Toyin Saraki: Wellbeing Foundation founder praises AU over commitment to health

Founder-President of the Wellbeing Foundation Africa, Mrs Toyin Saraki

Mrs Saraki reflected on the key pronouncements which emerged from global and regional leaders at the just concluded Davos Meetings and the AU Summit.

Founder of the Wellbeing Foundation Africa, Toyin Saraki has welcomed the African Union's launch of two significant health commitments at the 2017 African Union Summit.

Mrs Saraki described the union’s pledge to create “an agency to tackle global threats such as Ebola, and to make immunization available throughout the continent by 2020” as smart and necessary investments towards universal health.

The Wellbeing Foundation founder, who is an Inaugural Fellow of the newly launched West African Academy of Public Health, and Chair of Nigeria's Primary Healthcare Revitalization Support Group made the comments in an opinion editorial for Reuters.

In the article, she reflected on the key pronouncements which emerged from global and regional leaders at the just concluded Davos Meetings and the AU Summit.

“As Chair of the Nigeria's Primary Healthcare Revitalization Support Group, I believe that primary healthcare investment, both from the private and public sector, is key to ensuring universal healthcare for all Nigerians,” Mrs Saraki said.

“At the World Economic Forum last week, healthcare leaders discussed the ‘Hospital of the Future’, and the panelist Dr.Elizabeth Nabel noted that: “We would like to take healthcare delivery systems as much in to the homes and into the communities as possible because we believe we can deliver better care at lower costs. If you believe in value-based healthcare, the definition being patient measured outcomes defined by cost. We believe that outcomes will be better delivered in the homes and communities rather than hospitals.”

“From a social investment perspective it is also a huge opportunity to see a social impact return on money invested. The nature of primary healthcare – the ability to monitor and manage delivery of, for example, the Wellbeing Foundation Africa's Mamacare antenatal and postnatal health access through birth preparedness classes, or by the USAID-funded MPowering Healthworkers Program which engaged mobile-technologies in training midwives in Ondo State of Nigeria– means that money invested in, can be quantified by results gained. For innovative social impact investors, there is an opportunity here for collaboration between both the central and state level governments in Nigeria to fund real change.

“The imperative of fulfilling rights-based social contracts with citizens should rightly be fulfilled at the most accessible, visible and tangible levels, for the battle to deliver good health and a great education, will be won (or lost) at the strata of primary healthcare and early childhood development through primary education.

“By changing course and delivering on existing domestic and international commitments to invest in health, education and fight corruption, the Government of Nigeria has the opportunity to save millions of lives, leverage on in-country, regional and global support for health, and build a more productive, prosperous and secure Nigeria,” she added.

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Mrs Saraki also explained how technology has increased access to vulnerable communities and created ample room for the rapid improvement of primary healthcare in Nigeria.


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