#Willemstad, May 4, 2019 – Curacao –The Regional Health Communications Network (RHCN) made up of communications and health promotion specialists from across the English, French and Dutch Caribbean countries and territories, met from 29 to 30 April to develop region-wide public education campaigns to address non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and wellness.
The RHCN was established by the
Caribbean Public Health Agency (CARPHA) in 2015 to develop, implement, sustain,
monitor and evaluate communication responses to priority health issues in the
Region.
Caribbean Ministers of Health
have long recognised the critical role communication plays in health. In 2016,
Ministers at the Thirtieth Meeting of the Council for Human and Social
Development (COHSOD) proposed a region-wide comprehensive, sustained,
evidence-based public education campaign, using traditional and new media to
address NCDs and wellness.
“Since
its inception, the RHCN has positioned itself as the lead body on public health
communications in the Region driving various public health messages for healthy
lifestyles in the Caribbean. The Network serves to assist policy makers
in CARPHA Member States to make informed decisions about public health concerns
in the Region,” said Dr. C. James Hospedales, Executive Director of CARPHA.
CARPHA,
in collaboration with the Pan American Health Organization/World Health
Organization (PAHO/WHO) and the Organisation for Eastern Caribbean States
(OECS) Commission, hosted a 2-day Curacao meeting with the aim to adapt
culturally appropriate and effective pre-existing information, education and
communications (IEC) materials to promote diabetes awareness and adoption of
healthy lifestyles. The OECS Commission, under the World Diabetes
Foundation funded project ‘OECS Diabetes Prevention and Care’, will be using
the adapted IEC materials to support a year-long mass media campaign.
Through a collective and partnership approach, the RHCN will contribute to the achievement of objectives defined in the CARPHA Strategic Plan, and the Caribbean Cooperation in Health (CCH) which will result in healthier outcomes for all peoples of the Caribbean thorough empowerment and information. Over the two days, the successes of the Network were highlighted, and participants drafted a regional communications strategy and action plan (2019 – 2021) and developed a communications strategy to support the CCH IV priorities.
Release: DPI Guyana
Photo Caption: Participants at the meeting held in Willemstad, Curacao
Jamaica got a 3 million US dollar grant from humanitarian charity organisation Direct Relief, as part of its mission to strengthen resilience in the Caribbean region. This is also an effort to enhance Healthcare systems and infrastructure throughout Jamaica in preparation for natural disasters as the organization renews its ongoing partnership with the island. This was announced by Direct Relief in an article on May 1.
To enhance and strengthen security in the Guiana Shield, Guyana, Suriname and French Guiana on Monday April 29, signed a security common master plan following a meeting in George Town, as announced By President of Guyana Irfaan Ali on Facebook. Ali expressed that the agreement will hopefully enhance collaborations and relations between Suriname and French Guiana.
The Prime Minister of Grenada, Dickon Mitchell, at the 2024 Sustainable Tourism Conference on April 22, expressed that Caribbean universities should be leading researchers for coral restoration as he addressed the importance of corals to the region’s capacity for tourism sustainability amid climate change
Regarding this, he called for more funding to encourage universities to create more marine experts, given the region’s vulnerability to climate change effects.