|
Bamako Initiative - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Bamako Initiative was a formal statement adopted by African health ministers in 1987 in Bamako, Mali, to implement strategies designed to increase the availability of essential drugs and other hea...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamako_Initiative |
||
|
Mr. President, development is, by definition, a long-term undertaking. And by that measure, the nearly 12 years that have passed since the Bamako Initiative was first embraced by African Health Ministers have been equivalent to the blink of an eye. Thanks to the Bamako Initiative,
|
||
|
The Bamako Initiative and the Integrated Management of Childhood Illnesses Initiative, the product of partnerships between WHO, UNICEF, governments and communities, also offer effective tools that can be harnessed to strengthen malaria prevention and treatment. The Bamako Initiative, which has been endorsed by the OAU,
|
||
|
In the move after the Alma Ata Declaration (1978) Village Pharmacies where created. Well before the Bamako Initiative was declared (1987), After Primary Health Care, The Bamako Initiative (BI) is an other attempt to give tools for health improvement into the hands of people.
|
||
|
Providing essential drugs - The Bamako Initiative The Bamako Initiative was agreed by African Ministers of Health in 1987 with WHO and UNICEF, calling for community participation in managing and funding supplies of essential drugs.
|
||
|
PubMed Central articles that cite the above article: This article is also cited by 3 articles in BioMed Central...
|
||
|
Research Antimalarial drug use in general populations of tropical Africa Gardella F, Assi S, Simon F, Bogreau H, Eggelte T, Ba F, Foumane V, Henry MC, Kientega PT, Basco L, Trape JF, Lalou R, Martelloni M, Desbordes M, Baragatti M, Briolant S, BioMed Central articles that cite the above article:
|
||
|
Abstract Background Malaria is one of the leading causes of mortality and morbidity in Nigeria. It is not known how user fees introduced under the Bamako Initiative (BI) system affect healthcare seeking among different socio-economic groups in Nigeria for diagnosis and treatment of malaria. Reliable information is needed to...
|
||
|
This letter was written in defense of a November 19, 1988 editorial discussing the Bamako Initiative. The writer, who works for UNICEF, has been working, Research and experience in community financing for health in Africa is felt to provide a solid basis for proceeding with the Bamako Initiative.
|
||
|
Bamako Initiative revitalizes primary health care in Benin The health system reform strategies were subsequently formally adopted in 1987 in Bamako by African Ministers of Health, UNICEF and WHO, as the Bamako Initiative.
|
