Health

Gvt, health development partners launch health fund

By William Milasi

Government represented by Vice President Constantino Chiwenga, jointly with funding partners and United Nations agencies in the health sector, Monday launched the Health Resilience Fund (HRF) and the National Health Strategy (NHS) 2021-2025, the Investment Case for the National Health Strategy and Coordination Framework for the Health Sector with the fund and strategies aimed to further improve the health of the population of Zimbabwe.

A statement released revealed that the National Health Strategy (2021–2025) is a deliberate effort by government to improve the health and wellness of the population and to ensure universal access to health services, whilst the Investment Case to the National Health Strategy (2021–2025) calls for efficiencies in the utilisation of available health resources.

In addition, the health sector coordination framework consolidates and coordinates shared efforts by the Ministry of Health and Child Care and all key stakeholders to improve sector governance and oversight.   

“The Health Resilience Fund (HRF) is a pooled health fund that will contribute under the coordination of the Ministry of Health and Child Care to improve health care for vulnerable mothers, new-borns, children and adolescents in Zimbabwe. Funding partners are the European Union, the Governments of Ireland, the United Kingdom, and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance while UNICEF, UNFPA and WHO are the technical partners of the Fund,” the statement read.

It is noteworthy to mention that the HRF is aligned with the country’s National Development Strategy 1 (NDS1) and the National Health Strategy (NHS) 2021-2025 and will run till 2025.

The key objective of the HRF is to consolidate the gains achieved under the Health Development Fund.

“The Fund will focus on three health pillars: ending preventable maternal, newborn, child and adolescent deaths; global health security; and health systems strengthening. It has a budget of approximately USD 90 million,” read the statement.

The Health Development Fund (HDF) that preceded the Health Resilience Fund was supported by the European Union, Ireland, Sweden, the United Kingdom and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance.

The HDF contributed to improving several health indicators, as shown by the 2019 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) and the 2022 National Population and Housing Census.

Notable improvements were on maternal mortality, infant and under-five mortality, adolescent fertility, contraceptive prevalence and chronic malnutrition or stunting. 

Consequently, the intervention saw the country’s maternal mortality ratio, for instance, reduced from 614 to 462 per 100,000 live births between 2014 and 2019 while at the same time, “the Health Development Fund contributed to maintaining the availability of essential medicines and commodities in primary health care facilities at an average of 80%.”

“In 2020, the Health Development Fund quickly adapted to the challenges caused by COVID-19 and contributed to the National COVID-19 Response plan. The Health Development Fund supported the response through coordination activities, infection prevention and control capacity strengthening, risk communication and community engagement activities, treatment of COVID-19 cases, procurement of ventilators, test kits, personal protective equipment, essential medicines and laboratory reagents, and strengthening health controls at the country’s borders. This complemented the Government led multi-sectoral response which included the COVID-19 vaccination programme,” read the statement.

Invariably, the Health Resilience Fund will build on the gains of the Health Development Fund and address the remaining challenges to ensure access to maternal, child and sexual and reproductive health and nutrition services, and to strengthen the health system’s resilience to shocks. 

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