India’s digital public infrastructure great model for world to learn from: Gates Foundation president

Lauding the Indian growth story, a top leader of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on January 16 said other countries can use India’s successful digital public infrastructure model to help achieve their healthcare and other development goals.

Speaking to PTI in Davos on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting, the Foundation’s president of Global Development, Christopher J. Elias also said AI can help accelerate achieve global development targets but it must be used responsibly and with careful attention to ethics and regulations.

“In India, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has worked in a wide range of sectors and areas including health, agriculture, water and sanitation, digital public infrastructure and inclusive financial services. We will continue to work in these areas,” he added. Mr. Elias said the Foundation’s oldest field office is in India and that is more than 20 years old.

“We work very closely with the Central government and many State governments there on some of the very important issues. We work particularly closely in States of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar on maternal health and new-born child health issues, we work in Odisha on issues related to water sanitation, agriculture development and improving lifecycles related,” he added.

Mr. Elias said it is very exciting to see such a huge presence from India. He also recalled that as G20 Chair last year, India brought together the global community to understand how best to accelerate progress with sustainable development goals of the United Nations.

“That I think is going to be talked about a lot here at Davos,” he said adding, “One area of particular accomplishment in India that I think can be a good model for the world to follow is digital public infrastructure that has helped achieve a lot of progress in financial services, health etc,” Mr. Elias said.

He said things such as universal ID, universal payment interface etc have really served India very well in the last decade to accelerate progress and development.

Mr. Elias said the leaders attending the WEF meeting can discuss how that success model of India can be shared with other nations especially in Africa and Asia and if they can help them achieve their development targets as well.

Talking about opportunities and threats from artificial intelligence, Mr. Elias said AI presents a huge opportunity to accelerate global development but it needs to be done responsibly.

“It needs to be done with careful attention to ethics and regulations so that we can harness this tool of cutting edge science and technology for the best use of mankind,” he said.

Mr. Elias said AI might be of great use to help frontline healthcare workers get the most accurate information to help address community needs. “There is tremendous potential for AI but we need to use it in a responsible manner.”

‘World yet not fully prepared for future pandemics’

Praising India and other countries for contributing to a global pandemic fund, a top official of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation on January 16 said the world is yet not fully prepared to deal with any future pandemic and a lot more work needs to be done.

Speaking to PTI on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting, where ‘Disease X’ is one of the key areas of discussions, Dr. Christopher J. Elias said we have learnt our lessons after COVID-19 but further efforts and discussions are needed, including on financing requirements.

“A really important discussion had started nearly eight years ago after the Ebola outbreak and that discussion cake into very clear focus after COVID-19 that the world needs to be better prepared,” he said.

“The world needs to be ready for infections and diseases that we know such as influenza but also diseases that we don’t know and may be new such as Disease X. But I don’t think we are fully prepared yet,” he added.

Mr. Elias noted that there have been a lot of talks on what needs to be done for the world to be fully prepared.

The WHO is in the process of negotiating an accord, trying to bring countries together on what needs to be done and how it is going to be financed, he said.

“We had a wake-up call from COVID-19 and we are relatively better prepared than we were four years ago but we are not fully prepared. There is a lot more work to be done and there is a lot more financing that needs to be arranged and those would be a lot more discussions over the course of next one year,” he said.

Talking about financing requirements Mr. Elias said that after the COVID-19, an IMF report suggested that we might need $10 billion a year to make sure that the entire world is adequately prepared for future pandemics.

“At Indonesian G20 two years ago, a pandemic fund was created and many nations of the world including India contributed to that fund. So, that’s a start and it has raised about $2 billion so far but obviously it’s not everything that is needed,” he said.

On the new annual budget of the Foundation, Mr. Elias said they are very excited that the board of trustees of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has approved our largest budget ever of $8.6 billion for 2024.

“We think it’s really important that we are leading in helping to improve global health and development at a time when there is so much pressure on the resources around the world.

“This budget is about $1 billion higher than what was our budget in 2021. So we are increasing our budget significantly and we hope that many others also do so.

“Because this is the time when we have seen many successes in global health and a lot of opportunities are there for continued successes,” he added.

Asked about areas where these funding will go, Mr. Elias said there are many that the budget covers including finishing the job on polio eradication.

“India eradicated polio more than ten years ago but there are a few other places in the world where we have to finish the job and we are optimistic that in a year or two we will be able to eradicate polio from the world,” he said.

The foundation will also continue to work towards improving immunization and to reach those areas where people need the help the most are among our key priorities, he added.

Source link

#Indias #digital #public #infrastructure #great #model #world #learn #Gates #Foundation #president

India likely to achieve SDG goals for reduction in newborn deaths: WHO expert Anshu Banerjee

India, which has taken proactive steps to reduce neonatal mortality, is likely to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) targets in this key area by 2030, a top WHO official has said, citing data on the annual rate of reduction for newborn deaths in the country between 2016 and 2021.

“India has taken important steps to improve the quality of care during labour and childbirth, leading to reductions in maternal deaths. This will also bring better outcomes for new-borns,” Dr. Anshu Banerjee, Director, Department of Maternal, Newborn, Child and Adolescent Health and Ageing at the World Health Organisation, Geneva, told PTI , in Cape Town.

“If we use the annual rate of reduction for newborn deaths between 2016–2021 and apply it to 2022–2030, it is likely that India will be able to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal targets,” Dr. Banerjee, who was here last week to attend the ‘International Maternal Newborn Health Conference’ (IMNHC 2023), said.

“India has been proactive in taking action to accelerate neonatal mortality reductions, including strengthening policy and planning for newborn health,” Dr. Banerjee said. Dr. Banerjee addressed several sessions during the four-day conference which was held from May 8-11.

The IMNHC 2023 was hosted by the government of South Africa and AlignMNH – a global initiative funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in collaboration with the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and in partnership with UNFPA, UNICEF, and the World Bank.

India has an established newborn care programme at both the health facility and community levels.

Essential newborn care is given through dedicated Newborn Care Corners in health facilities, Newborn Stabilisation Units have been established in primary health facilities to take care of simple newborn illnesses, and a large network of about 1,000 newborn care units covers nearly every district in the country has been established in hospitals to take care of sick and preterm newborns.

India also has one of the largest “home-based care for newborns” programmes where six to seven visits are made by frontline health workers (ASHAs) to provide health services and counselling at home after birth.

“In order to bring further gains, it will be important to continue improving the quality of care available to newborns, especially those that are born early, small or sick,” he said.

On being asked about the learnings from the ‘Born too soon: decade of action on preterm birth’ report by the WHO, UNICEF and PMNCH — the world’s largest alliance for women, children, and adolescents, which was also launched here last week, Dr. Banerjee said that complications relating to premature births are now the leading cause of under-five child deaths globally, and as such, its is one of the most pressing issues for child survival. Preterm birth is when a baby is born before 37 weeks of pregnancy.

“We simply can’t achieve global newborn health and survival targets without moving on this big issue. And yet, there has been very little progress in reducing rates of preterm births globally over the last decade,” he said.

“There is now no excuse for inaction – we have so many solutions and innovations that we didn’t have a decade ago. What we need is a big focus on investment and implementation for both prevention of preterm birth – in particular, this means ensuring high-quality care during pregnancy for every woman, including early ultrasound – and better care for small and sick newborns and their families,” he stressed.

“Next week, the WHO will be launching new resources for countries to support the wider roll-out of kangaroo mother care, a lifesaving technique involving both skin-to-skin contact between a mother and a baby and exclusive breastfeeding,” Dr. Banerjee said.

“This needs to be available to preterm babies everywhere to ensure they have the best possible chance of survival.”

On countries facing twin problems of obesity and malnutrition with urbanisation, Dr. Banerjee said while the problem of undernutrition in women and children (manifested as wasting, stunting, and micronutrient deficiencies) continues to be a major contributor to sickness and mortality throughout the world, rising rates of obesity are contributing to increases in non-communicable diseases. This has been called “the double burden of malnutrition”.

“This means that health programmes and healthcare workers must simultaneously scale up interventions to address both ends of the spectrum at the same time – and ensure they are screening for and managing both undernutrition and obesity,” he said.

“This can be a huge challenge, but we are finding that there are achievable “double-duty actions” that are important to reduce both undernutrition and obesity. “For example, protection and support of continued breastfeeding – including through maternity protections, for instance – supports better child growth and protects against the later development of obesity.”

“Delivering supplemental food products that are highly nutritious without containing unhealthy fats and sugars can also be a double-duty action,” he said.

On what are some best practices that India can emulate from other countries for improving maternal and newborn health, Dr. Banerjee said, “India does not have to look far.” There are success stories within India – for example, the State of Kerala has achieved a maternal mortality rate of 19 per 100,000 live births, followed closely by a few other States.

“Implementation of quality standards in obstetric care helped address the common causes of maternal death, complemented by improvements in the response to childbirth-related emergencies,” he stated.

“In South Asia, Sri Lanka has achieved remarkable success and that too with limited financial resources by focussing on universal health coverage, deploying professional midwives for skilled birth attendance and ensuring quality of care.”

On what learnings others can derive from India’s policies to reduce MMR, he said leadership and commitment at the highest level to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality are instrumental in driving change.

“In addition, India has several unique policies and schemes that have focussed on reducing inequities in access to quality care in public and private healthcare facilities.”

In particular: India has adopted a policy to provide every woman and newborn with assured, dignified, respectful and quality healthcare, free of cost and with zero tolerance for denial of services under SUMAN.

Another scheme guarantees pregnant women a minimum package of antenatal care services, including ultrasound, in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy at designated public health facilities.

India is supporting monitoring and safe delivery for all high-risk pregnant women through additional extra antenatal visits for them.

Interventions during labour and childbirth are estimated to have the greatest impact on reducing preventable maternal and newborn deaths, and India has focussed hard on improving care at this point.

The Ministry of Health has undertaken quality certification of hundreds of labour rooms and maternity operation theatres under the “LaQshya” programme. Standardisation of labour rooms, adherence to critical (clinical and non-clinical) practices around childbirth and creation of a conducive environment for “respectful maternity care” has fostered more confidence in the public health system.

Competencies of the health care providers in these labour rooms have been strengthened through a programme called “Dakshta” which focusses on improving essential skills.

India has introduced several IT initiatives to leverage digital platforms to support health service provision for pregnant women and children. Several states are using innovative mobile technology to support health status monitoring and response.

Source link

#India #achieve #SDG #goals #reduction #newborn #deaths #expert #Anshu #Banerjee