Tag: Panama

  • What did we learn from the Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030) in its first two years?

    What did we learn from the Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030) in its first two years?

    At a World Health Organization conference in Panama, The Geneva Learning Foundation is hosting an Innovations Café today.

    The session’s title is “Connected learning to accelerate local impact at global scale: Year 1 of the Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030)”.

    What is the Movement for Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030)?

    Immunization Agenda 2030 (IA2030) is the world’s strategy, adopted by the World Health Assembly in 2020, to achieve the global goals for immunization.

    In March 2022, The Geneva Learning Foundation (TGLF) launched a call to form a movement in support of IA2030.

    By June 2023, over 16,000 health workers were participating.

    More than 80% work in districts and health facilities and over half are government workers.

    70% work in fragile contexts such as armed conflict, remote areas, urban poverty, and other challenges.

    This ground-up commitment has the potential to complement the top-down work of the IA2030 global partners, if this community of practitioners is recognized, empowered, and listened to by global health agencies and donors.

    In today’s session, you will hear first-hand from IA2030 Movement Members.

    How has participation in this Movement helped them to better serve the immunization and primary health care needs of the local communities they serve?

    In Year 1 of this Movement, we demonstrated the feasibility of establishing a global peer learning platform for immunization practitioners, with the creation of a movement of more than 10,000 health workers in support of IA2030 goals. Learn more about Year 1 outcomes.

    In Year 2, as the Movement continued to grow rapidly in over 100 countries, we generated evidence of practitioner demand and public health impact, captured in academic papers and multiple detailed case studies. Request your invitation to the IA2030 Movement’s Knowledge-to-Action Hub to get access to research outputs.

    Learn more about how new digital learning approach can open access to international global health conferences otherwise restricted to the select few.

  • Panamanian chicken

    Panamanian chicken

    Why did the chicken cross the road?

    Lunch time, after a jet-lagged conference morning. Hand shakes and smiles, mingling Spanish and English. Forks and knives scrape plates as we skewer the plump, roast chicken.

    Within the first 90 seconds, I am being mandated or tasked to request funding immediately upon returning to headquarters. Before dessert, we are exploring how Caribbean and Asia Pacific island nations could – should – work together on sustainability. There is funding for that, too.

    Pause. Smile. Eyes light up.  Puckers his lips. Whispers. Confides.

    “Cross-cutting.”

    “It’s a magic word,” he bursts out. Say this word and you are skewering the organizational silos. You are cutting through the red tape. You are opening the doors to the world. You are bridging the gap.

    Why did the chicken cross the road? To get to the other side, of course.