… their health-related stories and concerns. Topics discussed included drug stock-outs, substandard medicines, the need for more health workers and how to enhance treatment literacy for people living with…
… service delivery, (ii) health workforce, (iii) health information systems, (iv) access to essential medicines, (v) financing, and (vi) leadership/governance. Depending on factors related to access, coverage,…
… Joint Learning Network for UHC Social Innovation in Health Initiative and research (35%), and medicines in health systems (27%). Respondents also identified a long list of “other” technical areas,…
… procurement processes, negotiated prices, and public procurement capacity to assure supplies of critical medicines and supplies. • Challenges of absorbing programme staff into the general health system. • Parallel…
… procurement processes, negotiated prices, and public procurement capacity to assure supplies of critical medicines and supplies. • Challenges of absorbing programme staff into the general health system. • Parallel…
… prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, and palliative care, as well as access to essential medicines and vaccines. We urge participants and signatories to renew their focus on monitoring progress…
… prevention, treatment, rehabilitation, and palliative care, as well as access to essential medicines and vaccines. We urge participants and signatories to renew their focus on monitoring progress…
… financial investment to ensure effective, efficient and consistent quality assurance by all National medicines Regulatory Authority (NMRAs), including improved data sharing and harmonisation, with linked…
… ‘building blocks’ (leadership/governance, services, health workforce, health information systems, medicines and other health products, health financing), functions (e.g. governance, financing, generating…
… particularly primary health care • Scaling up investment in skilled health workers • Improving access to medicines and health technologies • Innovating to meet the health needs of vulnerable and marginalised groups…