Can Child Health Systems Hold?

From climate shocks to protracted conflicts and shrinking budgets, today’s “metacrisis” is reshaping the future of child health.

In this recent episode of Global Health Matters, host Garry Aslanyan speaks with Landry Dongmo Tsague, director of the Centre for Primary Health Care at Africa CDC, and Debra Jackson, Takeda Chair in Global Child Health at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, about what it will take for children not just to survive, but to thrive.

Both guests note the real gains of the last three decades.

Aslanyan points to under-five mortality falling by over 60% since 1990, while Tsague stresses that “we recorded unprecedented gains over the past two decades,” driven by investments in community-based primary care and immunisation reaching underserved populations. But those advances are fragile.

“Since COVID-19 … there’s now serious concern that these gains will be lost,” Jackson says, citing rising temperatures, conflict and the fact that “as of last year, 2024, we reached or exceeded the 1.5-degree target.”

Conflict zones, from the Sahel to Sudan, put children at immediate risk of malnutrition, disease and interrupted services.

“Without peace, there is no health,” Tsague underscores.

He also flags steep funding declines and outlines emerging solutions endorsed by African leaders: boosting domestic budgets, tapping innovative financing such as levies and diaspora remittances, and mobilising blended finance for primary care infrastructure and local manufacturing.

What works on the ground?

Jackson argues for integrated services and better data: “Information systems are going to be critical if we’re going to address this.”

Community engagement is central; in Zimbabwe, mothers co-created a heat early-warning approach and became local advocates.

Looking ahead, Tsague points to youth as a game-changer: “I can’t be optimistic without highlighting the strength that the continent has in its young people,” including plans for 2 million community health workers by 2030.

Watch the full episode: 

Image Credits: Global Health Matters.

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