TOGETHER TO IMPROVE THE QUALITY OF HEALTH SERVICES

«Since 2017, Doctors with Africa CUAMM has been working at the PCMH, the maternal and child hospital in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone. Thanks to a new programme of the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), financed by the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation, Cuamm supports a series of health staff training, the education activities of the students of the specialisation school in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, the pharmacy and its universal health care service, with a view to reinforcing the improvement of the care provided.

Recently, we received a donation of sanitary material to fight and reduce infections. As CAUMM, we have also offered cleaning and waste collection products, increased handwashing points within the wards, and equipment such as trolleys, to deposit sterilised material», says Claudia Mocci, CUAMM project leader in Freetown.

«We are two gynaecology residents – explain Alessia Sala and Marina Valeriani, Junior Project Officer, – who arrived at the Freetown Maternal and Child Hospital a few months ago. We started working here with the other trainees and residents. It is a very different reality from what we were used to, there are so many patients, so little material available, and every day is a challenge! The first few weeks we just observed to understand how we could fit in, then we started the activity like everyone else. We are growing on a daily basis and trying to teach practices that residents here have no way of learning, such as ultrasound. For the moment, it is a challenging and difficult experience, but at the same time stimulating and educational».

A commitment that continues despite the difficulties, to guarantee the necessary care for African mothers and children.

 

ANNUAL MEETING 2023 RELIVE THE BEST MOMENTS

A special thanks to the more than 1,800 people who came from all over Italy to live together at the Annual meeting of CUAMM and to give voice to Africa.
 

A special thanks to the many guests with us on stage and to the 1,800 people who came to Milan, from all over Italy, to give voice to Africa and put at the center the future of young Africans who wish to remain in the land where they were born. Today, all together, we have relaunched the commitment to take care of mothers and children. Everyone’s support is the greatest encouragement to face the new challenges with tenacity and determination, always and in any case, WITH Africa in the heart!

Relive the best moments of the Annual Meeting!

THE VIDEO
THE PHOTOGALLERY
THE PRESS RELEASE

ANNUAL MEETING 2022 RELIVE THE BEST MOMENTS

A special thanks to more than 4,000 people welcomed the Holy Father and listened to his encouragement to continue this path, to “not be afraid to go to difficult places,” today Saturday, Nov. 19th, in Rome’s Paul VI Hall at the Annual Meeting of Doctors with Africa Cuamm.

Relive the best moments!

Read Pope Francis’ Speech

Watch the video in English

Watch the video in Portuguese

The photogallery

The press release

 

 

CUAMM’S SUPPORT TO DISPLACED PEOPLE

Doctors with Africa CUAMM is present in Ethiopia, in the Amhara region, with a humanitarian intervention to support local communities and displaced populations to guarantee health and nutritional services in response to the serious crisis caused by the conflict in the country, with a project supported by the World Health Organisation.

The commitment continues with a second and new project, “Integrated assistance and resilience support interventions for displaced populations and surrounding communities in conflict-affected areas of Amhara Regional State, North Shewa and Oromia Special Zone”, financed by the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation, in consortium with COOPI and Enhanced Rural Self Help Association, which were present at the opening event together with representatives of the health department of the North Shewa region and Debre Birhan, as well as the health directors of some of the facilities involved in the programme.

The focus is on restoring and rehabilitating urgent and essential nutrition and health services to enable displaced people and host communities to live in dignified conditions. CUAMM will work on the one hand to rehabilitate two health facilities that were severely damaged and looted during the conflict, and on the other hand to improve the provision of health and medical services. This will be achieved by focusing on reproductive health, maternal and child health, major communicable diseases, training health personnel also on gender-based violence and services for mental health and psycho-social support.

During the presentation of the project, Riccardo Buson, Country manager for CUAMM in Ethiopia, spoke, renewing the commitment of the team organisation in Debre Birhan to continue to provide essential health services for the vulnerable groups most affected by the conflict, thanking the local authorities for their renewed confidence, and hoping to work together again to strengthen relations in the area and to foster the impact of the intervention.

AFRICA IS NOT TO BE EXPLOITED, IT IS TO BE PROMOTED

Relive the best moments

Rome, Nov. 19th, 2022 – More than 4,000 people welcomed the Holy Father and listened to his encouragement to continue this path, to “not be afraid to go to difficult places,” today Saturday, Nov. 19th, in Rome’s Paul VI Hall at the Annual Meeting of Doctors with Africa Cuamm.

Msgr. Claudio Cipolla, Bishop of Padua and President of Cuamm gave the welcoming to Pope Francis by saying: “Cuamm is an expression of the missionary laity, a story made up of multiple stories, which have gave it body and soul since 1950. “WITH”: the preposition also used by Jesus, “the God WITH us.” For Cuamm it is essential not to be FOR the other but WITH the other. In so many African countries there are hospitals and dispensaries that are weak, fragile, unable to provide their people with basic health care. There are few trained doctors and nurses (in South Sudan there is one midwife in 20,000 mothers giving birth). Cuamm faces these challenges WITH the Churches and local governments, together, in the logic of sharing and mutual responsibility.”

Pope Francis’ speech was heartfelt and engaging: “I like to emphasize the fact that your story begins when, 70 years ago, a college was established, right in Padua, to host young African medical students. Young Africans. This is a clear expression of your style: to be with Africa, even before being for Africa. And this is precisely the good attitude, because there is in the imagination, in the collective unconscious, the wrong idea that Africa is to be exploited. On the contrary, your attitude is to be with Africa and your work is a concrete way of putting into practice something we ask every day in the “Our Father Prayer. “When we pray “give us today our daily bread,” we should think carefully about what we say, because so many, too many men and women, only receive crumbs from this bread, or not even that, simply because they were born in certain places in the world. I think of so many mothers, who cannot have access to safe birth and sometimes lose their lives; or so many children, who die in early childhood. Your presence here today brings my heart close to countries that are of particular interest to me, such as the Central African Republic, where I went in 2015 to open the Holy Door, in Bangui; and South Sudan where, God willing, I will travel early next year. Do not be afraid to take on difficult challenges, to intervene in remote, violence-scarred places where people do not have the opportunity to access primary health care. Be with them! Should it take years of efforts, should there be successive disappointments and failures on the way to results, do not be discouraged, ever. Be persevering with service and dialogue open to all as tools for peace and overcoming conflicts. Africa is going backwards and poverty is getting worse. I truly appreciate your work in giving voice to what Africa is experiencing; because you bring to the surface the hidden and silent sufferings of the poor that you encounter in your daily efforts. And I urge you to continue to give Africa a voice, to give it space so that it can express itself: Africa has indeed a voice, but it is not heard; you must open possibilities so that Africa’s voice can be heard; you must continue to give voice to what is not seen, to its labors and its hopes, to move the conscience of a world that sometimes is too focused on itself and little on the other. Finally, I invite you to give special attention to young people: to encourage in every way, in your activities, the job placement of local youth who crave to live their future as protagonists especially in their countries of origin”.

Cuamm director, don Dante Carraro took the stage in the second part of the morning that was conducted by the journalist and longtime friend Piero Badaloni, by saying to the audience that: “Africa is going backwards, as pandemic, war and energy and financial speculation are affecting it dramatically. In fact, as we struggle with our life, the burden is heavier on Africa: just think that in Ethiopia, a pair of latex gloves, the kind you use in the hospital, costed 0.5 cents in the beginning of the year while they are currently priced 1 euro! Consequently, the whole cost of living has increased. But as Cuamm, our task is to look forward with confidence”.

Fabio Manenti, head of Projects at Cuamm presented the results of “Mothers and Children First. People and competencies”: “The target we need to reach is 500,000 assisted deliveries, in the first year there were 93,000, but only about 50 percent of women give birth in hospitals and there is still a lot to do. The climate crisis, food crisis and global crisis we are facing because of the war, are also worsening the quality of care and this is something we do not see”.

Among the main themes of the meeting, there was the commitment to train young Africans “Human resources are the most important asset for Cuamm and for Africa,” explained Giovanni Putoto, Cuamm’s head of Programming. Investment in training should be made at all levels, from hospitals to schools to universities that train doctors, specialists and managers, as in the case of the high-level Master program launched in Mozambique, with the collaboration of the University of Padua, the University of Maputo and the University of Beira”.

Also Professor Pietro Invernizzi, director of the Department of Medicine and Surgery at Bicocca University in Milan, stressed the importance of collaboration with Italian universities: “We train new generations of professionals who will have to deal with our health, and we realize that we are dealing with an internal fragility. Africa motivates us, so we decided to start an institutional and collaborative effort with Cuamm.

Collaboration continues on different paths as the one with religious congregations that Cuamm launched in recent years and that was presented today by Sister Anastasie Mokli: “In the health field, our work has always started progressively, as under the trees, with care for children and mothers, then we opened small dispensaries and, little by little, we added different services to respond to different needs. Now through collaboration with Cuamm we will also be able to improve our skills and resource management”.

“This collaboration with congregations made it clear to us that interventions from the ground up, from the frontline, were necessary to revitalize Africa. We have come to involve 25 congregations in 23 countries. We started with field missions that helped us bring to light the common problems and challenges in health systems that need to be addressed together,” added Andrea Atzori, Cuamm’s head of International Relations.

“The vaccination campaign in Africa is progressing. Thanks to Cuamm’s efforts, more than 1 million vaccine doses have been administered: and that is a great achievement,” said Francesca Tognon, Cuamm physician.

Prof. Alberto Mantovani, scientific director of Humanitas claimed his involvement and support for Cuamm’s vaccine campaign, “Intellectual asset of young Africans is remarkable. The sequencing of the virus was recently reported in Science, which is useful in mapping how the variants we are so concerned about are generated. It’s an achievement that shows us that it is possible to carry out high-level research in Africa, research that everyone needs. This is what Cuamm does through its training program, it cultivates culture and intelligence that serves a continent and the idea of a global health”.

At the end of the event, Niccolò Fabi moved the audience by performing “Costruire” before leaving the floor to don Dante Carraro for the final greeting in which he relaunched the commitment for the future.

A special thanks to the youth orchestra I “Polli(ci)ni” from Padua, which embellished the event with its music.

 

ANNUAL MEETING AND THE SPECIAL AUDIENCE WITH POPE FRANCIS

Padua, 9 November 2022 – Stories of commitment and perseverance which are the results of a year- long work “with” Africa, future challenges, hidden and distant tragedies that are unknown yet caused by the serious global crisis we are all in. These will be the core topics at the Annual Meeting of Doctors with Africa Cuamm, which this year will be opened with the special audience with Pope Francis.

 The event, open to everyone upon registration, will take place Saturday 19th November at 9h in the Paul VI Hall, Vatican City (Rome).

Life in Africa is an obstacle course, a bumpy climb where toils are added to toils and weights to weights, with the ultimate risk of being squashed, with the risk that it is always the poorest, and the weakest, mothers and children who pay. But ‘Africa is not just a misfortune that befell close to us’, as Don Dante Carraro, director of the Padua-based NGO, often emphasises. It is much more, it is a great sense of life, despite everything. By going beyond the problems and looking at the good that is being built every day, we can learn a lot from this continent.

Climate change, droughts, Covid-19 and also the war in Ukraine. These are problems that impact our daily lives and that have devastating effects in Africa, effects that no one talks about and on which Doctors with Africa Cuamm wants to draw everyone’s attention and wants to recount them and ‘offer them’ to the Holy Father, who with his words and his example can be a guide and point of reference to continue on this path of caring and support to the poorest and most fragile.

Numerous topics will be discussed over the Meeting: from the first results of the programme ‘Mothers and children first. People and competencies’, which focuses on the training of competent and motivated health workers; to fragile countries such as South Sudan and the Central African Republic; from the commitment to the vaccination campaign in Africa to telling “What goes unseen”, the great tragedies and the dramatic effects of this global crisis on Africa. The skyrocketing prices of basic goods and material for the ordinary activities in hospitals; the number of malnourished children; the almost fourfold increase in the cost of petrol, with very heavy consequences on the referral system; diabetes drugs costing three times as much. “What goes unseen” from where we stand is a lot and will be told at the Cuamm Annual Meeting, together with the silent yet constant commitment of Doctors with Africa Cuamm, which has been working in the field over 70 years, alongside the last, “with” Africa always, despite everything.

 

Neri Marcorè, Sveva Sagramola and Niccolò Fabi are the three special friends who will give a voice and face to this heartfelt appeal that Cuamm will be launching before Pope Francis. They are witnesses who in different ways share the commitment ‘with Africa’ and with their involvement can help mobilise as many people as possible.

 

A special mention to “I Polli(ci)ni” Orchestra from Padua that will enrich the event with some pieces from its repertoire.

 

PROGRAMME

9h Paul VI Hall – Vatican City – Rome

Host Sveva Sagramola

 

First part:

Pope Francis’s entrance

Greetings from Monsignor Claudio Cipolla, Bishop of Padua

 

Audience by Pope Francis

Second part:

Spot from Sierra Leone

“The effects of the global crisis”

Don Dante Carraro, Director of Doctors with Africa Cuamm

Spot from Uganda

Results from the first year of the project Mothers and children first. People and competencies.”

Fabio Manenti, Head of Projects at Doctors with Africa Cuamm

Musical interlude – “Pollicini” Orchestra

Spot from Central African Republic

“People and competencies”

Giovanni Putoto, Head of Programme at Cuamm

Pietro Invernizzi, Director of the School of Medicine and Surgery at Bicocca University, Milan

Valentina Iacobelli and Francesco Tagliente, residents at Matany, Uganda

Musical interlude – “Pollicini” Orchestra

“High-quality collaborations”

Andrea Atzori, head of International Relations and Emergency department at Cuamm

Spot from the vaccination campaign

“Evaluation of the vaccination campaign in Africa”

Francesca Tognon, Operational research at Doctors with Africa Cuamm

Alberto Mantovani, Scientific Director at Humanitas Research Hospital, Milan

“What goes unseen”

Niccolò Fabi, songwriter

Don Dante Carraro, Director of Doctors with Africa Cuamm

ACCREDITATION PROCEDURES

Journalists and media operators who wish to participate must send a request, within 24 hours of the event, through the Holy See Press Office’s online Accreditation System at: press.vatican.va/accreditations

 

The ANNUAL MEETING enjoys the patronage of FNOPO, is realised with the special support of Gilead Sciences S.r.l. and with the contribution of Banca Etica. Technical Sponsor: Freccia Rossa – official train

Media Partner: Vatican news, Vatican Radio, Tv2000, In Blu, Avvenire, Rai Radio 1, Corriere Buone Notizie, Africa Rivista.

MOTHERS AND CHILDREN FIRST is a programme in collaboration with Fondazione Cariparo, Fondazione Cariverona, Fondazione Cariplo, Fondazione Compagnia di San Paolo, Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Lucca.

WORLD DIABETES DAY

“Education to protect the future “: this is the slogan proposed by the International Diabetes Federation on November 14th, during the World Diabetes Day. A slogan with the aim of increasing access to diabetes education, so that we can contribute to improve the lives of more than half a billion people living with diabetes worldwide.

These are many initiatives scheduled for November 14th in the African countries. In Freetown, Sierra Leone, Doctors with Africa CUAMM supports the organization march of diabetes awareness, organized in collaboration with the Health Department. In Ethiopia several proposals are also scheduled: a convention on the topic, a march, awareness-raising and screening activities. The march is going to be in the main squares of Addis Abeba, with the involvement of about 5,000 participants. In Mozambique, CUAMM proposes three dates. In Maputo, also on the 14th, proposes an event that will see the Deputy Minister of Health participation. In the Zambesia region will take place a march and a “health fair” with screening and awareness. In the region of Sofala, the next days, it will be an official moment with the authorities and a health fair.

CUAMM’s commitment in the fight against diabetes has primarily focused in Ethiopia, Mozambique, Sierra Leone, Tanzania and Uganda by raising awareness and prevention in health centers and in the villages, realizing screenings to check blood sugar, the state of health in general and the parameters for early detection of non-communicable diseases. The aim is to start treatment as soon as possible. All in collaboration with the local authorities: reaching, in some cases like Mozambique, the drawing up of “Ministerial Guidelines for diabetes care and treatment, in addition to hypertension”. Another example is Sierra Leone, where the first “Guidelines on managing gestational diabetes” have been prepared.

A work made possible thanks to the many people who assure their support and thanks to partnerships with interlocutors like AICS and World Diabetes Foundation.

The biggest problem now is to bring out the hidden part: too often diabetes, like other chronic diseases, is unrecognized as something serious to be treated.

The figures are clear: 537 million people around the world living with diabetes; 24 million just in Africa. However, in Africa, 54% of cases go undiagnosed. The number of people living with diabetes is supposed to rise by 129% by 2045, according to predictions. 1 in every 8 children born alive is affected by hypoglycemia during pregnancy. In 2021, just in Africa, 416,000 people died because of diabetes.

It is clear that in the hospitals where we operate the overall picture of NCDs has grown worse even more due to the Covid-19 pandemic, with a strong impact on healthcare systems: many diabetes, hypertension treatment and prevention services, along with awareness campaigns, have been interrupted – says Father Dante Carraro, Doctors with Africa CUAMM director –. Furthermore, the gap has not yet be filled, due to the severe global crisis that influences everyday life in Africa. Just think that, in Tanzania, the cost of diabetes treatments has tripled.

CUAMM WITH THE POOREST OF ROME

Two campervan set up as mobile health clinic are located in St. Peter’s square, across the left side of the Basilica’s colonnade, to offer medical healthcare to the most vulnerable and homeless people, from Monday to Sunday November the 13th, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. A healthcare facility provided by Doctors with Africa CUAMM on occasion of the World Day of the Poor to be celebrated the 13th of November. The initiative is promoted by the Dicastery for Evangelisation and in partnership with Petrone Group, Gilead Sciences and Bourelly Group.

Doctors, residents, CUAMM operators coming from all areas will take turns to welcome people and give basic assistance as blood pressure and blood glucose measurements, basic check-ups, Covid-19 tests, HIV tests, and to assess the health status of people far from the traditional routes, referring them to the national health system if needed.  One of the two campervan is used every day by Cuamm to give medical assistance to the poorest in the ghettos of Foggia province, Apulia, while the other is kindly lent by Petrone Group and Bourelly Group.

“Jesus Christ […] for your sake became poor» (cfr 2 Cor 8,9). This is the title proposed by Pope Francis to celebrate this day, to medidate on the fact that “In front of the poor one does not engage in rhetoric, but rolls up one’s sleeves and puts faith into practice through direct involvement, which cannot be delegated to anyone. […] It is not, therefore, a question of having a merely assistancial attitude towards the poor, as often happens; instead, it is necessary to commit oneself so that no one lacks what is necessary. It is not activism that saves, but sincere and generous attention that allows one to approach a poor person as a brother who stretches out his hand so that I may awaken from the torpor into which I have fallen’.

 

 

Yesterday, the US ambassador to the Holy See, Joe Donnelly, Michelangelo Simonelli of Gilead, Massimo Petrone of Petrone Group and Guido Bourelly of Gruppo Bourelly  visited (pictured).

These words sound sadly relevant and meaningful today that Africa is experiencing innumerable disasters due to the global crisis we are all living in. A crisis that, as always happen, hits hardly the poorest and the most vulnerable. In fragile contexts, national health systems have been weakened by the pandemia that has also affected access to health facilities.  Moreover, this dramatic situation is exacerbated by numerous factors as the effects of the serious global crisis we are experiencing, with the war in Ukraine; climate change; energy speculation and the many other forgotten wars…

Consequences are severe for us, as we can all testify while are dramatic in Africa where basic goods prices are soaring, from flour to milk to fuel. Health systems are as bad as 10 years ago. In this scenario, the main challenge for Cuamm is to stay by the side of the the poorest, in Italy as well as in Africa, to face daily battles which are getting bigger.

WHAT GOES UNSEEN

Dear All,

we are now living a hard time. After the Covid-19 crisis we hoped we could breathe a sigh of relief, but war and energy speculation are putting a strain on us. Everyone is making small and big sacrifices. But even if it is difficult for us, it is even more to Africa. There, this situation has dramatic effects because populations are already very poor: there is neither a welfare system, nor any kind of social parachute.

Over the last three months I’ve been to Ethiopia, South Sudan, Tanzania and Sierra Leone. Unfortunately, these countries face a similar situation. Africa seems going backward: Silently, unseen, without a voice. You can’t see any of this, doesn’t seem to exist, no one talks about it.

What goes unseen is that in a country such as Sierra Leone the National Emergency Medical Service (NEMS) is malfunctioning and working marginally. It was put into action two years ago also with the support of CUAMM. The gas oil for the ambulances went from 8,000 to 22,000 leones per liter, enough for the first 4-5 days of the month. Then, the system crashes: we lose dozens and dozens of mothers that would need an urgent caesarean section.

What goes unseen is that at the Wolisso hospital, in Ethiopia, the cost of a pair of sterile gloves has reached 1 euro. In a day, on average, 350 pairs are used for ordinary hospital activities.

What goes unseen at Tosamaganga, in Tanzania, is that diabetes medications cost have tripled in just a few months.

What goes unseen is that in South Sudan the government is no longer able to pay salaries, the international donor funding is allocated somewhere else. You can feel the tension in the air. Someone continues to work, hoping that something comes along soon, others take up any kind of job to feed their children. How can a hospital stay operational without healthcare personnel?

Karamoja region, northeastern Uganda: what I am witnessing here, from where I am writing to you, is that ‘too many’ children are dying due to a severe malnutrition that is affecting numerous regions.

However, what you do not see (What goes unseen) is also the daily and hard work that we keep doing next to the one of many local colleagues, despite all. A persistent, silent, invisible and hidden work that keeps going, in a very tenacious way.This is what we ask you, we need your support. It is too much of a challenge to deal with on our own, a commitment that goes through the eight countries in which we operate. For each country, we have selected a hospital that is struggling more than the others are.

Chiulo in Angola, Wolisso in Ethiopia, Beira in Mozambique, Bangui in the Central African Republic, Pujehun in Sierra Leone, Lui in South Sudan, Tosamaganga in Tanzania, Aber in Uganda.

In order to cope with the increasing gas oil (for generators and transport), medicines and salaries costs, our need is approximately 100/150,000 euros for each hospital: for the next six months, totaling 1 million euros.

What goes unseen is the dramatic poverty in which a large part of population in Africa is plummeting. Next to each of you, we want to continue to do our part, close to those most in need.

A heartfelt thanks for what you’ll be able to do and for being with us November 19th in Rome for our Annual meeting. We will be all together to tell, also to Pope Francis, “What you can’t see”. I hug you.

 

Father Dante

 

REGISTRATION AT BIRTH THE RIGHT OF EVERY CHILD

In Bishoftu, close to Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the closing event of the five-day workshop was organised to present the new module on birth registration, which is included in the university and midwifery training curriculum. The new module, developed together with a team of university tutors, is the first of its kind in Ethiopia and will be introduced already in the academic year 2022-2023 in midwifery colleges throughout the country.

This innovation aims to train midwifery professionals, who in turn will sensitise families, on the importance of birth registration at the registry office to improve maternal and child health, aiming at several objectives: ensuring children’s right to identity, working to reach the most disadvantaged communities far from the main health centres and hospitals; raising awareness on the importance of birth registration, sensitising families, so that this takes place close to birth and with initial support from health centres. And again: strengthen the links between the national registration system and the health sector, to make up for the large number of missed registrations by encouraging correct certificate completion and family follow-up.

This important goal is an integral part of the project “Children’s Right to Identity in Oromia”, financed by the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation and implemented by AMREF together with Doctors with Africa CUAMM. Many Ethiopian stakeholders collaborated in the development of the project, including the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Education, the National Association of Midwives, the Ministry of Finance, Herqa (Higher Education Relevance and Quality Agency) and Vera (Vital Event Registration Agency).

Thanks to the collaboration of the authorities and organisations involved, at the proposal and with the technical and financial support of CUAMM, this project will in the future also lead to an innovation in the curriculum for midwifery students at Ethiopian colleges. Moreover, the school of nurses and midwives in Wolisso will be involved in the testing of a training course that will train health workers who will help to improve the provision of maternal and child care services at St. Luke’s Hospital in Wolisso, supported by CUAMM.

During the workshop, moderated by Azeb Admassu, a member of the Human Resources Directorate of the Ethiopian Ministry of Health, many stakeholders took the floor and expressed their satisfaction with the great achievement so far: improving the training of midwifery professionals and raising awareness of pregnant women and mothers on child health and access to care nationwide.

«Once again, the CUAMM’s strategy of providing technical and financial support to a project aimed at meeting the needs of Ethiopia’s health and education system has proved successful – stressed Riccardo Buson, CUAMM country representative, wishing to continue fruitful cooperation with local partners to improve maternal and child health in the country».

The commitment does not stop and will continue in the coming months to achieve other relevant goals.