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Today we gather in this auditorium of one of the
most enduring and respected organizations in the
Hemisphere of the Americas, to discuss and take
forward the agenda for establishing the Caribbean
Public Health Agency. I am sure, that in time, the
delegates to this Partners Meeting will look back
with pride to our individual and collective roles in
the establishment of a landmark institution.
We who have been involved in this process know
the challenges that have been encountered. There was
the issue of overcoming the skeptics across the
spectrum of the region and the international
community, of the vision and viability the Caribbean
Public Health Agency (CARPHA). There was the need to
convince others of the feasibility of consolidating
five (5) institutions into one Agency. This is
despite the evidence from a range of objective
studies by the most credible sources and the careful
scrutiny of the recommendations from these studies
by our technical officers and decision makers.
Evidence shows that the configuration of the public
health response by the existing health institutions
was not the most efficient.
There were also the lessons from around the
world. There were the debates within the World
Health Organization on the ideals of health for all
and within PAHO on equity in health. The Report of
the Caribbean Commission on Health and Development
(2006) underscored the need for revamping the
Region’s approach to public health and helped to
shape the underlying philosophy of CARPHA. In
addition, the experiences of Canada, the UK, USA and
European Union have provided useful guidelines for
public health approaches. In the European Union for
example, notwithstanding the long established health
systems within most of the member states, mechanisms
for cooperation in health are being promoted
including the European Observatory in Health Systems
and Policies, the Association of Schools of Public
Health in Europe (ASHER), the European Health
Management Association and the European Public
Health Alliance. These models notwithstanding, our
biggest challenge was coming up with a formula that
best fits the needs and peculiar circumstances of
the Caribbean Region.
In so doing, it is important for us to place
CARPHA in context. The Caribbean Community is no
longer an experiment. It is a reality. It was
constructed on the basis of a treaty – The Treaty of
Chaguaramus in 1973 - which has evolved through
amendments over the past 38 years. While the
establishment of the Caribbean Single Market and
Economy is the acknowledge flagship of the
integration movement, it is not the only yard stick
by which to measure the progress made in regional
integration. The Treaty of Chaguaramus has
identified three pillars of integration including
Trade and Economic integration, Foreign Policy and
Community Relations and functional Cooperation
replaced by Human and Social Development, while
acknowledging Functional Cooperation as a cross
cutting element. More recently, a fourth pillar,
Crime and Security has been added.
Indeed, it must be recognized that long before
the trade and economic integration took root, it was
in the areas of health, education and culture that
the Caribbean Community made its greatest impact.
The activities in these areas, singly and
collectively, continue to connect the Caribbean
people, including the Caribbean Diaspora and to
project distinctiveness about the Caribbean in the
global arena. In particular, the area of health
cooperation has been an outstanding illustration of
what can be gained by acting collectively to achieve
outcomes that benefit all the citizens across the
region, minimizing the inequities and maximizing the
efficiencies. There is no better modality, in
principle, than the Caribbean Cooperation in Health
(CCH) initiative. The weaknesses of the CCH
identified in the various studies have to do with a
failure to consistently implement its priorities due
to a lack of a consolidated system and in many cases
because of a lack of resources.
The Caribbean Public Health Agency is conceived
as a response and a remedy to this situation. It is
seen as an example of functional cooperation: as a
mechanism by which the health of the people of the
Caribbean will be promoted and protected from
disease, injury and disability, thereby fostering
the wellness revolution enunciated in the Port of
Spain Declaration, unifying to fight the
non-communicable diseases (2007). It is also
intended to advance the realization, embodied in the
Nassau Declaration (2001), the Health of the Region
is the Wealth of the Region. In this regard, it is
expected to highlight the opportunity costs of
pursuing the public health functions in a
consolidated way, rather than as disparate entities
that duplicate efforts and dilute the public health
objectives for which they were designed.
This is by no means to suggest that our existing
public health institutions have not served the
region well. In many cases they have functioned
under circumstances that challenged the creative
imagination and management capability of their
respective directors, which we celebrate and which I
ask you to duly recognize.
As we move forward with the implementation of the
Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA), we note
that the surveillance and laboratory functions of
the Caribbean Epidemiological Centre (CAREC), would
constitute the core of the Agency. In this regard,
we are deeply grateful that the Government of
Trinidad and Tobago is committed to supporting the
relocation of the CAREC facility and thereby
providing a home for the agency’s core activities.
Over the years the Caribbean Food and Nutrition
Institution (CFNI) has provided the essential
regional guidelines and directions for Member
States. Its integration into CARPHA, for example,
would foster greater synchronization of the
laboratory functions while enhancing its ability to
contribute to the programmes and policies, including
training of public health specialists in the areas
of food and nutrition. In the area of environmental
health, many of the Caribbean Environmental Health
Institute’s (CEHI) programmes that focus on water
and sanitation as well as the links between climate
change and health will be maintained, but integrated
more specially to respond to the public health
requirements.
The functions of the Regional Drug Testing
Laboratory will remain intact but again would be
more clearly aligned to the overall mandate of the
integrated agency. In the case of the Caribbean
Health Research Council, , its research and
development capabilities are likely to be enhanced
and expanded under the consolidated agency. Its
scientific committees and its annual conference
could help to transform the ethic within CARPHA with
an infusion of international cooperation, thereby
stimulating dynamism of Caribbean public health
through its linkages with the regional and research
centres and experts in the international arena.
This is merely a schematic illustration of the
CARPHA functions and organization which no doubt
would be further elaborated on, in the substantive
presentations. But an essential feature of CARPHA is
the rationalization of resources which may yet
provide a model of how the Caribbean Community
shapes the future of over 25 regional institutions.
These span the gamut of services ranging from
meteorology, disaster management and climate change;
through to quality and standards, examinations and
accreditation; to fisheries, agriculture and crime
and security. A review of these institutions
together with that of the Caribbean Community
Secretariat is currently being undertaken as part of
a comprehensive plan to increase the effectiveness
and efficiency of the conduct of Community’s
business.
The leaders of our Region are quite aware that
the global economic crisis has engendered a new
economic order and escalated a changed political
landscape, with deep structural barriers and access
to overseas development assistance (ODA). Hence
there is need to revisit our approach to partnership
and resource mobilization.
This is why in convening this Partners Meeting,
the Community has called for a resource mobilization
and sustainability plan that illustrates the
commitment of its Member States to maintain their
quota contributions. This together with PAHO’s
pledge to maintain the level of its support to the
regional institutions will no doubt guarantee the
delivery of basic public health functions during
CARPHA’s transitional period between now and 2014,
and set the stage for a solid foundation in the
periods to follow.
CARPHA is being inaugurated at a time when the
global debates on the new deal in HIV as well as the
new approaches to NCDs are taking place. In both
cases the role of public health in reducing the
impact of the communicable and non-communicable
diseases is being identified as a critical component
of sustaining economic development. The costs of
adequately responding to each of these sets of
diseases are enormous. CARPHA therefore provides the
possibility of being that bridge for channeling
scarce resources and fostering shared responsibility
and institutionalizing effective management.
This is therefore the context in which we invite
partners to collaborate in accelerating CARPHA’s
implementation plan. The tasks before us are many
but not insurmountable. The immediate ones revolve
around building up the laboratory facilities,
strengthening its surveillance capabilities,
increasing the cadre of public health professionals,
enhancing public health leadership, supporting
research and development and investing in social
marketing techniques to broaden the understanding of
the public health mission and generally set the
stage for enhanced public/private sector
partnership.
The CARPHA Steering Committee, chaired by Dr.
Leslie Ramsammy, Minister of Health, Guyana and
Chair of the Council for Human and Social
Development, together with the CARICOM Secretariat
and PAHO groups, have worked tirelessly since the
last Partners Meeting in June 2010 to move the
implementation process forward. I wish to commend
them. On behalf of the CARICOM Heads of Government,
I also wish to express my gratitude to Dr. Mirta
Roses, Director of PAHO and her staff for their
invaluable contribution to this process and for
their gracious hospitality in hosting this meeting.
We are also aware of the vital role being played by
the Government of Trinidad and Tobago which has
undertaken to continue to host CAREC, the core of
CARPHA. In addition, we wish to recognize the
support and outstanding contributions to this
process made by the Public Health Agency of Canada
as well as the ongoing collaboration of the UK
Department of Public Health and the National Social
Marketing Company of the UK. I also must place on
record the deep commitment made by the European
Commissioner for Development to support CARPHA and
we are glad that he has accepted our invitation to
attend the Heads of Government Meeting on 1 July
2011 in St Kitts and Nevis at which the ceremonial
signing of the intergovernmental Agreement
establishing CARPHA as a legal entity will be done.
Let this Partnership Meeting therefore provide a
further impetus for us to truly say that we are
gathered here today on 13 June, 2011 during the
period designated by President Obama as Caribbean
American Heritage Month. Let us use this occasion to
rewrite Caribbean public health history. Let us join
in amplifying the inspiring sentiments of the
American writer women Sonia Jones:
“We must remember that one determined person can
make a significant difference, and that a small
group of determined people can change the course of
history.”
CONTACT:
piu@caricom.org
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