Accountability, AIDS and Africa – Stop the Stockouts, Financial Oversight (BEMF)
Posted by | Posted in Access to Health, Finance, Food for thought, Global Health, Government, HIV/AIDS, Health Systems, ICT, Infectious Diseases, Innovation, Malaria, Mapping, Mobile Phones, Pharmaceuticals, Research, Supply Chain, TB | Posted on 24-09-2009
In my work in the field, I am no longer surprised to see test stockouts, essential medicines stockouts, supply stockouts, broken or missing diagnostic machines, or patients who are afraid of healthcare workers. It is a complete tragedy, and as I work to help, I think of all the people who are sick or die because of failures of the healthcare system, who cannot tell anyone their stories. For those who do not work in the health system, or haven’t had an experience of health system failure, transparency and data on implementation is practically invisible – so there’s no public awareness of the issues.
So I was thrilled to see recent developments in accountability – the Stop the Stockouts campaign, and the creation of the Budget and Expenditure Monitoring Forum in South Africa.
Power to the People: Stop the Stockouts
Stop the Stock-outs , a multi-country Africa campaign, is using text messages sent by activists and members of the public to expose stock-outs of essential medicines at public health facilities and put pressure on governments to address the issue. It was launched in Kenya, Uganda, Malawi and Zambia by Health Action International (HAI) Africa. During Pill Check week in June, facilities were surveyed, and a map of stockouts was created. The image below incorporates July 2009 data. It was found that many government health facilities were routinely running out of, or just not stocking essential medicines to treat common diseases such as malaria, pneumonia, diarrhoea, HIV and tuberculosis (TB).
“We were finding availability levels in rural, lower-level health facilities of 40 or 50 percent for essential medicines,” said Christa Cepuch, a pharmacist at HAI Africa. Read more from IRIN here
Show me the Money: HIV Policy AND the Budget and Expenditure Monitoring Forum in South Africa
With a new government in South Africa as of May, there have been some very positive signs. Read the rest of this entry »


![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=91bd5ac7-9bc6-4cb1-a519-1198c000d3df)