Media statement
UK Prime Minister launches International Partnership for Health
Push to make aid more effective
The UK is joining up with other developed countries and major donors
to find ways to spend aid more effectively in the poorest parts of
the world.
The coalition hopes to reduce death rates and tackle disease by
building more clinics and providing better training for doctors and
nurses.
Prime Minister Gordon Brown said developed nations had "the knowledge
and power" to save millions of lives.
Charities welcomed the initiative, but said more money was still needed.
The prime minister and German Chancellor Angela Merkel announced the
creation of the International Health Partnership in London last month.
On Wednesday, they will meet representatives from major donors
including the UN and the World Health Organisation, as well as health
ministers from Burundi, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, Zambia, Cambodia
and Nepal.
Better coordination
The BBC's developing world correspondent David Loyn said the meeting
was not about giving more money, but about spending it better.
In a statement, Mr Brown said: "Today we come together - donor
governments, health agencies and developing countries - with the
certainty that we have the knowledge and the power to save millions
of lives through our efforts."
The Department for International Development (DfID) said that while
programmes to combat specific diseases had brought good results, less
attention had been paid to infrastructure improvements.
For example, it said in some developing countries there was just one
health worker per 1,000 people compared to one per 100 in Europe.
Under the new initiative, donors will therefore agree to provide more
long-term, predictable funding to allow poor countries to invest in
hospitals, clinics and medical training.
The DfID also said developing countries often found it difficult and
time consuming dealing with numerous different donors, so efforts
would be made to improve coordination.
Child deaths
Development charities welcomed the initiative, but said that without
more money, targets on improving health set at the UN Millennium
Summit seven years ago would not be met.
Oxfam's director Barbara Stocking said: "This initiative will only
succeed if enough countries get behind it and if it mobilises
additional aid to provide co-ordinated and expanded state health
provision."
In particular, the partnership hopes to reduced child and maternal
mortality rates, and improve treatment of diseases like HIV and AIDS.
Half a million women worldwide die each year in childbirth and 10
million children do not reach their fifth birthday.
Only one in four of those in need of AIDS treatment in Africa
receives it.
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