Post by account_disabled on Mar 6, 2024 5:00:47 GMT
Will Regional Health Able to Meet the Needs of the Region in This New Stage? Latin America: Regional Health Cooperation in Crisis the Strategies to Confront Covid- in Latin America and the Caribbean Have Shown a Common Line of Action: the Responses Have Been Unilateral and Isolated, and With a Decline in the Health Programmatic Agenda of the Regional Integration Structures. This Happens in a Region That Continues to Be the Most Unequal in the World and That, According to the Economic Commission for Latin America and the.
Caribbean (Eclac) , Will Suffer One of the Greatest Socioeconomic Impacts. It is Not That the Region is Not Active in the Context of the Pandemic, but Rather That the Initiatives of the Different Regional Blocks Have Been Disjointed From Each Other. This Scenario, Also Favored by the Political Distance Between the Countries UK Mobile Database and the Lack of Leadership, Has Limited the Possibility of Achieving Concerted Policies. It is Possible to Observe That, in Almost All Action Blocks in Latin America, the Main Strategies Were Related to High-level Political Declarations, Publications of Reports With Epidemiological Data and Holding Virtual Forums on the Pandemic.
Some Moved Forward With Other More Specific Initiatives. The Central American Integration System (Sica) and the Caribbean Community (Caricom), for Example, Strengthened Regional Epidemiological Surveillance Strategies and Discussed the Adoption of Joint Drug Negotiation Mechanisms That Already Existed Before the Pandemic. The Southern Common Market (Mercosur) Mobilized Regional Funds for Emergency Financial Support and the Purchase of Supplies and Diagnostic Tests, as Did Sica.
Caribbean (Eclac) , Will Suffer One of the Greatest Socioeconomic Impacts. It is Not That the Region is Not Active in the Context of the Pandemic, but Rather That the Initiatives of the Different Regional Blocks Have Been Disjointed From Each Other. This Scenario, Also Favored by the Political Distance Between the Countries UK Mobile Database and the Lack of Leadership, Has Limited the Possibility of Achieving Concerted Policies. It is Possible to Observe That, in Almost All Action Blocks in Latin America, the Main Strategies Were Related to High-level Political Declarations, Publications of Reports With Epidemiological Data and Holding Virtual Forums on the Pandemic.
Some Moved Forward With Other More Specific Initiatives. The Central American Integration System (Sica) and the Caribbean Community (Caricom), for Example, Strengthened Regional Epidemiological Surveillance Strategies and Discussed the Adoption of Joint Drug Negotiation Mechanisms That Already Existed Before the Pandemic. The Southern Common Market (Mercosur) Mobilized Regional Funds for Emergency Financial Support and the Purchase of Supplies and Diagnostic Tests, as Did Sica.