
Audio By Carbonatix
President John Mahama has left Accra for Stockholm, Sweden, where he will be co-hosting the mid-term review meeting of the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation (GAVI Alliance).
He will be co-hosting the meeting with the Swedish Minister for International Development Cooperation, Hillevi Engström.
More than 150 participants including Health Ministers from implementing countries, GAVI Alliance partners- WHO, UNICEF, World Bank, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation-, donors and potential donors, the private sector, civil society, Members of Parliament and vaccine manufacturers are attending the meeting.
The meeting is expected to evaluate the progress made by the Alliance in its quest to deliver on the goals of the London pledging conference in 2011.
These goals include accelerating the uptake and use of under-used and new vaccines; strengthening health systems to improve immunisation coverage; improving long-term predictability and stability of immunisation financing; and helping to improve vaccine market conditions for developing countries.
President Mahama, who has been selected by the Global Fund as an ambassador, hosted with the Fund and GAVI a side event during the recent UN General Assembly on innovative development models and how to harness the power of global public-private partnerships in the post 2015 agenda.
The 2011 pledging conference saw donors committing $4.3 billion for the immunisation of 250 million of the world’s poorest children by 2015, thereby saving up to 4 million lives.
Since then, GAVI has funded a total of 67 new vaccine introductions and campaigns. It expected that all the seventy-three GAVI-supported countries will by 2014 introduce 5-in-1 pentavalent vaccines.
GAVI has also helped to produce more predictability and competition in the vaccine market, which has helped to bring down the cost of fully vaccinating a child with three priority vaccines – pentavalent, pneumococcal and rotavirus - from $35 in 2010 to $23 in 2012.
In Ghana, GAVI has just helped negotiate for record-low prices for HPVs, which prevents cervical cancer. Ghana is therefore among the first countries to introduce the vaccine in a demonstration project in two districts.
Latest Stories
-
Police arrest Kwadwo Safo Akofena and 2 others over Adwoa Safo shooting incident
18 minutes -
At least 13 killed and dozens injured after Qatar gas explosion
21 minutes -
Partey declares readiness for England showdown as Black Stars eye group lead
23 minutes -
Rain turns Accra-Kasoa road into daily nightmare
41 minutes -
NPP relaxes nomination form collection rules amid payment platform delays
1 hour -
IFRIG leads regulators, Ghanaian banks on non-interest banking and finance training in Malaysia
1 hour -
Ashanti Health Directorate fights Neglected Tropical Diseases with distribution of free medications
1 hour -
Kenya minister found in contempt of court over US-backed Ebola centre
1 hour -
Four arrested over murder of couple in Zebilla District
2 hours -
EasyJet says US bidder trying to buy it ‘on the cheap’ as it rejects £4.7bn offer
2 hours -
Telecel Ashanti codes programme: First cohort of 25 pupils graduate in Obuasi
2 hours -
Electricity tariffs increases by 3.49%, water by 0.85% effective July 1
3 hours -
Man, 22, arrested with skeletal parts at Sefwi Atronsu
3 hours -
Former Kenyan justice minister blocked from entering Uganda, lawyers’ body says
3 hours -
Kenya minister found in contempt of court over US-backed Ebola centre
3 hours