PRESS RELEASE
2013 Resolve Award Recognizes Zambia for Advances in Reproductive Health Care
Geneva, May 22, 2013 –Today, Zambia will receive the prestigious Resolve Award, which honors
nations for expanding access to essential reproductive health services. The Honorable Dr. Joseph
Kasonde, Minister of Health, will accept the Award on behalf of the Government of Zambia at a
ceremony celebrating the Resolve Awardees during the 66th World Health Assembly in Geneva,
Switzerland.
The Award honors Zambia’s efforts to ensure that all people have access to primary and
reproductive health services, and to provide those services in a convenient, integrated way. “People
do not want to go to separate facilities for family planning and for child health,” says Dr. Kasonde.
“We are working to meet all of their health needs in one place.”
Integrated service delivery is part of a larger restructuring and strengthening of health services in
Zambia. A decade ago, Zambia’s rates of HIV/AIDS and maternal and child mortality were among
the world’s highest, and access to family planning and reproductive health care was limited. Years
of “structural adjustment” had decimated the country’s health and social service sectors.
In response, over the last decade, the Zambian government increased spending on primary and
reproductive health by 50%. Today, family planning, HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment and
maternal and child health services are offered free of charge in the public sector. And the
government is constructing 650 new rural health posts, to facilitate integrated service delivery.
These efforts are producing measurable results. In the decade since Zambia adopted the new
approach:
. Contraceptive use increased from 15% to 41%
. More than three quarters of pregnant women living with HIV have been provided with
anti-retroviral drugs and counseling to prevent transmission
. Maternal mortality has declined by 40%
. Malaria deaths have been reduced by 67%
As a recipient of the Resolve Award, Zambia’s efforts to improve primary and reproductive health
will receive international attention. The Resolve Award is granted by the Global Leaders Council
for Reproductive Health (GLC), a group of eighteen sitting and former heads of state, high-level
policymakers and other leaders who build political leadership for increased financial and technical
support for reproductive health.
Resolve Award winners are chosen through a competitive global nominations process. In addition
to Zambia, this year’s winners include The Gambia and Kenya, with a special mention to Sierra
Leone.
The Award will be presented by GLC Chair Joy Phumaphi. Ms. Phumaphi, who also serves as
Executive Secretary of the African Leaders Malaria Alliance (ALMA), is the former Minister of
Health for Botswana.
Zambia and other Resolve Award winners can inspire other nations, says Phumaphi. “There are
many barriers to reproductive health access. It might be that services are too expensive or
inconvenient. It might be abusive husbands who do not want their wives to use family planning.
But, as the Resolve Award winners have shown, all of these barriers can be overcome.”
As the world’s nations discuss development strategies to replace the Millennium Development
Goals, which expire in 2015, Kenya and other Resolve Award winners can point the way forward.
“The Resolve Award winners show what we can do—and what we must do—to lead the way to
universal access to reproductive health and rights,” says Phumaphi.