REPORTS OF THE REGIONAL DIRECTORS ON SIGNIFICANT REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS INCLUDING REGIONAL COMMITTEE MATTERS

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WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION ORGANISATION MONDIALE DE LA SANTÉ EB79/18 29 October 1986 EXECUTIVE BOARD Seventy-ninth Session Provisional agenda item 8 REPORTS OF THE REGIONAL DIRECTORS ON SIGNIFICANT REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS INCLUDING REGIONAL COMMITTEE MATTERS Report by the Regional Director for Africa The Director-General has the honour to present to the Executive Board a report by the Regional Director for Africa, which highlights significant developments in the Region, including matters arising from discussions at the thirty-sixth session of the Regional Committee. Should members of the Board wish to see the full report of the Regional Committee, it is available in the Executive Board room.

REPORT BY THE REGIONAL DIRECTOR FOR AFRICA ON SIGNIFICANT REGIONAL DEVELOPMENTS, INCLUDING REGIONAL COMMITTEE MATTERS CONTENTS Paragraphs Introduction 1-5 Reorganization of the regional secretariat structure 6-11 Financial crisis 12 Accelerating the achievement of HFA through activities at the local level 13-14 African Immunization Year 15-16 Intersectoral cooperation for health 17 Cooperation with other agencies 18-19 New health sciences library 20 Regional Committee matters 21-30 Conclusion 31 INTRODUCTION 1 The African Region continues to be in the grip of a severe socioeconomic crisis compounded by persistent natural calamities, armed conflicts and political instability. There is, however, general agreement that this desperate situation is not the work of a divine hand, and that a durable solution is within the scope of the peoples and governments concerned, if properly supported by the international community. 2. Indeed, the African crisis can be described as a blessing in disguise, for it has prompted a number of positive factors and attitudinal changes that could significantly shape the course of African development for many years to come, including attainment of the objective of health for all by the year 2000. One of these factors has been the painstaking diagnosis of the root causes of Africa 1 s ills, and recognition of the urgent need for the governments and external development partners to do something about those ills. This evolution, which was illustrated by the recent special session of the United Nations General Assembly on the African crisis, could have welcome implications for health development in the Region. 3. Another factor is the strong political determination of many African governments to introduce reforms needed to launch the continent on sound development tracks. 4. The third is a heightened awareness of the strengths and limitations of the role of bilateral and multilateral development agencies, in particular those of the United Nations system. As demonstrated by experiences in the recent conduct of emergency relief operations iri the drought-stricken countries of the African Region, there is a healthy and growing trend within the United Nations family and bilateral donor community to review policies and approaches, so as to mount a single-purpose multisectoral integrated attack on human misery and destitution, which is the lot of most Africans. 5. These developments have equally exercised WHO in the African Region, which has witnessed significant changes since February 1985 in response to the magnitude of the development problem in Africa. The August-September issue of World Health magazine accurately summarizes the restructuring measures adopted in the Region.

REORGANIZATION OF THE REGIONAL SECRETARIAT STRUCTURE 6. This has been one of the most important developments that have affected WHO in the Region in recent memory. Governments of the Region, the Director-General, and WHO staff in the field and at the Regional Office in Brazzaville closely participated in this significant endeavour, which was dictated by the manifest need for more effective WHO support to Member States of the African Region. 7. In the new arrangements, priority attention has naturally been devoted to the regional network of country offices. Internationally recruited WHO representatives are already either in place or have been appointed in all but one country, following implementation of resolution AFR/RC35/R7 of the thirty-fifth session of the Regional Committee for Africa, which invited the Regional Director gradually to put an end to the experiment of using nationals as WHO programme coordinators. 8. WHO country offices occupy a strategic position in the new set-up, in that they are expected to provide effective leadership at the country level in galvanizing actions and resources in support of health development, particularly the primary health care (PHC) approach, in monitoring the health for all (HFA) process, and managing WHO 1 s technical cooperation activities. Increased authority and responsibility for programme management have been delegated to the representatives to enable them to carry out their expanded role. For the same purpose they are being provided with administrative assistants who will perform programme support functions related to the management of WHO activities at the country level, and operate the newly established AFROРОС (AFRO Programme Operations Coordination) system in the country offices. Additionally, information and documentation officers are being assigned to these offices to assist in coordinating the flow of information between the countries and WHO, and also process reports from the districts on the implementation of PHC, 9. The new regional structure features three subregional health development offices, each located in one of the African sub-regions. These offices comprise multidisciplinarу health development teams - organized like a rapid-deployment task force - to provide prompt WHO technical and material support to Member States, especially in implementation of HFA strategies based on PHC. Each subregional office has three teams whose activities correspond closely to the classified list of programmes for the Seventh General Programme of Work, viz: a strategic support team for health systems Infrastructure activities, a technical support team for health science and technology activities, and an administrative support team for programme support activities. 10. Among the major reforms introduced at the Regional Office in Brazzaville, mention should be made of the following: the office of the Regional Director has a unit responsible for HFA strategy coordination, leadership, advocacy and monitoring, as well as relations with governing bodies. The Director of Programme Management (DPM) is assisted by a technical adviser, who also has supervisory responsibility for the new Programme Operations Coordination (РОС) unit. Three technical programme management units reporting to the DPM are charged with the following responsibilities: support to national health systems (PM1), public health programmes in support of general health promotion and protection (PM2), and health science and technology in relation to disease prevention and control (PM3). The divisions responsible for coordination, promotion and information (DCP), and programme support (DSP) have equally been reorganized to provide efficient back-up services to programme implementation at all levels. 11. Many new appointments have been made and some staff reassigned to strengthen the new arrangements at all levels The set-up is already functioning and producing a positive impact in the countries, as noted by the Regional Director during his country visits, and by a number of government representatives at the thirty-sixth session of the Regional Committee. The new regional secretariat structure has therefore moved into a phase of productive stability. FINANCIAL CRISIS 12. Perhaps never before has the financial situation of WHO in the Region been as serious as since last year, with as yet no bright prospects in sight The severe budgetary cuts could not have come at a worse juncture, just as the Region was reorganizing itself for the hot race towards the year 2000. The subregional health development offices had been planned to

be operational from 1985, but action had to be delayed until early 1986 because of resource constraints, which have continued to hamper the proper functioning of those offices equipped only with a skeleton staff. At the Regional Office, many posts have been frozen at a time when the workload and responsibilities of the Regional Office have increased in response to the critical situation in the Region. Moreover, the severe drop in the US dollar exchange rate has pushed up the costs of programme operations, over and above the sharp inflationary treads in most countries of the Region. This gloomy situation is of great concern to Member States of the Region, as noted during the recent thirty-sixth session of the Regional Committee. ACCELERATING THE ACHIEVEMENT OF HFA THROUGH ACTIVITIES AT THE LOCAL LEVEL 13. The Regional Director presented to the thirty-fifth session of the Regional Committee, in September 1985, a plan for accelerating the implementation of PHC in Member States of the Region, with the objective of attaining health for all by the year 2000 (HFA/2000). This plan is now in the phase of implementation in the Region. A three-year overlapping scenario for supporting PHC is proposed in the plan, as follows: (i) (ii) (iii) 1986 一 operational support for PHC (peripheral level) 1987 - technical support for PHC (intermediate level) 1988 - strategic support for PHC (central level). 14. A survey recently carried out by WHO representatives showed that several countries have initiated district-focused implementation of PHC; the majority have formed district management committees and district health committees, both of which require strengthening. The country offices and subregional offices are providing support to these initiatives. A major requirement for successful implementation of PHC at district level is adequate decentralization of national administrative and managerial responsibility. AFRICAN IMMUNIZATION YEAR 15. The Expanded Programme on Immunization (EPI) is of high significance in Africa because it is one of the key PHC elements for achieving HFA/2000. It aims at reducing the high mortality and morbidity caused by EPI target diseases. 16. The Regional Committee at its thirty-fifth session adopted resolution AFR/RC35/R9, which declared 1986 to be African Immunization Year, focused on the following objectives: (1) to substantially increase immunization coverage of target populations during 1986; (2) to establish a mechanism for sustained immunization services, which will ensure universal delivery of immunization and high vaccination coverage of target populations by 1990. At the time of writing it is not possible to evaluate the effectiveness and impact of activities related to the African Immunization Year campaign, but there are sufficient indications to show that this regional initiative has boosted implementation of EPI in the Region. INTERSECTORAL COOPERATION FOR HEALTH 17 As a follow-up to the round-table held at the Regional Office in December 1985 on intersectoral cooperation in national HFA strategies, and to the Technical Discussions on this subject at the Thirty-ninth World Health Assembly in May 1986, three subregional workshops are planned in November 1986 with the aim of testing the ideas of the two meetings mentioned above on a concrete footing at the district level. The following themes will be addressed: Sub-Region I Sub-Region II Sub-Region III Water, sanitation and housing Population, food and nutrition Education, information and life-style.

COOPERATION WITH OTHER AGENCIES 18. Intersectoral collaboration in the African Region has found practical expression in the increased development of joint programming and operational activities with other agencies, especially those of the United Nations system, on major aspects of health care, such as food and nutrition with FAO, essential drugs with UNIDO, environmental control with UNEP, and family planning with UNFPA. 19. Collaboration with UNICEF in particular has been intensified following a consultation organized in September 1985 between the Regional Directors for Africa of UNICEF and WHO. Country-based staff of both organizations increasingly cooperate in the formulation and management of integrated programmes for the accelerated attainment of HFA/2000, using the PHC approach. A NEW HEALTH SCIENCES LIBRARY 20. A brand new health sciences library will be under construction before the turn of 1986 to replace the present library, which is patently inadequate even for the scientific information needs of the Regional Office. The new library building will be supplied with the latest informatics hardware and linked by computer to the other libraries of WHO and the ) United Nations system, and especially to the National Library of Medicine in Washington, DC, USA. The library will also support a network of health sciences libraries in the African Region. REGIONAL COMMITTEE MATTERS 21. The thirty-sixth session of the Regional Committee for Africa was held in Brazzaville from 10 to 17 September 1986. The session was attended by representatives from 43 Member States, national liberation movements recognized by the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the diplomatic corps, and international and nongovernmental organizations. 22. It is significant to note that, for the first time in the history of the Region, the Chairman of OAU opened a session of the Regional Committee. This development, which will be followed up next year at the summit meeting of OAU, which has included health on its agenda, underscores the increasing recognition at the highest political level of the crucial role of a healthy population as the driving force in development. 23. The proceedings of the Committee covered the following topics: the work of WHO in 1985 - succinct report of the Regional Director; the diarrhoeal diseases control programme; the Dr Comían A. A. Quenum Prize for Public Health in Africa; ways and means of implementing resolutions of regional interest adopted by the World Health Assembly and Executive Board; I method of work and duration of the Health Assembly; economic support for national HFA strategies; regional programme budget policy; proposed programme budget for 1988-1989; Eighth General Programme of Work covering the period 1990-1995 (regional contribution); revised regional antimalaria strategy; report on subregional programme meetings; report of the sixth meeting of the African Advisory Committee for Health Development (AACHD); and finally the report of the Technical Discussions, which focused on the PHC approach and protection of health of farm workers during the Industrial Development Decade in Africa. Some of these questions that may be of immediate interest to the Executive Board can be briefly summarized as follows. Work of WHO in 1985 24. The Committee noted that the serious financial crisis affecting the United Nations system had had severe adverse effects on the implementation of programme activities in 1985. It commended the Regional Director on actions taken to reorganize WHO'S African regional structure, decentralize technical and material resources, and upgrade programme efficiency. 25. On the implementation of PHC at the district level, the Committee considered the outline plan prepared by the Regional Director to be a valuable tool for accelerating the attainment of health for all. It called on the medical and nursing professions to fully assimilate the concept of PHC, and on Member States to decentralize the management of national health systems. The Committee also stressed the need to assign high priority to the Expanded Programme on Immunization, the control of diarrhoeal diseases, and the essential drugs programme, while avoiding a vertical approach.

26. In resolution AFR/RC36/R1, the Committee invited Member States, inter alia, to intensify the development of national health systems based on PHC, using as a frame of reference the three-year plan of action for the period 1986-1988 endorsed by the Committee at its thirty-fifth session. Dr Comían A. A. Quenum Prize for Public Health in Africa 27. The Committee unanimously adopted the proposal of the Cameroon delegation to institute such a prize in view of the significance of the role played by Dr Comían A. A. Quenum in public health in the Region. In resolution AFR/RC36/R8 on this subject, the Committee invited Member States, organizations and individuals to contribute to the fund that had been opened by the Government of Cameroon for the prize, and recommended to the World Health Assembly the establishment of the prize (see Annex), Proposed programme budget for 1988-1989 28. After studying the report of the Programme Sub-Committee, which had thoroughly reviewed the proposed programme budget for 1988-1989, the Committee noted that the budget had been prepared in accordance with the guidelines established by the Thirty-eighth World Health Assembly, that a zero growth rate in real terms had been the basis for the budgeting of Regional Office and regional activities, and finally that the budget adequately reflected the new structures and programme directions in the African Region, In resolution AFR/RC36/R2 on "Acceleration of the implementation of health for all in the African Region of WHO", invited Member States to earmark at least 5% of the Organization's regular budget funds for improvement of the managerial process at the district level to permit the coordination and integration of all PHC activities, and to derive maximum benefit from all available health resources so as to ensure continuity of activities at the peripheral level. Regional programme budget policy 29. The Committee emphasized the need for Member States to make optimal use of WHO'S limited resources for activities that are consistent with health policies adopted collectively in WHO for the attainment of HFA/2000. It observed with satisfaction that the regional programme budget policy provided a useful synthesis of the existing collective policies of the Organization, and that it offered an effective mechanism for improving the partnership between Member States and WHO. Resolution AFR/RC36/R3 was adopted on this item. Eighth General Programme of Work (1990-1995) 30. The Committee noted with satisfaction that the preparation of the contribution of the African Region to the Eighth General Programme of Work had been guided by a concern to follow up the Seventh General Programme of Work, with appropriate adjustments. Endorsing the comments and recommendations of the African Advisory Committee for Health Development (AACHD) and the Programme Sub-Committee, the Committee adopted resolution AFR/RC36/R5 on this subject. CONCLUSION 31. Notwithstanding the very serious challenge posed to the African Region by the simultaneous crises of African socioeconomic development on the one hand and the dwindling resources of WHO and its sister agencies on the other, the Organization is now poised for concrete action in Member States, following the profound restructuring that has just been completed, and which is already noticeable in increased productivity and efficiency at all levels.

ANNEX RESOLUTION AFR/RC36/R8. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE "DR COMLAN A. PRIZE FOR PUBLIC HEALTH" A. QUENUM The Regional Committee, Considering the discussions during the thirty-sixth session of the for the African Region of WHO concerning the proposal of the Government the memory of the late Dr Comían A. A. Quenum by the establishment of a health bearing his name; Bearing in mind paragraphs 6.6 and 6.7 of the Financial Regulations of WHO; 1. PAYS TRIBUTE to the memory of Dr Comían A. A. Quenum; Regional Committee of Cameroon to honour prize for public 2. EXPRESSES its gratitude to the Government of Cameroon for its timely and appropriate initiative; 3. INVITES Member States, organizations and individuals to follow the example of the Government of Cameroon by contributing to the fund that has been opened for the prize; 4. RECOMMENDS to the Executive Board and the World Health Assembly the establishment of the "Dr Comían A. A. Quenum Prize for Public Health in Africa". Sixth meeting, 16 September 1986