Representatives of eight global health agencies gather at the GAVI Alliance headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland. Copyright: GAVI Alliance/2010
Geneva, 26 January 2010 – "Recent substantial increases in international attention to health have been accompanied by demands for statistics that accurately track health progress and performance, evaluate the impact of health programs and policies, and increase accountability at country and global levels," say the authors in an essay in this week's PLoS Medicine.
Limitations
The ability to respond to such demands, they say, is constrained by limited data availability, quality, and use: "Many developing countries have limitations that hamper the production of data of sufficient quality and timeliness to permit regular tracking of progress made in scaling up and strengthening health systems."
In their essay, the eight agencies propose four global actions to strengthen the collection, analysis, synthesis, validation, and use of health data in countries. They lay out their commitments to pursuing each of these goals:
The eight agencies supporting the proposal are the World Health Organization (WHO), Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria; the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI); the UN Population Fund (UNFPA); the World Bank's Human Development Network; Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS/UNAIDS; United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF); and the Global Health Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.