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MESSAGE ON WORLD HEALTH DAY - Addressing health crisis demands partnership
published: Friday | April 7, 2006

Kofi A. Annan, Contributor


ANNAN

HEALTH WORKERS save lives. They strive to ensure that advances in health care reach those most in need. They contribute to the social and economic well-being of their countries. And they are essential to their countries' security, by being the first to identify a new disease or a new threat to public health.

Yet today, in many parts of the world, the health workforce is in crisis. The global population is growing, but the number of health workers in many of the poorest countries is falling. Across the developing world, health workers face economic hardship, deteriorating health infrastructure and social unrest. And the HIV/AIDS pandemic has hit health workers particularly hard, taking their own health and lives, as well as those of their patients.

NEED TO BOLSTER HEALTH WORKFORCE

It is clear that to protect and improve the health of people worldwide, and to achieve the Millennium Development Goals, we need to rapidly bolster the global health workforce. Africa alone will require one million new health workers to achieve the goals. Without such a dramatic increase in capacity, paediatric immunisations will not be administered; infectious outbreaks will not be contained; curable diseases will remain untreated; and women will keep dying needlessly in childbirth.

Addressing this crisis demands partnership and cooperation nationally and globally, across different sectors - including education, transport and finance - as well as within the health workforce itself. That is why the theme of this year's World Health Day is 'Working Together for Health'. On this day, I urge all concerned - governments, professional organisations, civil society, the private sector, the media and international donors - to join forces and step up investment in the health workforce. Let us work together for health in the 21st century.


Kofi A. Annan is Secretary General of the United Nations.

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