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U.S. Public Health Assistance to Africa by Michael Hall.

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Presentation on theme: "U.S. Public Health Assistance to Africa by Michael Hall."— Presentation transcript:

1 U.S. Public Health Assistance to Africa by Michael Hall

2 Resolved: The United States federal government should substantially increase its public health assistance to Sub-Saharan Africa.

3 Sub Saharan Africa (SSA)

4 Where Might “Public Health Assistance” Come From?  The Department of State recognizes five types of US Foreign Aid. ● Economic Aid to Support US Political and Security Objectives ● Military Assistance ● Humanitarian Assistance ● Multilateral Assistance ● Bilateral Development Assistance

5 Where Might Development Assistance Come From?  When looking at Economic and Development Assistance together, there are 7 accounts Congress funds. Among these accounts are two that are explicitly health related:  Child Survival and Health (CSH)  Global AIDS Initiative (GAI)

6 Where Might Development Assistance Come From? OOOOther health programs are funded through the Development Assistance. The two largest are:  Family planning and reproductive health; and  Infectious disease prevention other than HIV/AIDS

7 Where Might Development Assistance Come From? AAAAll told, the Department of State calculates that more than $2.5 billion was spent in global health programs in 2004.

8 What Does “Public Health Assistance Mean?”  “Public health assistance” in not a term found in the US Foreign Assistance Budget.  “Public health assistance” is a term found in other federal regulations.  The Code of Federal Regulations says public health assistance is the provision of health services designed to protect the health of the general public.

9 Like What Kind of Services? Public health services “including, but not limited to, immunizations for immunizable diseases, testing and treatment for tuberculosis and sexually-transmitted diseases, and family planning services.”

10 Public Health In SSA – The Big Picture  The CIA statistics on life expectancy reveal the following:  Of the 31 lowest ranking nations in life expectancy, 28 were in SSA  The average person born in SSA can expect to live 46 years, which is 32 years less than most Western Countries  Zimbabwe, Zambia, Angola, and Swaziland are all below 40 years.

11 Public Health In SSA – The Challenges  Of the more than 40 million people in the world living with HIV/AIDS, it is estimated that 2/3 of them are in SSA – that’s more than 26 million people!  Challenge #1: HIV/AIDS  HIV/AIDS is the #1 killer of people in Africa – more than 7% of the population is HIV positive and as many as 2 million per year die

12 Public Health In SSA – The Challenges  Challenge #2a: Other Infectious Diseases – Malaria  More than 80% of global cases and 95% of deaths are in SSA  There are between 300 million and 500 million cases in SSA every year  Between 750 thousand and 1 million children in SSA die each year

13 Public Health In SSA – The Challenges  Challenge #2b: Other Infectious Diseases – Tuberculosis  In 2005, WHO estimates that 2.5 million were infected with TB in SSA. More than 500 thousand died.  29% of all global TB cases occurred in SSA. The only region with more cases was South-East Asia, a region with more than double the population.

14 Public Health In SSA – The Challenges  Diarrhea is the #1 cause of infant mortality in Africa. More than 600 thousand die of Rotavirus alone.  Challenge #3: Dehydration from Disease  Diarrhea can be caused by a number of diseases. In Africa, the most common are Cholera and Rotavirus.


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