CANAM’s new digital approval system promises faster healthcare access, but concerns remain over exclusion, cybersecurity, and unequal access for millions…
As part of efforts to reinforce epidemic preparedness and response, Burkina Faso’s Ministry of Health has graduated 25 frontline officers…
In prelude to the celebration of the International Day of Families on May 15, Cameroon’s Ministry of Women’s Empowerment and…
For the first time, an antimalarial drug adapted for babies weighing 2 to 5 kilograms has been prequalified by the…
After four days of intensive exchanges, practical sessions and strategic reflections in Yaounde, stakeholders from public institutions, civil society and…
During the 2nd coordination meeting for community HIV response interventions held on May, 7, 2026 in the NACC conference room…
This initiative, welcomed by facility managers, aims to encourage users of the biometric platform who work daily to streamline patient…
Between its antiseptic properties and metabolic regulation, this little-known natural treasure is now establishing itself as a pillar of traditional…
These areas, which settled people call « margins, » are in reality the realm of nomadic herders. No tractors, no oil. Just…
On the occasion of International Day of the Midwife, whose global theme is « One Million More Midwives, » Bertrice Tchouangue Tchassem, president of the Association of Midwives and Related Professionals of Cameroon (ASFAC) for the Central Region, paints a stark picture. According to her, the problem is not so
much the number of trained midwives—Cameroon trains hundreds each year—but rather their poor distribution and their assignment outside of reproductive, maternal, newborn, child, and adolescent health services. Between advocating for the recognition of the midwifery profession and calling for preventative care, she delivers a clear message: make better use of existing resources to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality.
