Africa: AU Member States Urged to Have Functional Nat’l Public Health Institute Capable of Leading Disease Prevention

Africa: AU Member States Urged to Have Functional Nat’l Public Health Institute Capable of Leading Disease Prevention


Addis Ababa, — – In a powerful display of regional unity and commitment to strengthening public health systems, senior health officials, government leaders, and public health professionals from across Southern Africa convened in Harare, Zimbabwe, for the Fourth Annual Southern African National Public Health Institute (NPHI) Meeting.

Hosted under the theme “Strengthened Information, Knowledge Sharing and Peer-to-Peer Mentorship,” the gathering brought together member states, development partners, and public health advocates to emphasize the urgent need for fully functional and sustainable national public health institutes across the continent.

Speaking on behalf of the African Society for Laboratory Medicine (ASLM), Dr. Talkmore Maruta delivered a stirring keynote that outlined both the opportunity and responsibility of establishing robust NPHIs.

“We are not safe until everyone is safe,” he declared, warning that countries without operational NPHIs are denying their populations essential protections and services.

His remarks were grounded in recent data from the Africa CDC, which showed that only 18 of 55 AU member states currently have fully functional NPHIs. “The time is yesterday,” Dr. Maruta urged. “With over 200 pathogen-related events reported in 2024, delay is no longer an option.”

The meeting also saw renewed partnerships between ASLM and the Africa CDC in areas such as pathogen genomics, antimicrobial resistance, and workforce training.

Delegates emphasized that NPHIs are more than bureaucratic entities; they are life-saving institutions. They allow governments to mount rapid, effective responses to health threats and ensure continuity in disease surveillance and control, especially in an increasingly interconnected world.

Speaking on behalf of Africa CDC Director General Dr. Jean Kaseya, Dr Lul Riek, the Regional Director of Africa CDC, commended the directors of NPHIs and heads of delegations from across the region for heeding the call to convene.

The meeting’s theme aligns closely with Africa CDC’s New Public Health Order, a continental health vision forged in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The New Order calls for a paradigm shift to prepare Africa for future health threats, anchored in five pillars: strengthening NPHIs, expanding local manufacturing of medical supplies, enhancing the health workforce, increasing domestic health financing, and building action-oriented partnerships.