WHO Namibia supports the Development of a National Action Plan on Health Security

WHO Namibia supports the Development of a National Action Plan on Health Security

A team of experts from the World Health Organization visited Namibia  in August 2017 to assist in the development of a National Action Plan on Health Security.  This was a follow-up to a Joint External Evaluation which was undertaken by a team of 11 experts held in December 2016. The December Evaluation was to determine Namibia’s readiness to prevent, detect, and rapidly respond to public health threats, whether they are naturally occurring, deliberate, or accidental.


The Evaluation further aimed to determine a baseline and develop an action plan which will help the Country develop its core capacities in compliance with International Health Regulations (IHR 2005). The findings of the Joint External Evaluation were presented to Stakeholders composed of various Ministries, Agencies and Institutions and these were used to develop a National Action Plan for Health Security (NAPHS) for Namibia. WHO supported the recent Review and Costing meeting for the NAPHS that was held in Walvis Bay on 31 October to 2 November 2017. The purpose of this meeting was to review, finalize and deliberate of costing of the proposed activities for this plan. A total of 55 delegates participated, including  officials from the Office of the Prime Minister, Ministry of Finance, MOHSS, Ministry of Safety and Security, Ministry of Mines, Namibia Airports Company, Namport, and regional health directors from border regions.


Mr Petrus Mhata, WHO Namibia Surveillance Officer, reiterated the importance of  building the countries core capacities in line with IHR(2005) and stated envisaged implementation plan is not only confined to the Ministry of Health and Social Services, alone, but a collective plan of the country as a whole. He further explained that “IHR is not limited to human disease outbreaks of new and ever-emerging public health events, but extends to animal and environmental health risks”. He added that National Action Plan for Health Security is intended to ensure adequate capacity to prevent, detect and mount rapid response to any public health emergency of international concern. This can only be achieved with the concerted and coordinated efforts of all key stakeholders.


Namibia, due to its geographical location, high influx of tourists and regional and international trade, is prone to emergencies of international threats and other public health risks. Strengthening the IHR core capacities will enable the country to prevent, detect and rapidly respond to any public health emergency such as disease outbreaks, chemical and radiological hazards. These imply strengthening surveillance and border crossing points, establishing proper isolation facilities, antimicrobial resistance monitoring, and response capacity. 

 

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Mrs Celia Kaunatjike

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Email: kaunatjikec [at] who.int (kaunatjikec[at]who[dot]int)