PtD newsletter March 2023: Join PtD at WHO's HRH forum

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Events

WHO 5th Global Forum on Human Resources for Health

Register for PtD’s virtual parallel session

 

When: Monday 3 April, 10:45 – 12:15 CEST

How to register: Register here

 

People that Deliver is playing a leading role in the session Health supply chain cadres: The missing link to achieving universal health coverage at this year’s Fifth Global Forum on Human Resources for Health.

 

Moderated by MSH’s Andrew Brown, the session will bring together PtD’s Dominique Zwinkels, Marasi Mwencha from the Global Fund, Inès Buki from the Global Health Supply Chain-Procurement and Supply Management project at Chemonics International in Rwanda and Henrietta Bakura-Onyeneke from the National Product Supply Chain Management Programme at the Federal Nigeria Ministry of Health.

 

The session will reflect on the implementation of the Supply chain management professionalisation framework in Nigeria and Rwanda, explore the added value of the framework, consider the lessons learned from its implementation, and analyse the current investment and technical approach in capacity development and professionalisation from a donor perspective.

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Latest article

A chance to make a difference

Last month the PtD coalition elected Hilary Claire Frazer deputy chair of the coalition.

 

Hear directly from Hilary on her priorities and why she believes in more-widely disseminating PtD’s tools.

 

Below is an insight into Kofi Aboagye-Nyame and Hilary's vision for the next two years.

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New publication

Application of the PtD supply chain management theory of change in Liberia

For the first time the PtD Building human resources for supply chain management Theory of Change has been used to examine community health workers in their capacity as members of the supply chain workforce.

 

The findings show that community health assistants, as they are called in Liberia, have the knowledge and skills necessary to deliver health services in their communities but often lack the supplies needed to fulfil their roles.

 

When we properly #SupplyCHWs we achieve more equitable health outcomes.

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