Écrit par WHO			
				
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				22 Octobre 2018			
			
				
		
				
				
		
BERLIN 16 October 2018  -- Eleven heads of the world’s leading health and development  organizations today signed a landmark commitment to find new ways of  working together to accelerate progress towards achieving the United  Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals.
 
 Coordinated by the World Health Organization, the initiative unites the  work of 11 organizations, with others set to join in the next phase.
 
 The commitment follows a request from Chancellor Angela Merkel of  Germany, President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo of Ghana, and Prime  Minister Erna Solberg of Norway, with support from United Nations  Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, to develop a global action plan to  define how global actors can better collaborate to accelerate progress  towards the health-related targets of the 2030 Sustainable Development  Agenda.
 
 “Healthy people are essential for sustainable development – to ending  poverty, promoting peaceful and inclusive societies and protecting the  environment. However, despite great strides made against many of the  leading causes of death and disease, we must redouble our efforts or we  will not reach several of the health-related targets,” the organizations  announced today at the World Health Summit in Berlin. “The Global  Action Plan represents an historic commitment to new ways of working  together to accelerate progress towards meeting the 2030 goals. We are  committed to redefine how our organizations work together to deliver  more effective and efficient support to countries and to achieve better  health and well-being for all people.”
 
 The group has agreed to develop new ways of working together to  maximize resources and measure progress in a more transparent and  engaging way. The first phase of the plan’s development is organized  under three strategic approaches: align, accelerate and account.
 
 Align: The organizations have committed to coordinate  programmatic, financing and operational processes to increase collective  efficiency and impact on a number of shared priorities such as gender  equality and reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent  health.
 
 Accelerate: They have agreed to develop common  approaches and coordinate action in areas of work that have the  potential to increase the pace of progress in global health. The initial  set of seven “accelerators” include community and civil society  engagement, research and development, data and sustainable financing. 
Account: To improve transparency and accountability to countries and development  partners, the health organizations are breaking new ground by setting  common milestones for nearly 50 health-related targets across 14  Sustainable Development Goals. These milestones will provide a critical  checkpoint and common reference to determine where the world stands in  2023 and whether it is on track to reach the 2030 goals.
 
 The Global Action Plan will also enhance collective action and leverage  funds to address gender inequalities that act as barriers to accessing  health, and to improve comprehensive quality health care for women and  girls, including sexual and reproductive health services.
 
 The organizations that have already signed up to the Global Action Plan  for Healthy Lives and Well-being for All are: Gavi the Vaccine Alliance,  the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, the Global  Financing Facility, UNAIDS, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, Unitaid, UN Women, the  World Bank and WHO. The World Food Programme has committed to join the  plan in the coming months.
 
 The final plan will be delivered in September 2019 at the United Nations General Assembly.