GLOBAL FUND BOARD CALLS FOR REGIONAL RESPONSE TO HEALTH CRISIS IN VENEZUELA
Author:
David Garmaise
Article Type:Article Number: 11
ABSTRACT The Global Fund Board has called for a coordinated regional response to the health crisis in Venezuela. The Board expressed continued concern āabout the resurgence of malaria, shortages of critical commodities for HIV and TB, and the broader health crisis in Venezuela and its impact on the region.ā
The Global Fund Board has called for a coordinated regional response to the health crisis in Venezuela ā one that addresses the impact on the region, incorporating relevant partners and donors.
At its 37th meeting on 3-4 May in Kigali, Rwanda, the Board expressed continued concern āabout the resurgence of malaria, shortages of critical commodities for HIV and TB, and the broader health crisis in Venezuela and its impact on the region.ā The Board also expressed appreciation for the engagement of communities, civil society groups, the Pan-American Health Organization (PAHO), UNAIDS, the World Health Organization (WHO) and others, and for their efforts to raise awareness and explore solutions for this situation.
The situation on the ground in Venezuela has been deteriorating for some time. A report inĀ The GuardianĀ dated 19 October 2016, paints a picture of a public health system in collapse. āThese problems all converge in the nationās hospitals,ā the newspaper said, āwhere doctors report rising levels of mortality thanks to a dire shortage of medical supplies, shutdowns of operating theatres, staff declines and violent crime, including gunshots during surgery and mugging in corridors.ā
The Guardian said that the Venezuelan Health Observatory, a research centre at the Central University of Venezuela in Caracas, estimated thatĀ fewer than 10% of operating theatres, emergency rooms and intensive care units are fully operational. The Observatory said thatĀ 76% of hospitals suffer from scarcity of medicines, 81% have a lack of surgical materials and 70% complain of intermittent water supply.
More recently, on 7 April 2017,Ā Fox NewsĀ reported that 85% of drugs usually readily available to Venezuelans are no longer available.Ā Last year, the news outletĀ said, 11,000 Venezuelan babies died within their first year if life. In just one year, the infant mortality rate went from 14.8 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2015 to 19.6 in 2016. The head of vascular surgery at the Childrenās Hospital JM de los Rios in Caracas said that the center has not performed any heart surgery in six years for lack of funding from the central government.
āIn a rare cry for help,ā Fox News said, ālast week President Nicolas Maduro asked for the United Nationsā support to alleviate medicine scarcity.ā
In August 2016, theĀ New York TimesĀ reported that there has been a resurgence of malaria. After Venezuela had eradicated malaria in its most populated areas ā it was certified by the World Health Organization as being malaria free ā āthe countryāsĀ economic turmoilĀ has brought malaria back,ā the newspaper said, āsweeping the disease out of the remote jungle areas where it quietly persisted and spreading it around the nation at levels not seen in Venezuela for 75 years.ā
GFO has reported on the situation in Venezuela in two articles,Ā hereĀ andĀ here.
The Board said that it had discussed the situation at length. It noted that Venezuela is currently not eligible for Global Fund financing. However, the Board said that in the context of a regional response, the Fund āwill continue to engage and, if possible, support the regional response.ā
In addition, the Board directed its Strategy Committee and the Secretariat to discuss exceptional circumstances in non-eligible countries as part of the ongoing reviews of the Global Fundās Eligibility Policy.