President Julius Maada Bio has shared Sierra Leone’s experience with the Ebola and Covid-19 pandemic, and efforts at healthcare delivery at the High-Level Africa CDC Forum in Addis Ababa Ethiopia on Saturday 18th February 2023.
The president started by highlighting the lessons Sierra Leone has learned during the two pandemics that have hit the country stating that it is everyone’s business.
“The main lesson for us in Sierra Leone is a clear understanding that Pandemic Prevention, Preparedness, and Response are Everybody’s Business. Political leadership, health diplomacy, technical capabilities, active community engagement, flexible funding, and most importantly, speed-of-action, are perhaps the most important success factors for managing an epidemic or pandemic,” he said.
Bio said the country is creating an effective and efficient strategy to service delivery which will strengthen Primary Health Care and improves clinical service at the secondary and tertiary levels.
“We are establishing an effective and efficient approach to service delivery that involves strengthening Primary Health Care as well as improving clinical services at the secondary and tertiary levels. We are using the Life-Stages approach to quality client/patient-centered care,” he said.
The President added that those efforts would be complemented by the establishment of a National Public Health Agency, coming on the back of a November 2022 ratification by the Sierra Leone Parliament of the new Public Health Bill.
“The new Public Health Agency will build and strengthen core competencies in surveillance and epidemiology, data and data analytics, laboratory science, and research to answer local and global questions. This would be done while focusing on addressing routine health challenges and honing early warning systems during ‘Quiet’ periods. We will complement those efforts with simulations and exercises to maintain outbreak response competencies,” he averred.
Pre Bio furthered that though huge improvements had been made over the years, the Ebola outbreak of 2014 to 2016 in West Africa was still raw in the country’s psyche, with over 14,000 infections and nearly 4,000 deaths.
“Those lessons learned were on full display before, and at every stage of our response to COVID-19 in Sierra Leone. Even before the first case was detected in my country, I assembled a Presidential-Taskforce that I chaired. I took full responsibility and accountability for the response. The Taskforce included representation of key line-Ministries of my government and civil society. We also maintained strong links with international development partners and the private sector,” he said.
He said those outbreaks taught his government and the country that epidemics and pandemics were not just health issues, but they had a way of affecting all facets of the lives of people with devastating consequences.
“Distinguished ladies and gentlemen, in Sierra Leone we have had our share of epidemics and pandemics. As a nation, we refuse to be defined by these health crises. We believe that what hurt us yesterday, makes us wiser, strengthens our resolve, and makes us more determined to not only build back but build back better,” Bio concluded.