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News release

Africans view health as a top priority, want governments to invest more resources to prepare for future pandemics

16 Aug 2024
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News release
Key findings
  • Health-related issues (29%) rank second among the most important problems that Africans want their governments to address, following unemployment (33%) (Figure 1).
  • Only half (51%) of Africans believe that their government is “somewhat” or “very” prepared for a future public health emergency like COVID-19 (Figure 2). o Fewer than one-fourth of citizens in Cabo Verde (24%), Lesotho (21%), and Gabon (15%) think their government is ready to deal with a pandemic (Figure 2).
  • Almost six in 10 Africans (58%) “agree” or “strongly agree” that their government should invest more in preparations for future health emergencies like COVID-19, even if it means fewer resources are available for other health services (Figure 3). o Three-fourths or more of citizens support greater investment in pandemic preparedness in Liberia (82%), Tanzania (75%), and Ethiopia (75%). o But majorities in Gabon (70%) and Congo-Brazzaville (55%) disagree.

A majority of Africans want their governments to invest more in preparations for future health  emergencies, even if doing so will diminish the resources available for other health services, Afrobarometer surveys show. 

Africans see health as the second-most important problem requiring government  intervention, and only half of them think their governments are ready to deal with future  public health emergencies like COVID-19. 

The World Health Organization (WHO) this week declared mpox a global public health  emergency of international concern. The WHO has called for coordinated international action in response to an uptick in mpox cases in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and  several other African countries.