Environment &Mental Health &NGOs &WASH &water Bill Brieger | 21 Aug 2024
Haiti: Addressing lead exposure in a low- or middle-income country, a multipronged approach
Mickelder Kercy (mkercy1) posted this entry on lead exposure in Haiti in the class blog of the course, Social and Behavioral Foundations of Primary Health Care at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Graph Data Source: American Heart Association
Recent studies conducted in Haiti revealed that lead exposure increases the risk of hypertension, a major cardiovascular or non-communicable disease. Among children, lead is responsible for several mental and behavioral disorders. Sources of lead exposure includes contaminated drinking water, paint, and batteries.
Laws have been enacted to regulate the prevention and management of exposure to environmental toxicants. These laws mandate institutions to supply safe water, ministry of health to provide adequate care, and companies to sell and safely dispose of their products without harm to population members. Currently, these overarching laws are not being implemented due to political instability, poor governance at the national and municipality levels, and deteriorating socio-economic conditions nationwide.
Several initiatives have been taken that could address lead exposure in Haiti:
- The Ministry of the Environment (MdE) sought the financial assistance of the Global Environment Facility (GEF) to improve the drinking water system.
- The Global Environment Facility (GEF) has allocated $4.5 million from the Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF) to the Ministry of the Environment project to help strengthen policies, regulatory bodies, and organizations in support of the management, supply, and access to clean drinking water (SDG 6) in Haiti starting 2023.
- The Presidential Transitional Council (CPT) plans to budget $7,590,221 for waste management in the capital of Haiti.
Current initiatives are promising stirring up among population members the optimistic view that they could signal a departure from decades of inefficiency and ineffectiveness in government affairs. As recommended,
- The Ministry of the Environment (MdE) and Presidential Transitional Council (CPT) should demonstrate accountability, transparency, and proficiency in current projects.
- The Presidential Transitional Council (CPT) should prioritize waste management according to international standards in the triage and disposal of hazardous wastes such as lead-based batteries.
- The Ministry of Public Health and Population (MSPP) should promote lead exposure prevention in businesses and at the population level, and management across all primary health care facilities.
- Sustainable lead exposure mitigation is a necessity. Based on current human capital and financial resources, the MdE and MSPP could potentially seek out-of-country technical assistance from
- The Lead Exposure Elimination Project to inventory lead-based paints and reformulate them into safer products nationwide, and
The Pure Earth to train employees in the Initial Site Screening (ISS) protocol application to update current maps of lead contaminated sites across all 10 departments in Haiti.
Elimination &Eradication &Health Systems &Helminths/Worms &ITNs &Journalists/Media &Leishmaniasis &NGOs &Nigeria &NTDs &Partnership &Repellent &Research &Schistosomiasis &Technical Assistance &Treatment Bill Brieger | 29 Sep 2020
Malaria News Today 2020-09-28/29: media involvement, NGOs, monitoring and research
A variety of malaria and related issues have arisen over the past two days. A media coalition for malaria elimination formed in Ghana. A Nigerian NGO stresses the importance of addressing malaria on Nigeria’s 60th Independence Day (October 1). An innovative technology foundation is supporting various malaria and NTD treatment and diagnostic research efforts. Click on links below to read the details.
Media Coalition for malaria control and elimination launched
A Media Coalition comprising of selected journalists and editors, has been launched in Ghana under the umbrella of the “Zero Malaria Starts with Me” campaign to eliminate malaria by 2030. The Coalition, which aimed to enhance the quality and quantity of malaria coverage, and support broader advocacy efforts, was launched at a workshop in Accra organized by the National Malaria Control Programme (NMCP), in collaboration with the African Media and Malaria Research Network and Speak Up Africa, an advocacy and communication Organisation based in Senegal.
The workshop brought together media personnel from across the regions, who nominated their Regional Executives, with two National Co-Chairpersons coming from Greater Accra. The Members of the Coalition, made a firm declaration of their commitment towards the elimination of malaria in Ghana by the year 2030, by championing the fight, taking responsibility for their roles through proactive, regular, accurate, and high-quality media output of news on malaria.
Chinwe Chibuike Foundation Set To Flag-off Full Scale Malaria Eradication Program On Independence Day
A Nigeria indigenous and international non-governmental organization, envisioned to create a conducive environment towards the accessibility of healthcare facilities and improved educational opportunities, has joined the fight against the bizzare challenges of Malaria. The renowned Nigeria-USA humanitarian organization, Chinwe Chibuike Foundation is collaborating with other organizations to flagoff a full scale malaria eradication exercise tagged “Nigeria at 60 Malaria Eradication Project”, on the 1st of October 2020.
According to the founder and President of Chinwe Chibuike Foundation, Ms Gloria Chibuike, during an interview session with Pulse TV few days ago, she noted the forthcoming Nigeria At 60 Malaria Eradication Program will be different and of more impact, especially with the full scale approach and introduction a new Malaria repellant Band.
While emphasizing on the extensive features of the project, Ms Gloria described Malaria as one of the biggest problems in Africa at the moment, considering the increased number of recorded deaths and infection. She narrated that the discovery of the new malaria repellent band was timely and off-course very efficient, especially with testimonies from few persons who have already tried the brand.
Drugs and Diagnostics: Malaria and NTDs
The Global Health Innovative Technology (GHIT) Fund announced today a total of 1.37 billion yen (US$13 million*) to invest in seven partnerships to develop new lifesaving drugs and diagnostics for malaria, Buruli ulcer, Chagas disease, leishmaniasis, schistosomiasis, and soil-transmitted helminths (STH). This includes three newly funded projects and four that will receive continued funding. The RBM Partnership is planning on how to monitor and provide technical support for ITN programs. Click the links within each section to read details.
As of September 29, GHIT’s portfolio includes 50 ongoing projects: 26 discovery projects, 16 preclinical projects and eight clinical trials (Appendix 3). The total amount of investments since 2013 is 22.3 billion yen (US$211 million).
Support the Improvement of Operational Efficiency of ITN Campaigns
The Alliance for Malaria Prevention (AMP) is a workstream within the RBM Partnership to End Malaria. With malaria indicators stagnating and intense pressure to improve access and use of effective ITNs, WHO has renewed focus on stratifying vector control strategies in countries. Along with the introduction of new, more expensive ITNs, countries are now challenged to determine where they should deploy different ITN types to manage insecticide resistance within limited funding envelopes, as well as to identify more efficient ways to implement mass ITN distribution.
Countries that have accessed AMP technical assistance have significantly improved their capacity to modify and update strategies and tools to increase ITN access, use and accountability. They have also continued to identify further gaps and look for effective ways to address them. Now AMP planning to support update and finalization of ITN tracking tool, aligned with priorities across major partners (GF, PMI, RBM).