AfricaFocus Bulletins with Material on Health - 2009
Dec 18, 2009 Africa: New Books from AfricaFocus Subscribers
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/sub0912.php
This AfricaFocus Bulletin has recent books (2008 and 2009) from
AfricaFocus subscribers, including authors, editors, contributors,
and publishers. It's a very substantial list, but I'm sure some
have escaped my notice. If you are an AfricaFocus subscriber, check
this out for your own books and those by the your fellow
subscribers. If you are an author or editor and don't find your
recently published book here, do let me know (at
africafocus@igc.org), and I'll add it below.
Dec 15, 2009 South Africa: 30+ New Books
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/sab0912.php
The most popular of these new books from and about South Africa is
undoubtedly that by John Carlin on Nelson Mandela and the Game
that Made a Nation, now available in two editions as well as in
the newly released Clint Eastwood movie. But probably the one most
in need of greater international attention is the one edited by
Tawana Kupe and colleagues - Go Home or Die Here: Violence,
Xenophobia and the Reinvention of Difference in South Africa. This
photographic and analytic portrayal of the xenophobic violence of
2008 poses fundamental questions about the shape of today's South
Africa.
Dec 6, 2009 USA/Africa: AIDS - No We Can't?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hiv0912a.php
"It was ordinary people, people living with AIDS and those who
loved them, who spoke up, demanded action. Activists in Brazil,
Thailand, South Africa, Uganda and elsewhere shamed their
countries, the world into action. [international AIDS programs
... were swept into place by the force of the voices crying out for
justice only a few years ago. It is almost 10 years later and we're
in danger of losing everything we've achieved on AIDS this decade."
- Greg Gonsalves
Dec 6, 2009 Africa: HIV/AIDS 2009 Update
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hiv0912c.php
"Through its partnerships with more than 30 countries through
September 2009, PEPFAR has provided direct support for life-saving
antiretroviral treatment for over 2.4 million men, women and
children. The Global Fund has supported treatment for 2.5 million
people worldwide. Approximately 1.3 million people receive
treatment supported by both PEPFAR bilateral programs and the
Global Fund, and thus are counted in the totals for each
organization. These numbers reflect the strong country-level
partnership between PEPFAR and the Global Fund." - Joint press
release by the Global Fund and PEPFAR, December 1, 2009
Dec 6, 2009 USA/Africa: AIDS - Yes, We Can?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hiv0912b.php
"If we are to sustain the gains we've had and have made
against this epidemic, PEPFAR must work in closer collaboration
with country governments to support and mount a truly global
response to the shared global burden of disease. ... But unmet
needs are still the dominant feature of this program. ... we're
going to begin transitioning from an emergency
response to a sustainable one through greater engagement with and
capacity building of governments." - Dr. Eric Goosby, Ambassador,
Global AIDS Coordinator for U.S. government
Nov 27, 2009 Africa: Ending Malaria in Sight?
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/mal0911.php
On the Comoran island of Moheli, with a population of 36,000,
malaria has been eliminated with the aid of a comprehensive
Chinese-assisted treatment campaign. And at the 5th Pan-African
malaria conference, held in Nairobi in early November, Kenya's
minister of public health, Beth Mugo, announced that her country
had set the goal of eliminating the disease by 2017.
Nov 6, 2009 Africa: Donors Retreating on AIDS
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hiv0911.php
"After almost a decade of progress in rolling out AIDS treatment we
have seen substantial improvements, both for patients and public
health. But recent funding cuts mean doctors and nurses are being
forced to turn HIV patients away from clinics as if we were back in
the 1990s before treatment was available" - Dr Tido von
Schoen-Angerer, Director of MSF's Access to Essential Medicines
Campaign.
Nov 6, 2009 USA/Africa: Supporting Global Health
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/gh0911.php
"Overall, we call for a doubling of U.S. aid to global health from
nearly $8 billion a year to $16 billion by 2011. A six-year scale
up of a sufficiently resourced initiative would total $95 billion.
While this reflects higher levels than the President's original
announcement, 40% of this increase is for the total of $14 billion
that must be invested in health workforce - which we believe could
make or break the effort." -
http://www.theglobalhealthinitiative.org
Sep 28, 2009 Africa: Financing Global Health
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/fin0909.php
The G20 Summit meeting in Pittsburgh last week marked a significant
expansion of international fora on global problems, with the
official announcement that it was replacing the more restricted G8
as the primary venue for coordination of the world's major economic
powers. The Summit's conclusions, focused on macroeconomic and
financial issues, offered little for Africa, apart from generic
expressions of support for development and protecting the most
vulnerable. But the changing policy climate was also reflected in
the parallel release of incremental proposals for new financing
mechanisms for global needs that would be more consistent than
promises of "aid" from rich countries.
Jul 28, 2009 Africa: Backsliding on AIDS Funding
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hiv0907.php
"Why is it not possible to allocate sufficient money for every
aspect of global health, of which AIDS is but a part, and in so
doing, meet the Millennium Development Goals - money which is but
a fraction, a miniscule fraction of all the public dollars that
have found their way, in one short year, into the bottomless pits
of greed and avarice?" - Stephen Lewis, speaking at the opening of
the International AIDS Society conference in Cape Town
Jun 8, 2009 Africa: Innovative Global Financing
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/tax0906.php
"Innovative financing ... is no longer in the experimental stage.
It has already produced over $2 billion dollars in three years. But
there is still an enormous need for financing: to ensure primary
education for all, improve maternal health, combat hunger and the
great pandemics, guarantee environmentally-friendly development,
etc. We know that $175 billion is needed every year at the global
level to finance climate mitigation policy. We all know that $35
billion is needed to achieve the Millennium Development Goals in
the health sector alone." - Bernard Kouchner, Minister of Foreign
and European Affairs, France
May 10, 2009 USA/Africa: Underfunding Global Health
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/gh0905.php
President Obama's global health budget plan, pegged at $63 billion
over six years and announced on May 5, one day in advance of the
full budget statement, met with predictably mixed responses. The
administration spin was that it was a major new commitment to a
comprehensive approach; health activist groups charged that it
actually marked a cut from prior commitments made in campaign
promises and by Congressional pledges.
Apr 27, 2009 Africa: Progress on Malaria
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/mal0904.php
"A new phase in the fight against malaria has begun. Data
presented here show that the malaria community has accelerated
efforts to deliver critical interventions, while also reducing
bottlenecks in their production, procurement and distribution.
Countries have been quicker to adopt more effective strategies
that would have been out of reach with less funding available ...
[there are] substantial increases in coverage of
insecticide-treated nets, with 19 of 22 sub-Saharan African
countries with trend data showing at least a threefold increase in
insecticide-treated net use among children since around 2000." -
UNICEF
Mar 1, 2009 USA/Africa: Waiting for Change
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/usa0903.php
"While low visibility for Africa policy may not be entirely
unexpected, considering the multiple crises the President faced
entering office, it has disappointed many who had hoped the
administration might quickly mobilize the high level attention that
is needed to spur action on vital issues." - Reed Kramer,
Feb 25, 2009 Africa: Public Health Care Must Lead
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hc0902a.php
"A growing number of international donors are promoting an
expansion of private-sector health-care delivery to fulfil this
goal [of universal health care]. The private sector can play a role in health care. But ...
the evidence shows that prioritising this approach is extremely
unlikely to deliver health for poor people." - Oxfam International
Feb 25, 2009 USA/Africa: Global Health Policy
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/hc0902b.php
"We believe that U.S. health and development assistance should
address both the root causes of ill health - poverty and inequality -
and be directed toward building public sector institutions to help
governments respond to the needs of their people. Aid should be
transparent on both donor and recipient sides and accountable to
the target population - the poor who need services most." - Global
Health Recommendations for a New Administration and Congress
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