Access to quality healthcare

— A targeted solution to sustainably develop healthcare —

Primary health care, essential to sustainable growth in any healthcare landscape, is developing unevenly in the South.
________

More than thirty years after the Declaration of Alma-Ata, which sought to protect and promote the health of all people by the year 2000, the declaration has clearly failed. Despite a good deal of progress, much of the world’s population has seen its state of health stagnate or even deteriorate. Access to medicines and treatment of infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis and malaria, remains problematic in many parts of the world. More than six million children under the age of five die each year from treatable or preventable diseases, and about 300,000 women succumb to complications in pregnancy, childbirth or postpartum (2012 WHO/World Bank/UNICEF report). The inequalities are stark indeed: Africa alone supports a quarter of the global burden of disease, and represents a tiny portion of the budget dedicated to health worldwide, according to a Médecins du Monde analysis based on the 2006 WHO report on health.

The Foundation strives to provide support to ensure that access to healthcare –a fundamental right for every human being – is recognised in the most vulnerable communities in emerging countries and people plunged in humanitarian crises due to conflicts or natural disasters. It has been working for two decades in Lebanon and has been providing support to women who are victims of sexual violencein the Democratic Republic of Congo and in Central African Republic.

Follow our action

Central African Republic: a New Programme for Victims of Sexual Violence

29/11/2019|

Despite its wealth of natural resources, the Central African Republic is among the poorest nations on earth, ranking 188th out of 189 countries, according to the Human Development Index. In this land racked by conflict for nearly twenty years, there are tens of thousands of women and girls that have been victims of sexual violence. On November 28, the Fondation Pierre Fabre and the Agence Francaise de Développement signed a partnership agreement in the presence of Dr. Mukwege, 2018 Nobel Peace Prize winner, for a centre for the care of victims of sexual violence in Bangui.