Kersti Kaljulaid, Helen Clark, Jorge Alcocer Varela and
Graca Machel | @HelenClarkNZ | Partnership for
Maternal, Newborn and Child Health
Wherever COVID-19 strikes, it
magnifies unfairness and inequality. In every nation and every community
touched by the virus, hard-won progress for women, newborns and young people is
being reversed.
This is not the work of the
disease itself, but of our reaction to it: resources for essential health care
shrink, people fear using health services, and poverty and hunger grow. The
problems are compounded by fragile health systems and lack of preparation.
A recent study in
the Lancet indicates
that, in low- and middle-income countries, all these factors could kill more
than a million children and thousands of mothers in the next six months.
In the past twenty years,
keeping mothers and children alive has been one of the great public-health
success stories. Child death rates have almost halved,
and maternal death rates are down by over a third. Those gains are now being
eroded as inequalities spread, running like fractures along the lines of age
and sex, further fragmented by geography, income, disability and ethnicity.
This time must be
different
We can choose a better
future, guided by our knowledge of past pandemics. In those other outbreaks,
women – along with children, adolescents and the most vulnerable – often
haven’t received their fair share of resources and services. They’ve been
excluded from decision-making. Globally, seventy per cent of health workers are
female, yet women’s basic needs have often gone unmet and their voices unheard.
Resources to deal with the pandemic are often diverted from women’s health services, with lasting effects on their children, their families,
and their economies.
These “secondary effects”
often dwarf a virus’s direct impact. For example, during the 2014-15 outbreak
in Sierra Leone, more than 3,500 people died of Ebola. But at the same time, an estimated 3,600 mothers and babies died because of disruption to essential health
services. In some West African countries, twenty-five years of progress on
maternal mortality was wiped out.
We see similar patterns
now. The Guttmacher Institute warns that COVID-19 could have a catastrophic effect on
sexual and reproductive health in poorer countries. Even a ten per cent
reduction in care could kill 168,000 babies and 28,000 mothers, and lead to
three million unsafe abortions.
Children are heavily affected
too. Many will suffer the lifelong effects of not being immunised against other
serious diseases, as parents shun health facilities for fear of contagion – or
of breaking curfews, or because they simply can’t get there without public
transport. And the economic effects are already worsening inequality and
hunger. The UN estimates that between 42 and 66 million children will fall into extreme poverty this year because of the virus’s economic impact.
In all these ways, COVID-19 is not the great leveller, but rather the great amplifier of inequality. That gives us a clear duty to protect the most vulnerable and disadvantaged, and to address the root causes of inequality. We must act now – while the storm is raging – or be ashamed by the number of lives swept away on our watch.
How to protect the
most vulnerable
We, the authors of this
article, come from four continents, but speak with one voice on what we – as a
global community – must do differently this time.
One, we need national
policies and budgets to protect human rights and promote inclusivity, equity
and fairness – during this pandemic and in its aftermath. That should include
strategies for preventing gender-based violence, child abuse, and the
mistreatment of health workers. Because these crimes are often hidden, we
should encourage people to share their experiences – as Femnet has done
with its #inclusivelockdown hashtag on Twitter. Women’s voices and leadership
must be at the core of our response, along with a recognition of children’s
needs.
Two, we need to focus on
strengthening health systems, including immunisation and basic primary health
care, to ensure universal health coverage. We need to expand health
infrastructure to rural and underserved areas, and gradually expand universal
health coverage. Women and families, especially in disadvantaged communities,
need support to keep using essential health services, including those for
sexual and reproductive health. That means doing things differently – like
temporarily moving maternity care elsewhere, perhaps to now-empty hotels.
Three, we need to put our
money into solutions that focus on partnership. To beat this pandemic without
disastrously increasing inequality, we need many different stakeholders to work
together: civil society, business, health professionals, donors, and engaged
citizens. We call for multi-stakeholder partnerships that allow women, children
and adolescents to take part in decisions that profoundly affect their health
and wellbeing.
That’s why we wholeheartedly
support the Access to Covid-19 Tools (ACT) Accelerator – an unprecedented
commitment by global leaders to work together, to develop and manufacture
vaccines, tests and treatments for Covid-19, and to make them available and
affordable for everyone, everywhere. It was launched by the WHO on 24 April,
and an EU-led fundraising initiative met its initial target of €7.5 billion in
just two days. The Accelerator came after an open letter to G20 governments –
signed by 214 world leaders, economists, and health experts – called urgently
for co-ordinated global leadership and solidarity.
A hopeful precedent:
global co-operation in peacetime
As the open letter says, if
COVID-19 remains in any country, it will re-emerge and prolong this economic
and health crisis. And so, although the pandemic magnifies inequality, it also
pushes us towards solidarity, giving us an opportunity to restructure our
health systems and leave no one behind.
We have the tools for
effective co-operation on global problems: a whole-of-government approach,
involving multi-stakeholder partnerships. They’ve been sharpened in our work on
the Sustainable Development Goals. Let’s use them now.
Already, we’re seeing people
and nations working together in peacetime in a way we’ve only achieved before
in war. Our response now could set a precedent for tackling other long-standing
issues, such as poverty, gender inequality and climate change. Let’s prove we
can work together to overcome unfairness and inequality, for the good of
everyone.
(Kersti Kaljulaid is the president
of the Republic of Estonia; Helen Clark is board chair of the Partnership
for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health (PMNCH) and the former Prime Minister of
New Zealand; Jorge Alcocer Varela is Mexico's Secretary of Health; and Graca
Machel is the former PMNCH board chair and the founder of the Graca Machel
Trust.) (
FROM:Thomson Reuters Foundation)
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