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Full Compilation HIFA discussion on maintaining Essential Health Services during COVID Full Compilation EHS-COVID (1) Webinar - Delivering Quality Essential MNCH Services During COVID-19 (English/French) 30 October, 2020 Forwarded from the Child Health Task Force. Dear Child Health Task Force Members, The Network for Improving Quality of Care for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health and the Quality of Care Subgroup of the Child Health Task Force, with support of UNICEF and WHO, are co-hosting a webinar series - Delivering Quality Essential MNCH Services During COVID-19. The final webinar in the series is Thursday, November 5th at 7am EST/12 noon GMT/3pm EAT, on ensuring safe continuation of child health services at health facilities and in communities (iCCM/IMNCI). Please see the flyer below and attached for more details [*]. You can register for the webinar here [https://zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_vEH9mPtHR-GUr4p4EoSSSw] and more information on the series is available here: http://www.qualityofcarenetwork.org/webinars/webinar-series-delivering-e... This webinar will include EN/FR translation. French invitation flyer forthcoming. 2733 Crystal Drive 4th Floor Arlington, VA 22202 Tel: 703.528.7373 Forwarded by Neil Pakenham-Walsh, HIFA Coordinator, [email protected] www.hifa.org Page 1 of 558 Coordinator, WHO-HIFA Collaboration: HIFA project on Essential Health Services and COVID-19 [EHS-COVID] https://www.hifa.org/projects/essential-health-services-and-covid-19 [*Note from HIFA moderator (Neil PW): HIFA does not carry attachments/graphics] EHS-COVID (2) WONCA webinars on Essential Health Services and COVID 30 October, 2020 WONCA (World Association of Family Doctors, HIFA Supporting Organisation) has announced two upcoming webinars (below) that are especially relevant to our new collaboration with WHO on Essential Health Services and COVID. Would anyone like to volunteer to participate in one of these webinars (I think they are an hour each) and share your observations with the forum? At the same time, you can publicise our upcoming thematic discussion (starts mid-November) to other webinar participants and invite them to join us. [email protected] We [WONCA] are delighted to announce the second series of weekly webinars on COVID-19... 01 November - SIG on Cancer and Palliative care at 1300 UTC - Registration page for attendees: https://bitly.com/wonca-covid19-27 8 November - SIG on Adolescent and Young Adult Care - Registration page for attendees: https://bitly.com/wonca-covid19-28 More information: https://www.globalfamilydoctor.com/Resources/COVID19/WONCA WEBINARCOVID19... Neil Pakenham-Walsh, HIFA Coordinator, [email protected] www.hifa.org Coordinator, WHO-HIFA Collaboration: HIFA project on Essential Health Services and COVID-19 [EHS-COVID] https://www.hifa.org/projects/essential-health-services-and-covid-19 EHS-COVID (3) Stroke systems of care in low-income and middle-income countries: challenges and opportunities Page 2 of 558 30 October, 2020 COVID is conspicuous by its absence in this otherwise comprehensive review in The Lancet (31 October 2020). The paper does not even mention COVID or coronavirus. I invite HIFA members to share any observations on the impact of COVID on essential health services for people with acute stroke - and their long-term rehabilitation. CITATION: Stroke systems of care in low-income and middle-income countries: challenges and opportunities Jeyaraj D Pandian et al. The Lancet, October 31, 2020 DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)31374-XSUMMARY: The burden of stroke is higher in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) than in high- income countries and is rising. Even though there are global policies and guidelines for implementing stroke care, there are many challenges in setting up stroke services in LMICs. Despite these challenges, there are many models of stroke care available in LMICs — eg, multidisciplinary team care led by a stroke neurologist, specialist-led care by neurologists, physician-led care, hub and spoke models incorporating stroke telemedicine (ie, telestroke), and task sharing involving community health workers. Alternative strategies have been developed, such as reorganising the existing hospital infrastructure by training health professionals to implement protocol-driven care. The future challenge is to identify what elements of organised stroke care can be implemented to make the largest gain. Simple interventions such as swallowing assessments, bowel and bladder care, mobility assessments, and consistent secondary prevention can prove to be key elements to improving post-discharge morbidity and mortality in LMICs. Best wishes, Neil Coordinator, WHO-HIFA Collaboration: HIFA project on Essential Health Services and COVID-19 https://www.hifa.org/projects/essential-health-services-and-covid-19 Let's build a future where people are no longer dying for lack of healthcare information - Join HIFA: www.hifa.org HIFA profile: Neil Pakenham-Walsh is coordinator of the HIFA global health campaign (Healthcare Information For All - www.hifa.org ), a global community with more than 19,000 members in 177 countries, interacting on six global forums in four languages in collaboration with WHO. Twitter: @hifa_org FB: facebook.com/HIFAdotORG [email protected] Page 3 of 558 EHS-COVID (4) Sexual and reproductive health services 30 October, 2020 Below are the citation and abstract of a new review in the journal Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters. The literature review includes up to 2019 and therefore does not address the impact of COVID. Nevertheless it may provide a baseline from which impact can be assessed. I invite HIFA members to share any papers on the impact of COVID on essential health services for reproductive and maternal health. CITATION: T. K. Sundari Ravindran & Veloshnee Govender (2020) Sexual and reproductive health services in universal health coverage: a review of recent evidence from lowand middle-income countries, Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters, 28:2, 1779632, DOI: 10.1080/26410397.2020.1779632 https://doi.org/10.1080/26410397.2020.1779632 ABSTRACT If universal health coverage (UHC) cannot be achieved without the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of the population being met, what then is the current situation vis-à-vis universal coverage of SRH services, and the extent to which SRH services have been prioritised in national UHC plans and processes? This was the central question that guided this critical review of more than 200 publications between 2010 and 2019. The findings are the following. The Essential Package of Healthcare Services (EPHS) across many countries excludes several critical SRH services (e.g. safe abortion services, reproductive cancers) that are already poorly available. Inadequate international and domestic public funding of SRH services contributes to a sustained burden of out-of-pocket expenditure (OOPE) and inequities in access to SRH services. Policy and legal barriers, restrictive gender norms and gender-based inequalities challenge the delivery and access to quality SRH services. The evidence is mixed as to whether an expanded role and scope of the private sector improves availability and access to services of underserved populations. As momentum gathers towards SRH and UHC, the following actions are necessary and urgent. Advocacy for greater priority for SRH in government EPHS and health budgets aligned with SRH and UHC goals is needed. Implementation of stable and sustained financing mechanisms that would reduce the proportion of SRH-financing from OOPE is a priority. Evidence, moving from descriptive towards explanatory studies which provide insights into the “hows” and “whys” of processes and pathways are essential for guiding policy and programme actions. Best wishes, Neil Coordinator, WHO-HIFA Collaboration: HIFA project on Essential Health Services and COVID-19 Page 4 of 558 https://www.hifa.org/projects/essential-health-services-and-covid-19 Let's build a future where people are no longer dying for lack of healthcare information - Join HIFA: www.hifa.org HIFA profile: Neil Pakenham-Walsh is coordinator of the HIFA global health campaign (Healthcare Information For All - www.hifa.org ), a global community with more than 19,000 members in 177 countries, interacting on six global forums in four languages in collaboration with WHO. Twitter: @hifa_org FB: facebook.com/HIFAdotORG [email protected] EHS-COVID (4) Sexual and reproductive health services 30 October, 2020 Below are the citation and abstract of a new review in the journal Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters. The literature review includes up to 2019 and therefore does not address the impact of COVID. Nevertheless it may provide a baseline from which impact can be assessed. I invite HIFA members to share any papers on the impact of COVID on essential health services for reproductive and maternal health. CITATION: T. K. Sundari Ravindran & Veloshnee Govender (2020) Sexual and reproductive health services in universal health coverage: a review of recent evidence from lowand middle-income countries, Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters, 28:2, 1779632, DOI: 10.1080/26410397.2020.1779632 https://doi.org/10.1080/26410397.2020.1779632 ABSTRACT If universal health coverage (UHC) cannot be achieved without the sexual and reproductive health (SRH) needs of the population being met, what then is the current situation vis-à-vis universal coverage of SRH services, and the extent to which SRH services have been prioritised in national UHC plans and processes? This was the central question
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