The United States Government, through the US Agency for International Development (USAID), has launched a new five-year $29 million partnership with the Ghana Health Service (GHS) to support the widespread adoption of life-saving health behaviours across Ghana.
“USAID’s new flagship social and behaviour change activity is a culmination of decades of partnership and engagement with the Ghana Health Service. This five-year award will support the GHS’s Health Promotion Division, Regional Directorates in northern Ghana, civil society and the private sector to increase and sustain the adoption of healthy behaviours and practices that improve health outcomes,” Dr Balsara noted at the event.
This partnership will focus on women of reproductive age, newborns and children under five years to save lives through common practices such as sleeping under a treated bed net, delivering babies at health facilities, encouraging breastfeeding and adopting family planning.
USAID Ghana Health, Population, and Nutrition Team Lead, Dr Zohra Balsara, joined the Ghana Health Service Director-General, Dr Patrick Kuma-Aboagye, at the launch event on April 5, 2022.
The USAID Accelerating Social and Behaviour Change (ASBC) project will support the Ghana Health Service Health Promotion Division (GHS/HPD) in using tested mass media and community engagement tools to accelerate the wide-scale adoption of key life-saving health behaviours.
The project targets women of reproductive age, newborns, youth and children under five. Messaging will encourage timely use of health services and products such as bed nets. The project will work nationally with an additional focus on northern Ghana.
Ghana has seen significant progress in health indicators over recent decades, but the COVID-19 pandemic has jeopardised some of the sector’s gains.
While behaviour change takes time, it is the foundation of positive health outcomes.
“Promoting healthy behaviours and demand for health services is an essential tool in the fight to combat infectious diseases and improve the lives of millions. From the simple act of washing hands to sleeping under an insecticide-treated bed net, delivering a baby at a health facility, encouraging exclusive breastfeeding and utilising modern family planning methods, all these actions require focused behaviour change to make an impact on health outcomes,” Dr Balsara added.
The project will be implemented under the leadership and direction of the GHS/HPD and Regional Health Directorates in northern Ghana.
The USAID ASBC project team will work with a consortium of Ghanaian organisations with a presence in northern Ghana.
Source: Mypublisher24.com