REACH on World NTD Day: Integrated, country-led action, to cover every last kilometre

Reaching millions of children

In 2024, the REACH Network reached some 17 million of the most vulnerable children in high-mortality settings across sub-Saharan Africa. 

Many of these children are also those most likely to be exposed to neglected tropical diseases, as a result of poverty, limited access to clean water and sanitation, malnutrition, and fragile health systems.

This overlap is no coincidence – it reflects the structural inequities that both NTD programmes and REACH seek to address.

Synergies for equitable delivery

The REACH platform approach enables natural and effective synergies with NTD programmes.

All countries implementing REACH are working to integrate meaningfully, so that the investment builds sustainable systems for child survival.

REACH countries are actively integrating with national NTD programmes, aligning delivery systems, community engagement, and monitoring efforts, in order to maximise the coverage of key interventions and reduce duplication. 

Working with and through existing country systems and leadership structures, REACH supports more efficient and equitable service delivery to children who face the highest risk both of preventable mortality and NTDs.

A holistic approach

This demonstrates the ways in which combined delivery platforms can simultaneously tackle complex, varied health challenges. 

Such cross-sectoral integration also reflects an important, but too often under-appreciated, understanding. Children do not experience disease or ill-health in neat, distinct categories, such that health systems should not seek to address these health issues with distinct, duplicative, top-down programmes either. 

Children do not experience disease or ill-health in neat, distinct categories, such that health systems should not seek to address these health issues with distinct, duplicative, top-down programmes either.

Embedding quality services in routine structures

By integrating with existing programmes, and with country ownership and national leadership to the fore, equitable, high-quality health services can be embedded in national delivery models. 

REACH is actively contributing to a future where lifesaving interventions are delivered to every child, alongside key treatments for neglected tropical diseases and other vital interventions, in the most remote, hardest-to-access communities in some of the most underserved parts of the world.

On World NTD Day, the REACH Network reaffirms its commitment to making vulnerable populations the first port of call, not the last. 

 
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