Showing posts with label McPhail Magwira. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McPhail Magwira. Show all posts

Thursday 31 March 2016

Mw Govt Downplays Global Fund Under-Utilization Fears

President Peter Mutharika signed Global Fund 
Partnership with Mark Dybul, 
Executive Director of the Global Fund 








The Malawi Government has refuted information sourced by the Parliamentary Committee on Nutrition, HIV and AIDS that the country has delayed in the use of the Global Fund money and there is risk of under-utilisation of the approved funds.

The entourage from the Ministry of Health lead by Secretary in the Ministry, McPhail Magwira and Chief of Health Services, Charles Mwansambo has enlighten the Parliamentary committee that there has been no delays in the use of the funds but Government has only faced a challenge of instituting the Project Implementation Unit (PIU).

On Wednesday, the team from Ministry of Health was meeting with the committee on issues on Nutrition, HIV and AIDS but the clarification on the issues followed worries expressed by the committee it got information that there has been no action on the ground in terms of use of approved funds by the principle recipients and the committee feared risk that the country will under-utilise the funds come 2017.

Responding to this question, Mr. McPhail Magwira, Secretary in the Ministry of Health said the Ministry has already started utilizing the money, however, he explained that the only area that delayed in the Global Fund programme was putting together of Project Implementation Unit (PIU) and not utilisation of the money.

"Despite the fact that the unit is not in place, we were allowed to proceed to utilize the funds.  So, the fact that the PIU is not in place and despite the fact that we needed to start in January, but in terms of resource utilization we have already started.” confirmed Magwira

He told the Committee that although it took long to put together PIU, Government has now resolved the problem as it has put together all the necessary staff there.

"This was the case as most of the members of staff from PIU are seconded from  Government except for the very few posts. We have already advertise the posts but in the interim we have also made arrangement for the Project Manager to come in to put the unit in place." said explained 

Chef of Health Services in the Ministry of Health, Dr. Charles Mwansambo shared Magwira sentiments by further assuring the committee that the money from Global Fund have been used.

“Indeed we were supposed to start from the 1st of January and am pleased to report that the Global Fund has provided moneys to Ministry of Health and to other principle recipients, ActionAid and World Vision.So the funds are in the country and were transferred in December for the activities that we said we are going to do that period. 

So, there is no reason to worry, the funds have already started to come in for specific activities that were targeted for the first months that were slightly delayed because of PIU." He said

Cementing on Magwira's justification of the delays in organising PIU office, Mwansambo explained to the committee that the delay to organise the PIU chiefly originated from the reason that non of the Government officers qualified from the interviews that were conducted for the post of managing PIU following advice from Global Fund that PIU management should be seconded from Government because from experience elsewhere, such officers stay even if  Global Fund moves out. 

“So, we went back to Global fund to ask them if we could recruit from outside, now, they have given us ok." He said adding "So, some of the people will be recruited from outside the market while the supporting team will be from Government. That is why it was slightly delayed."

Mwansambo also downplayed fears that National Aids Commission (NAC) is facing problems after it failed to become a principle recepient of Global Fund.

He said "The main role of NAC is to coordinate national response and they are ably doing that with support from various donors including World Bank, so, they are able to play that function."

“With the new funding model, the Global fund did advise countries to go for dual tracking where you get a principal recipient from Government and another from non-governmental organization. So, for Malawi since most of the biomedical part was being conducted by the Ministry of Health, when they advertised for the principle recipient, Ministry of Health applied and NAC applied also. Of course, since we were the ones implementing, we had a competitive advantage over NAC and that is why we got the funding but at present the other two principle recipients are ActionAid and World Vision and these are implementing the non-biomedical part of the project." He said 

"So, I don’t think NAC is at disadvantage at present or there are problems at present." Added Mwansambo

Malawi and the Global Fund strengthened their partnership by signing grants worth more than US$332 million in October last year, to expand treatment and prevention for HIV, TB and Malaria and build resilient and sustainable systems for health. 

The signing brought the total Global Fund commitment to Malawi to US$616 million from 2014 to 2017.

The HIV and TB grants total US$298 million and the malaria grants US$34 million. Malawi has also committed US$30 million of its domestic resources for procurement of health products and to strengthen health systems.

Investments through the grant will enable Malawi to provide HIV treatment for 745,000 patients by the end of 2017, which represents 70 percent of the people in need. The grants will be implemented jointly by the Ministry of Health and two non-governmental organizations, World Vision and ActionAid who will implement the grants directly, strengthening the community-based response to the diseases.

Wednesday 10 June 2015

PACHI Committed To Scale Up Child Survival Efforts As Govt Encourages Partnerships For Greater Impact

Parent and Child Health Initiative (PACHI) set to work hard with support from UNICEF in ending preventable child deaths by accelerating progress on maternal newborn and child survival.



Statistics indicates that though Malawi has registered a decline in child mortality rates per 1000 live births from 112 in 2010 to 71 representing annual rate of reduction of 5.6%, child death are unacceptably high as the A Promise Renewed (APR) 2013 report indicates 12 under five children die every minute.



According to the report, causes of death includes; pneumonia (13%), diarrhea (7%), malaria (14%), neonatal (32%) and HIV and AIDS (12%) and other diseases (12%) which are preventable and have treatment. 

Charles Makwenda 


Chief Executive Officer for PACHI Charles Makwenda says the organisation has set number of activities to including awareness among Malawians and lobby for improved health services.



“We would like to engage the communities, its very important for the communities to understand first that the number of death currently on the table are not acceptable and should do something because very often communities do accept the fate of death.”



“They have to understand that this can be changed” he added 



He said among others the engagements will include the awareness messages that the communities must demand for better health services from government 


Magwira 

Principal Secretary for Health Dr. MacPhail Magwira observes that partnerships and collaborative relationships are critical to deliver results for children and to contribute significantly to realising their rights and child survival.



"In a developing country shuch as Malawi it is critical that a broad range of strategic partnerships are established to achieve appropriate outcomes" said Magwira who called Civil Society Organisations (CSO's) to collaborate with government saying "Malawi realises" that CSO's has the local knowledge to inderstand what works at the grassroots level as well as challenges.

MacPhail Magwira: collaboration is power


He also appealed to all faith groups and CSO's to continue encourage local communities and families to adopt "priority behaviors" ten life saving acts for children.



"As government following our renewed commitment to reduce child deaths we will not only support but also initiate the involvement of the civil society in the APR movement" he said



Magwira however hailed CSO's for their focus on social accountability as part of APR in Malawi which he said will go beyond the sharpening, implementing and scaling up of high impact internvetions for maternal and neonatal health and provide a greater scope toward promoting engagement of children and families and communities to hold authorities accountable with respect to rights fulfilment.



Since the Child Survival Call to Action, in June 2012, in Washington DC, 178 governments as well as hundreds of civil society and faith based organisations have signed a pledge, vowing to do everything possible to stop women and children from dying of causes that are easily avoidable. 



Malawi is one of the 178 countries that have renewed their commitments to reduce under-five mortarity to 20 or less under-five deaths per 1000 live births by 2035 under 'A Promise Renewed (APR)' Initiative.