, gender equality and women’s empowerment must be a core priority, both to fulfill the human rights of women and girls across the Region, as well as to leverage the society-wide benefits it guarantees.

As per the focus of this year’s International Women’s Day – ‘Think equal, build smart, innovate for change’ – a good place to start ‘thinking equal’ is to improve adolescent health. In doing so, young women will not only be healthier; they will also be empowered to choose their own destiny. Increasing access to family planning services more generally will reduce the number of women treated for abortion-related complications and will also reduce unwanted pregnancies that can affect women’s health and limit their life-choices.

Health authorities should likewise ‘build smart’ in their approaches to universal health coverage. Whether for reasons of gender inequality, poverty, ethnicity, education or other factors, many women continue to face barriers to access, even as the coverage and quality of health services increases. These barriers must be addressed as a matter of priority. Importantly, when both women and men can access the services they need, as they need them, the burden of unpaid care in families (which typically falls on women and girls) is reduced and gender equality advanced.

To ‘innovate for change’, creative approaches to grassroots engagement and the use of new technology can be channeled. That could mean working with women’s groups to find ways to address gender-based violence or helping change norms around early marriage. It could also mean reducing the digital gender divide and rolling out mHealth technologies to enhance women’s and girls’ health literacy and encourage timely health-seeking.

On International Women’s Day, as every other day, WHO is committed to achieving gender equality, to eliminating all forms of discrimination against women and ensuring that women’s right to health is respected, protected and fulfilled. To this end, sustaining the Region’s achievements, accelerating progress and harnessing the full power of innovation are imperative. Only then will women’s health and the empowerment it promotes be advanced. And only then will the Region be poised to achieve gender equality – an outcome that will benefit all.

WHO – Nepal
UN House, Pulchowk | P.O Box: 108 | Lalitpur | Kathmandu | Nepal 


International Women’s Day (March 8) is a global day celebrating the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women. The day also marks a call to action for accelerating gender parity.

International Women’s Day 2019 campaign theme:
#BalanceforBetter

 

Art Competition for World Health Day 2019

March 7, 2019 0 comments
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National Plan, Policy & GuidelinesReportsResearch & Publication

National Annual Review, MoHP – 2017/18 (Presentation Slides)

by Public Health Update March 3, 2019
written by Public Health Update

National Annual Review – 2017/18 (Presentation Slides)

Objectives of National Annual Review – 2017/18

  • Jointly review the progress of Nepal Health Sector Strategy (2015/16 – 2020/2021) Implementation Plan and ensure all stakeholders develop a shared understanding of progress in the sector;
  • Identify the highest priority areas that need to be addressed to strengthen health system in the changing context; and
  • Agree on the strategic actions to be included in the next year’s Annual Work Plan and Budget (AWPB).

New Initiatives of Fiscal Year 2074/75
(PPP Page No.75-78)

  • Expansion of DHIS 2 in 1200 Health Facilities and e-LMIS in 22 Districts
  • LMIS system in 7 Provinces
  • Endorsed of Postnatal care micro planning guideline
  • Budget allocation for Sickle cell anemia in high burden districts
  • Health Desk establishment in Port of Entry
  • Expansion of C/DST lab at 3 Provinces
  • Proper allocation of budget for prepositioning of emergency items in provincial level
  • Health Promotion Strategy (2018-2030) and FCTC Drafted
  • Revision of NHT strategy and PEN Package
  • Strengthen central warehouse Initiation of Advanced Test (Molecular expansion and Genetic pathology laboratory, Cancer related special test and Allergy related tests) by NPHL
  • Short Treatment regimen for DR TB (9 months) initiated
  • M health technology and tracker for Identify, Reach, Recommendation, Test, Treat and Retain ( PLHIV)
  • Minimum Service Standards roll out at different level of health facilities
  • Declaration of local bodies with availability of 5 FP commodities
  • Strengthening of Comprehensive Reproductive
  • Health Training sites
  • Expansion of Maternal and Perinatal Death Surveillance and Response program (11 districts)
  • Scholarship Health worker placement from Province
  • Basic Health service Package endorsement
  • Public health Service Act.

Way Forward

(PPP Page No.79)

  • Finalization of O & M , Priority to Samayojan Process, Fully digitalized (Paperless) administrative procedure
  • Institutionalization of online Reporting System from Health Institution-Palika-
    Province-to Federal level
  • Functionalization of Framework Agreement procurement system for Drug/supplies -align with Insurance Mechanism and intact Supply chain
  • Coordinated Supervision and Monitoring- in all levels (federal, Province, Local government)
  • Accountable Financing– Reporting system from Province and Local Government (TABUCS)
  • Paradigm shift From Hospital to Community
    From Quality to Value
    From Health care to health

Future Priorities: Game Changers

(PPP Page No.43)

  • Free basic health care service will be ensured to all citizen
  • Specialized health services will be ensured to all citizen through the equitable health insurance scheme
  • Ensure 24/7 health care including basic emergency surgical services through primary hospital at each local government
  • Health Academy; Trauma center and a referral hospital established at each Province
  • Policy and planning: National Health Policy; Health Vision 2100 BS; 15th 5 year Plan
    Focus area: More investment in Adolescents , Better Health Financing system(Insurance), Multi sectoral approach to combat emerging NCDs.

Download (MoHP)


Health Sector Progress Report 2018, Ministry of Health & Population

Glimpse of Annual Report Department of Health Services 2073/74 (2016/17)

Key Findings (Nepali & English) – The 2016 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (2016 NDHS)

Nepal Health Sector Strategy(NHSS) Implementation Plan 2016-21


March 3, 2019 0 comments
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PH Important DayPublic HealthPublic Health Events

World Hearing Day 2019: Check your hearing!

by Public Health Update March 3, 2019
written by Public Health Update

World Hearing Day 2019: Check your hearing!

World Hearing Day is held on 3 March each year to raise awareness on how to prevent deafness and hearing loss and promote ear and hearing care across the world.

Each year, WHO decides the theme and develops a brochure on the topic based on the best available evidence as well as advocacy materials such as posters, banners, infographics and presentations, among others. These materials are shared with partners in government and civil society around the world as well as WHO colleagues across the Organization. At its headquarters in Geneva, WHO organizes an annual World Hearing Day seminar. In recent years, an increasing number of Member States and other partner agencies have joined World Hearing Day by hosting a range of activities and events in their countries. WHO invites all stakeholders to join this global initiative.

On World Hearing Day 2019, WHO will draw attention to the importance of early identification and intervention for hearing loss. Many people live with unidentified hearing loss, often failing to realize that they are missing out on certain sounds and words. Checking one’s hearing would be the first step towards addressing the issue.

The key messages for this event include:

  • All people should check their hearing from time to time, especially those who are at a higher risk of hearing loss such as adults above 50 years, those working in noisy places, those listening to music at high volumes for long periods of time and those experiencing ear problems.
  • Services for early identification and intervention should be made available through the health system.

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