Medic West Africa & Medlab West Africa is part of the Informa Markets Division of Informa PLC
This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Informa PLC and all copyright resides with them. Informa PLC's registered office is 5 Howick Place, London SW1P 1WG. Registered in England and Wales. Number 8860726.
Roberto Taboada
Head of the Anglo West African network
Roche Diagnostics based in Lagos, Nigeria
● Blood glucose meters for people with diabetes
● Point-of-care testing devices for use in doctors’ offices
● High-throughput analysers for hospitals and commercial diagnostic laboratories
● State-of-the-art instruments and reagents for life science research 6
4. Tell us about your investments, partnerships and upcoming goals for the next 12 month
*For the foreseeable future, we will be seeking out a diversity of partners and solutions to move ahead – between governments, development and technical agencies, implementing organisations, civil society and the private sector.
Leveraging a broad range of partners' strengths and expertise brings solutions to complex challenges.
Partnership is the core of much of the success we’ve seen so far in delivering access for patients and will be one of the key mechanisms to saving many more lives in years to come.
Through various projects across Africa, we have seen the effectiveness of public-private partnerships in action, for example:
6. Is there anything else you would like to add?
Earlier this year, the WHO (World Health Organization) Executive Board voted in favour of including the resolution “Strengthening diagnostics capacity” on the WHA 2023 agenda. This is a critical victory for African people.
It signalled a firm understanding by the WHO of the importance of increasing access to quality diagnostics in low-to-middle-income countries – particularly African countries. At Africa Health, we aim to seize this opportunity to power progress, transform the African healthcare narrative and ensure that every African has access to quality diagnostics and healthcare.
We will continue to leverage the power of partnership to build resilient healthcare systems and save lives. Let’s use this opportunity to work together to power progress, transform the narrative and ensure that every African has access to quality diagnostics and healthcare.
References:
pment site in Cape Town and a Scientific Campus in South Africa.
Our ambition for Diagnostics is to increase access to high-quality In-Vitro Diagnostic (IVD) testing tenfold in the next 10 years. Working with international agencies, non-governmental organisations and governments at the global, regional and local levels, Roche takes a holistic and collaborative approach to improve health systems and strengthen Africa’s diagnostic backbone and capacity.
One major misconception is that infrastructure is Africa’s primary challenge in achieving Universal Health Coverage (UHC).
Of course, lack of infrastructure is a significant barrier, but it is not isolated and should not be the only focus where governments allocate budgets.
The development of people is also integral. World Bank research has shown that there are 0.2 doctors for every 1000 people in sub-Saharan Africa – well below the global average of 1.6.2
Along with investment in infrastructure, there is an excellent opportunity for investment in training, hiring, better remuneration and insurance. Through awareness campaigns, medical research and health education across each country, prevention would save governments billions with a relatively minor investment.
Prevention on a large scale also begins with investment in diagnostics. Diagnostics can drive 70% of all clinical decision-making, yet they are apportioned less than 5% of hospital budgets.
The Lancet Commission on Diagnostics indicates that the median availability of diagnostics is only 19% in basic primary care facilities surveyed in low-income and lower-middle-income countries – many of which are African.3,4
Diagnosis informs treatment and care decisions right at the beginning of any patient’s healthcare journey. Consequently, prioritising diagnostics across Africa can empower individuals, improve health outcomes and ultimately drive economic growth – because healthier populations are more economically active.5
Roche Diagnostics offers a uniquely broad product portfolio and supplies a wide array of innovative testing products and services to researchers, physicians, patients, hospitals and laboratories in the fields of diabetes care and anticoagulation therapy, molecular biology, clinical chemistry, immunology and applied science, diagnosing communicable and non-communicable disease areas.
Our portfolio includes:
● Blood glucose meters for people with diabetes
● Point-of-care testing devices for use in doctors’ offices
● High-throughput analysers for hospitals and commercial diagnostic laboratories
● State-of-the-art instruments and reagents for life science research 6
For the foreseeable future, we will be seeking out a diversity of partners and solutions to move ahead – between governments, development and technical agencies, implementing organisations, civil society and the private sector.
Leveraging a broad range of partners' strengths and expertise brings solutions to complex challenges.
Partnership is the core of much of the success we’ve seen so far in delivering access for patients and will be one of the key mechanisms to saving many more lives in years to come.
Through various projects across Africa, we have seen the effectiveness of public-private partnerships in action, for example:
The central objective of the partnership is to strengthen diagnostics infrastructure and capacity in north-eastern Tanzania by creating a state-of-the-art Centre of Excellence. The Centre is designed to drive sustainable capacity building and develop the skill sets necessary to meet local needs.
We will showcase our latest diagnostic innovations in non-communicable and infectious disease areas. Our adoption of innovation is not limited to the development of in-vitro diagnostics for high-burden diseases such as HIV/AIDS and TB but also encompasses other aspects of process workflow to create sustainable solutions for the challenges posed within resource-limited regions.
We are committed to capacity-building initiatives through ongoing certified training of laboratory scientists.
We also apply our expertise to precise and robust diagnostic tests, automated systems and integrated solutions in Clinical Chemistry, Haematology, Coagulation and Immunodiagnostics.
We look forward to networking and exploring partnerships to improve healthcare in Africa.
Earlier this year, the WHO (World Health Organization) Executive Board voted in favour of including the resolution “Strengthening diagnostics capacity” on the WHA 2023 agenda. This is a critical victory for African people.
It signalled a firm understanding by the WHO of the importance of increasing access to quality diagnostics in low-to-middle-income countries – particularly African countries. At Africa Health, we aim to seize this opportunity to power progress, transform the African healthcare narrative and ensure that every African has access to quality diagnostics and healthcare.
We will continue to leverage the power of partnership to build resilient healthcare systems and save lives. Let’s use this opportunity to work together to power progress, transform the narrative and ensure that every African has access to quality diagnostics and healthcare.