SPOTLIGHT
THE REACH INITIATIVE
The REACH (Resilient and Empowered African
Community Health; Healthy communities,
resilient Africa) initiative is part of an ambitious
partnership between the IFRC and Africa Centre
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that
aims to strengthen the community health work-
force, and health systems, across the continent.
Africa is home to millions of people who are not
able to get the help they need to prevent, identify,
and treat health issues. Disease outbreaks can
quickly get out of control, and people continue to
suffer from vaccine-preventable illnesses such
as measles. People in remote areas must travel
miles to reach the nearest health facility. For
others, healthcare is simply unavailable or unaf-
fordable. There is an urgent need to strengthen
health systems and address the huge shortfall of
human resources for health in Africa, especially
at community level.
Addressing these challenges is essential for pro-
gress toward Sustainable Development Goal 3
to “ensure healthy lives and promote wellbeing
for all at all ages” and to guarantee Universal
Health Coverage.
In 2017, African Heads of States and Governments
formally endorsed the two million Community
Health Workers Initiative, to recruit, train and
deploy two million community health workers
across the continent.
Africa CDC, the IFRC and other partners are
working together to support African Union
Member States to fulfil these commitments. The
IFRC network in Africa and participating National
Societies are the lead operational partners for
the REACH initiative.
Through the five-year partnership, Africa CDC
and the IFRC aim to improve health outcomes
for African communities through the scale-up of
a strengthened, people-centred and integrated
community health workforce and systems to
deliver impact, resilience, and sustainability.
This initiative has the potential to almost double
the current community health worker density in
the region and is projected to reach 500 million
people across the continent.
The initiative was launched jointly by IFRC and
Africa CDC in October 2022 at the African Union
headquarters in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
The IFRC has already achieved significant mile-
stones towards strengthening the auxiliary role
of National Societies in health and community
health, a crucial step to enable them to effec-
tively lead progress.
A steering management committee and coordi-
nation group have been established and next
steps include finalizing partner mapping, devel-
oping detailed country-level implementation
plans, and mobilizing the necessary resources.
Dostları ilə paylaş: