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AfDB Outlines Health Infrastructure Strategy to Health Ministers In ECOWAS

Currently, in the consultation phase, the strategy entails policy dialogue and technical assistance on effective financing strategies, including expanding health insurance.

African Development Bank (AfDB.org) Vice President Dr Beth Dunford has outlined the details of a new strategy that seeks to boost access to health services across the continent.

Dunford delivered the message in a keynote speech at the 22nd Ordinary Session of the Economic Community of West African States Assembly of Health Ministers in Abuja.

Opening the meeting on behalf of Nigeria’s President Muhammadu Buhari, the country’s Health Minister Osagie Ehanire noted that the Covid-19 pandemic had exposed the fragility of health systems and infrastructure in the sub-region.

“The challenges posed by the pandemic have strengthened our collective resolve as a region to build back better, and part of our strategy is to work together as a regional bloc. It is in this regard that we appreciate and commend the support and leadership role of our development partners such as African Development Bank Group in the development of quality health infrastructure across the continent,” the Health Minister said.

Representing Bank Group President Dr Akinwumi A. Adesina at the event, Dunford explained that the strategy focuses on three categories: primary healthcare infrastructure for underserved populations; developing new secondary and tertiary healthcare facilities alongside specialist facilities for cancer diagnosis and treatment, dialysis and pain management; and building diagnostic infrastructure for efficient and effective disease diagnosis across Africa.

Covid-19 is a wake-up call on the central role of health systems and infrastructure for inclusive economic growth

“Covid-19 is a wake-up call on the central role of health systems and infrastructure for inclusive economic growth,” said Dunford, Bank Vice President for Agriculture, Human and Social Development. “Developing quality health infrastructure is a triple imperative – health infrastructure is fundamental to public health, has significant economic impact, and is of strategic importance for governments,” she added.

Currently, in the consultation phase, the strategy entails policy dialogue and technical assistance on effective financing strategies, including expanding health insurance. Its implementation will boost the continent’s efforts to achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goal 3 which refers to good health and well-being.

Dunford said the Bank was poised to play a critical role as a health infrastructure financier by drawing on its expertise in infrastructure development and working with sector partners.

“The portfolio will include investment projects, results-based financing, risk-sharing instruments to leverage private sector resources, debt and equity investments in private companies, and the promotion of innovative sources of finance, such as diaspora funds,” Dunford said filling the financing gap for health infrastructure would require mobilizing finances from the private sector, development finance institutions and diaspora groups. “The Bank cannot do it without your ownership and support,” she said.

Stanley Okolo, Director General of the West African Health Organization, welcomed the Bank’s initiative to support the development of quality health infrastructure across Africa.

The African Development Bank launched a multi-billion-dollar Covid-19 Response Facility and issued a $3 billion Covid-19 bond to support the efforts of African countries to mitigate the health and economic impacts of the pandemic.

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