Minister of Health gives homework to Medical Councils of Africa in Kigali

As he officially opened the 25th Annual Conference of the Association of Medical Councils of Africa #AMCOA2023 in Kigali, Dr Sabin Nsanzimana, Minister of Health, urged participants from African countries to lead discussions to find solutions to the problems facing the continent today.

In his speech, Dr Sabin Nsanzimana identified three key areas that medical councils need to seriously consider in order to put Africa on a strong footing in advancing the health for all agenda:

"We have the lowest ratio of health workers per thousand people compared to other continents," said Dr Sabin Nsanzimana. "I urge you to help our countries revise the way we train health workers to produce them in large numbers without compromising the quality of their training," he added.

The WHO recommendation is to have at least four health workers per thousand people. Only Libya, Botswana and South Africa have met this recommendation. Rwanda has one health worker per thousand people. The Minister gave the Council a homework assignment to catalyse change in countries' efforts to develop infrastructure, equipment, human resources and strengthen health systems in general to enable the remaining African countries to achieve this goal.

Another shift that Africa needs to embrace is the use of technology solutions to improve the delivery of medical services. Minister Nsanzimana urged Africa's medical councils to embrace technology and make it a blueprint for the services that will be delivered on the continent with the next generation: "As you review standards, medical schools and hospitals should put technology at a rightful place and push to another level of practice in the delivery of care, in the tools we use and in how we train the next generations of health care providers," he said.

Finally, Minister Sabin Nsanzimana urged the councils to work together and share their experiences. "Your neighbour may have a solution to the problem you are still struggling with. Build healthy networks of cooperation," he advised.

The #AMCOA2023 conference has attracted 200 delegates from more than 15 African countries to discuss team-based care and regulation to achieve universal healthcare. Speaking at the conference, AMCOA President Prof Simon Nemutandani believes that the time has come for Africa to rise up and improve the lives of its people. "The public healthcare system is under severe strain and it is incumbent upon us as diverse healthcare professionals to change the trajectory of how African healthcare systems are and instead focus on how they should be," reads part of his welcome note.


Rwanda to Host the 8th Pan-African Malaria Conference on World Malaria Day (WMD) 2024

Rwanda will host the Multilateral Initiative on Malaria (MIM Society) 8th Pan-African Malaria Conference (PAMC) from 21-27 April 2024 under the theme

Read more →

New South-South health cooperation initiative launched linking Africa and the Caribbean

Bridgetown, Barbados – The Health Development Partnership for Africa and the Caribbean (HeDPAC), a new initiative to strengthen South-South health…

Read more →

IRCAD Africa: A continent on the threshold of possibilities in surgical care

From October 2, 2023, Africa has begun to make its way to Kigali, Rwanda, for research and training in a variety of minimally invasive medical…

Read more →

The 4x4 Reform: A Path to Quality Health Care in Rwanda

In July of 2023, the Government of Rwanda approved the 4x4 Reform, a visionary strategy aimed at quadrupling the number of healthcare workers in the…

Read more →

African health ministers meet in Kigali to launch BioNTech manufacturing site

To coincide with the opening of the first BioNTech manufacturing facility in Africa - in Kigali, Rwanda - a high-level workshop was convened in…

Read more →

Minister of Health gives homework to Medical Councils of Africa in Kigali

As he officially opened the 25th Annual Conference of the Association of Medical Councils of Africa #AMCOA2023 in Kigali, Dr Sabin Nsanzimana,…

Read more →

TUNYWE LESS: Curbing the rise in alcohol consumption among the youth

The Government of Rwanda has launched a new chapter in its campaign to tackle alcohol consumption among people, especially the youth, after a recent…

Read more →

Rwanda resumes Polio 2 immunization after 7 years of halt

The Ministry of Health and Rwanda Biomedical Center have on Monday, July 24, launched a comprehensive vaccination campaign to administer the second…

Read more →

New Anti-drug abuse campaign launched among the youths

The Ministry of Health, Rwanda Biomedical Centre (RBC), Rwanda National Police (RNP) and other government stakeholders, have on June 8 launched an…

Read more →
-->