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Posted: Monday 28 September, 2015 at 5:52 PM

Strong health systems, effective leadership, and universal access are key to facing health challenges in the Americas

By: PAHO/WHO, Press Release

    The region has been a public health “trailblazer,” but many people still lack access to health care and living conditions necessary for good health

     

    Washington, D.C., 28 September 2015 (PAHO/WHO) — The countries of the Americas have been world leaders in collective action to advance public health goals, top health leaders said today at the opening session of the 54th Directing Council of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), Regional Office for the Americas of the World Health Organization (WHO). But overcoming persisting and new health challenges will require stronger health systems, universal access to health care, and effective coordination and leadership of regional public health action, they said. 
     
    “We have collectively achieved much—ranging in the early years from intense capacity building of national human resources for health to the eradication of smallpox, the elimination of polio and more recently rubella and congenital rubella syndrome, to the application of low-cost technologies for the prevention and control of cervical cancer in underserved populations, to a 2014 commitment to universal access to health and universal health coverage,” said PAHO Director Carissa F. Etienne. “Clearly, the Americas region is a trailblazer.”  
     
    “In our region, 27% of the population has no regular access to health services, and 46% has no comprehensive health insurance,” said Luis Almagro, secretary-general of the Organization of American States (OAS). “This represents enormous economic, social and human costs, not only for those who lack health services but for society as a whole. That’s why it is essential to dialogue and reach agreements about our region’s main health challenges.”
     
    The 54th Directing Council brings together ministers of health and other high-level delegates from countries throughout the Americas for five days of discussions and decisions on regional public health. This year the meeting will examine priority health issues ranging from violence against women and dementia in the elderly, to antimicrobial resistance, workers’ health, tuberculosis and viral hepatitis.  
     
    President Juan Orlando Hernández of Honduras, a special guest at the Council’s opening session, described his country’s efforts to improve health by addressing people’s living conditions. His government has established a program called Vida Mejor (“Better Life”) that promotes the use of “ecostoves” that reduce low-income families’ exposure to indoor air pollution while also reducing deforestation. The program also installs cement floors to protect against parasitic infections and latrines to provide basic sanitation, and includes family planning and nutrition education. “With small changes,” said Hernández, “you can achieve major improvements.”
     
    Emerging disease challenges require strong health systems
    U.S. Secretary of Health and Human Services Sylvia Mathews Burwell said recent global health challenges, especially West Africa’s Ebola epidemic, have taught the lesson that strong health systems are essential to prevent or mitigate the impact of outbreaks and health emergencies.
     
    “Another lesson we’ve learned is that the world needs a nimble, effective World Health Organization.” The United States “will continue to push for changes that make WHO better equipped to respond to the health needs of our world,” said Burwell, adding, “PAHO and the Americas Region are well-positioned to champion and model these reforms.”
     
    WHO Assistant Director-General Hans Troedsson warned that emerging health threats “are much bigger and more complex than the problems that dominated the health agenda 15 years ago.” He noted that two such challenges—growing antimicrobial resistance and tuberculosis—are on this week’s Directing Council agenda. Others include the health impacts of climate change and the rise in noncommunicable diseases such as cancer, heart disease, stroke and diabetes, which are now leading killers throughout the world. 
     
    “As in the past, we can look to this region for leadership in overcoming these and many other difficult challenges,” Troedsson said. “In doing so, Member States can draw on two of the region’s unique assets: a strong sense of solidarity throughout the Americas and a great spirit of optimism.”
     
    Héctor Salazar Sánchez, chief of the Social Protection and Health Division of the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), noted that health inequalities continue to be a major problem in the Americas. An important challenge for the region’s countries, he said, is to build political will for expanding access to health care and reducing out-of-pocket spending on health.
     
    During the morning session, the 54th Directing Council elected Minister of Health Elvia Violeta Menjívar of El Salvador as its president. 


     
     
     
     
     
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